Ring domains are essential for GATOR2-dependent mTORC1 activation

  • Cong Jiang
  • , Xiaoming Dai
  • , Shaohui He
  • , Hongfei Zhou
  • , Lan Fang
  • , Jianping Guo
  • , Songlei Liu
  • , Tao Zhang
  • , Weijuan Pan
  • , Haihong Yu
  • , Tianmin Fu
  • , Dali Li
  • , Hiroyuki Inuzuka
  • , Ping Wang
  • , Jianru Xiao*
  • , Wenyi Wei*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

The GATOR2-GATOR1 signaling axis is essential for amino-acid-dependent mTORC1 activation. However, the molecular function of the GATOR2 complex remains unknown. Here, we report that disruption of the Ring domains of Mios, WDR24, or WDR59 completely impedes amino-acid-mediated mTORC1 activation. Mechanistically, via interacting with Ring domains of WDR59 and WDR24, the Ring domain of Mios acts as a hub to maintain GATOR2 integrity, disruption of which leads to self-ubiquitination of WDR24. Physiologically, leucine stimulation dissociates Sestrin2 from the Ring domain of WDR24 and confers its availability to UBE2D3 and subsequent ubiquitination of NPRL2, contributing to GATOR2-mediated GATOR1 inactivation. As such, WDR24 ablation or Ring deletion prevents mTORC1 activation, leading to severe growth defects and embryonic lethality at E10.5 in mice. Hence, our findings demonstrate that Ring domains are essential for GATOR2 to transmit amino acid availability to mTORC1 and further reveal the essentiality of nutrient sensing during embryonic development.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)74-89.e9
JournalMolecular Cell
Volume83
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 5 Jan 2023

Keywords

  • Gator1
  • Gator2
  • NPRL2
  • Sestrin
  • WDR24
  • amino acid sensing
  • mTOR
  • ubiquitination

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