Lewis Cantley
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From kinase to cancer
Lewis Cantley | | 10 min read
From kinase to cancer The story of discovering PI3 kinase, and what it means for a fundamental pathway in cancer. By Lewis Cantley Related Articles 1 I suspected that this enzyme might be placing a phosphate on the 3 position of the inositol ring to produce phosphatidylinsitol-3-phosphate (PI-3-P), but I realized that this would be heretical to the field and would require rigorous chemical proof, since PI-3-P had not been previously described. So, at the Col

Following the PI 3-kinase pathway
Lewis Cantley | | 1 min read
Following the PI 3-kinase pathway By Lewis Cantley Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI 3K) acts upstream of myriad cellular pathways, including those that regulate protein synthesis and tumorigenesis. In this example, PI 3K phosphorylates the lipid PI -4,5-P2 to PI -3,4,5- P3, also known as PIP 3. PIP 3 binds to serine/threonine kinase (AKT) and recruits it to the membrane where PDK1 phosphorylates the kinase and sets it into action. Among a number of targets, AKT phosphor

Putting the P in PIP
Lewis Cantley | | 1 min read
var FO = { movie:"http://images.the-scientist.com/supplementary/flash/53942/pip.swf", width:"520", height:"780", majorversion:"8", build:"0", xi:"true"}; UFO.create(FO, "ufoDemo"); Putting the P in PIP by Lewis Cantley Click on the enzyme names or on the the arrows to follow the PIP pathway. Please download the Adobe Flash Player to view this content: Related Articles From Kinase to Cancer Following the PI 3-kinase

From kinase to cancer
Lewis Cantley | | 10+ min read
From kinase to cancer The story of discovering PI3 kinase, and what it means for a fundamental pathway in cancer. By Lewis Cantley In 1987 I attended a meeting at Cold Spring Harbor on phosphatidylinositol signaling that turned out to be pivotal for me. A few years earlier I'd helped show that a phosphatidylinositol (PI) kinase activity copurified with various oncoprotein tyrosine kinases, and that this association was critical for the ability of these oncoproteins to tran

A New Pathway for Inositol
Lewis Cantley | | 1 min read
Courtesy of Cantley labIn the mid 1980s we discovered a phosphatidylinositol kinase that co-purified with several oncoproteins and that correlated with cell transformation. When my graduate student Malcolm Whitman presented his results at a lab meeting, I noticed that in this autorad, the phosphatidylinositol phosphate produced by the oncoprotein-associated PI kinase (Type I) migrated slightly more slowly in thin layer chromatography (TLC) than that produced by PI 4-kinase (Type II).The reproduc
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