GTP酶
生物
细胞生物学
mTORC1型
调节器
GTPase激活蛋白
氨基酸
生物化学
磷酸化
信号转导
基因
G蛋白
蛋白激酶B
作者
Shawn Egri,Christna Ouch,Hui-Ting Chou,Zhiheng Yu,Kangkang Song,Chen Xu,Kuang Shen
出处
期刊:Molecular Cell
[Elsevier]
日期:2022-03-01
卷期号:82 (10): 1836-1849.e5
被引量:12
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.molcel.2022.03.002
摘要
•Three cryo-EM structural models of the GATOR1-Rag-Ragulator complex have been resolved •GATOR1 secures the nucleotide status of both subunits of the Rag GTPase heterodimer •Rag GTPase binding modes are predicted to be mutually exclusive in vivo mTORC1 controls cellular metabolic processes in response to nutrient availability. Amino acid signals are transmitted to mTORC1 through the Rag GTPases, which are localized on the lysosomal surface by the Ragulator complex. The Rag GTPases receive amino acid signals from multiple upstream regulators. One negative regulator, GATOR1, is a GTPase activating protein (GAP) for RagA. GATOR1 binds to the Rag GTPases via two modes: an inhibitory mode and a GAP mode. How these two binding interactions coordinate to process amino acid signals is unknown. Here, we resolved three cryo-EM structural models of the GATOR1-Rag-Ragulator complex, with the Rag-Ragulator subcomplex occupying the inhibitory site, the GAP site, and both binding sites simultaneously. When the Rag GTPases bind to GATOR1 at the GAP site, both Rag subunits contact GATOR1 to coordinate their nucleotide loading states. These results reveal a potential GAP mechanism of GATOR1 during the mTORC1 inactivation process. mTORC1 controls cellular metabolic processes in response to nutrient availability. Amino acid signals are transmitted to mTORC1 through the Rag GTPases, which are localized on the lysosomal surface by the Ragulator complex. The Rag GTPases receive amino acid signals from multiple upstream regulators. One negative regulator, GATOR1, is a GTPase activating protein (GAP) for RagA. GATOR1 binds to the Rag GTPases via two modes: an inhibitory mode and a GAP mode. How these two binding interactions coordinate to process amino acid signals is unknown. Here, we resolved three cryo-EM structural models of the GATOR1-Rag-Ragulator complex, with the Rag-Ragulator subcomplex occupying the inhibitory site, the GAP site, and both binding sites simultaneously. When the Rag GTPases bind to GATOR1 at the GAP site, both Rag subunits contact GATOR1 to coordinate their nucleotide loading states. These results reveal a potential GAP mechanism of GATOR1 during the mTORC1 inactivation process.
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