← Back to Publications
BBA Clinical 2017 Clinical Study

Activation State of PKB/Akt Predicts Survival in Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma

Miles J, White JK, Sheridan M, Larijani B, et al.

What This Study Shows

This foundational study demonstrated the core principle of functional biomarkers: protein activation state—not expression level—predicts patient outcomes.

In kidney cancer patients, measuring whether the PKB/Akt signaling protein was actually "switched on" (activated) strongly predicted survival. Simply measuring how much protein was present did not.

Key Findings

Activation State (aFRET)
HR = 0.228
P = 0.002 — Strong predictor
Expression Level (IHC)
HR = 1.390
P = 0.548 — Not predictive

Why This Matters

PKB/Akt is a central "hub" in cancer cell signaling. When activated, it drives cell survival, growth, and resistance to therapy. But a cell can have lots of Akt protein that isn't doing anything, or a small amount that's highly active.

This study proved you must measure function, not just presence—a principle that extends to immune checkpoints and other biomarker targets.

The Technology

The study used amplified FRET (aFRET)—an earlier version of the FRET-based approach now used in QF-Pro. By detecting the conformational change that occurs when Akt is phosphorylated (activated), researchers could distinguish active from inactive protein in patient tissue samples.

Learn More

Abstract

The PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway is frequently dysregulated in clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC), yet Akt expression has shown inconsistent prognostic value. We hypothesized that Akt activation state, rather than expression level, would better predict clinical outcomes. Using amplified FRET (aFRET) to detect phospho-Akt (pAkt-S473) in FFPE samples, we compared activation-based versus expression-based prognostic stratification.

Methods

Cohort: 62 ccRCC patients with long-term follow-up. FFPE tumor samples analyzed by both aFRET (activation) and conventional IHC (expression).

aFRET Protocol: Tyramide signal amplification (TSA) combined with FRET detection. Donor-conjugated anti-phospho-Akt (pS473) and acceptor-conjugated anti-total Akt antibodies. FRET efficiency calculated from donor quenching indicates proximity of phosphorylated and total Akt epitopes—a marker of active kinase conformation.

IHC: Standard immunohistochemistry for total Akt expression, scored by pathologist using H-score methodology.

Results

0.228
hazard ratio

Activation State Predicts Survival

High pAkt (aFRET) associated with improved disease-specific survival. HR = 0.228 (95% CI: 0.09-0.58), P = 0.002.

1.390
hazard ratio

Expression Does Not Predict

Total Akt expression (IHC) showed no significant association with survival. HR = 1.390 (95% CI: 0.48-4.01), P = 0.548.

"These data demonstrate that the activation state of Akt, rather than its expression level, is the relevant prognostic biomarker in ccRCC."

— Miles et al., BBA Clinical 2017

Biological Interpretation

The paradoxical finding that high pAkt predicts better survival may reflect:

  • 🔬 Intact signaling: Functional Akt signaling indicates less genomically disrupted, potentially more treatment-responsive tumors.
  • 🎯 Therapeutic target: Active Akt represents a druggable target; tumors relying on this pathway may respond to PI3K/mTOR inhibitors.
  • 📊 Expression ≠ Function: High Akt expression without activation suggests pathway dysfunction or compensatory upregulation without signaling output.

Methodological Significance

This study established key principles for functional biomarker development:

  • FFPE compatibility: aFRET works on standard formalin-fixed tissue, enabling retrospective studies and clinical implementation.
  • Quantitative readout: FRET efficiency provides continuous, objective measurement versus subjective IHC scoring.
  • Conformational sensitivity: FRET detects the spatial relationship between epitopes, reporting on protein conformation/activation state.

Related Glossary Terms