AI Article Synopsis

  • Cancer cells have a unique multiprotein complex called DockTOR that helps them survive stressful conditions, which is crucial for their growth and ability to spread.
  • This complex is triggered by a key protein called Cdc42 and involves other important proteins like AKT and mTOR, allowing cancer cells to regulate their survival signals even when growth factors are low.
  • Understanding how DockTOR functions could open up new possibilities for therapies targeting these stress survival mechanisms in cancer.

Article Abstract

The ability of cancer cells to survive microenvironmental stresses is critical for tumor progression and metastasis; however, how they survive these challenges is not fully understood. Here, we describe a novel multiprotein complex (DockTOR) essential for the survival of cancer cells under stress, triggered by the GTPase Cdc42 and a signaling partner Dock7, which includes AKT, mTOR, and the mTOR regulators TSC1, TSC2, and Rheb. DockTOR enables cancer cells to maintain a low but critical mTORC2-dependent phosphorylation of AKT during serum deprivation by preventing AKT dephosphorylation through an interaction between phospho-AKT and the Dock7 DHR1 domain. This activity stimulates a Raptor-independent but Rapamycin-sensitive mTOR/S6K activity necessary for survival. These findings address long-standing questions of how Cdc42 signals result in mTOR activation and demonstrate how cancer cells survive conditions when growth factor-dependent activation of mTORC1 is off. Determining how cancer cells survive stress conditions could identify vulnerabilities that lead to new therapeutic strategies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9881951PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.01.03.522657DOI Listing

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