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mTOR Signaling in Metabolic Stress Adaptation

Cheng‐Wei Wu, Kenneth B. Storey

2021Biomolecules49 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) is a central regulator of cellular homeostasis that integrates environmental and nutrient signals to control cell growth and survival. Over the past two decades, extensive studies of mTOR have implicated the importance of this protein complex in regulating a broad range of metabolic functions, as well as its role in the progression of various human diseases. Recently, mTOR has emerged as a key signaling molecule in regulating animal entry into a hypometabolic state as a survival strategy in response to environmental stress. Here, we review current knowledge of the role that mTOR plays in contributing to natural hypometabolic states such as hibernation, estivation, hypoxia/anoxia tolerance, and dauer diapause. Studies across a diverse range of animal species reveal that mTOR exhibits unique regulatory patterns in an environmental stressor-dependent manner. We discuss how key signaling proteins within the mTOR signaling pathways are regulated in different animal models of stress, and describe how each of these regulations uniquely contribute to promoting animal survival in a hypometabolic state.

Topics & Concepts

PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathwayBiologyCellular adaptationRegulatormTORC2Signal transductionMechanistic target of rapamycinTOR signalingAdaptation (eye)Cell biologyNeurosciencemTORC1GeneticsGenePhysiological and biochemical adaptationsHigh Altitude and HypoxiaNeurobiology and Insect Physiology Research