AI Article Synopsis

  • - The mTORC1 pathway is crucial for regulating cell growth and metabolism in response to various environmental signals, particularly amino acids, which activate mTORC1 by influencing Rag GTPases that recruit mTORC1 to the lysosome.
  • - The study found that mTORC1 cannot respond to amino acids in cells without Rag GTPases or the Ragulator component p18, highlighting their role in both mTORC1 activation and the recruitment of associated regulatory complexes (GATOR1, GATOR2, and KICSTOR) to the lysosome.
  • - The findings indicate that the Rag-Ragulator complex is essential for the organization of the mTORC1 nutrient-sensing pathway, emphasizing that mTOR

Article Abstract

The mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) pathway regulates cell growth and metabolism in response to many environmental cues, including nutrients. Amino acids signal to mTORC1 by modulating the guanine nucleotide loading states of the heterodimeric Rag GTPases, which bind and recruit mTORC1 to the lysosomal surface, its site of activation. The Rag GTPases are tethered to the lysosome by the Ragulator complex and regulated by the GATOR1, GATOR2, and KICSTOR multiprotein complexes that localize to the lysosomal surface through an unknown mechanism(s). Here, we show that mTORC1 is completely insensitive to amino acids in cells lacking the Rag GTPases or the Ragulator component p18. Moreover, not only are the Rag GTPases and Ragulator required for amino acids to regulate mTORC1, they are also essential for the lysosomal recruitment of the GATOR1, GATOR2, and KICSTOR complexes, which stably associate and traffic to the lysosome as the "GATOR" supercomplex. The nucleotide state of RagA/B controls the lysosomal association of GATOR, in a fashion competitively antagonized by the N terminus of the amino acid transporter SLC38A9. Targeting of Ragulator to the surface of mitochondria is sufficient to relocalize the Rags and GATOR to this organelle, but not to enable the nutrient-regulated recruitment of mTORC1 to mitochondria. Thus, our results reveal that the Rag-Ragulator complex is the central organizer of the physical architecture of the mTORC1 nutrient-sensing pathway and underscore that mTORC1 activation requires signal transduction on the lysosomal surface.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11363303PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2322755121DOI Listing

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