| Literature DB >> 33869199 |
Yan Zhao1, Jason Cholewa2, Huayu Shang3, Yueqin Yang4, Xiaomin Ding1, Qianjin Wang1, Quansheng Su3, Nelo Eidy Zanchi5,6, Zhi Xia1,3.
Abstract
Skeletal muscle anabolic resistance (i.e., the decrease in muscle protein synthesis (MPS) in response to anabolic stimuli such as amino acids and exercise) has been identified as a major cause of age-related sarcopenia, to which blunted nutrition-sensing contributes. In recent years, it has been suggested that a leucine sensor may function as a rate-limiting factor in skeletal MPS via small-molecule GTPase. Leucine-sensing and response may therefore have important therapeutic potential in the steady regulation of protein metabolism in aging skeletal muscle. This paper systematically summarizes the three critical processes involved in the leucine-sensing and response process: (1) How the coincidence detector mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 localizes on the surface of lysosome and how its crucial upstream regulators Rheb and RagB/RagD interact to modulate the leucine response; (2) how complexes such as Ragulator, GATOR, FLCN, and TSC control the nucleotide loading state of Rheb and RagB/RagD to modulate their functional activity; and (3) how the identified leucine sensor leucyl-tRNA synthetase (LARS) and stress response protein 2 (Sestrin2) participate in the leucine-sensing process and the activation of RagB/RagD. Finally, we discuss the potential mechanistic role of exercise and its interactions with leucine-sensing and anabolic responses.Entities:
Keywords: age-related sarcopenia; anabolic resistance; leucine response; leucine-sensing; protein synthesis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33869199 PMCID: PMC8047301 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.646482
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1mTORC1 functions as a coincidence detector to regulate protein synthesis. GAP, GTPase-activating protein; GEF, GMP exchange factor; Rags, ras-related GTPases; Rheb, ras homolog enriched in brain; mTORC1, mechanistic/mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1; S6K1, S6 kinase 1; 4E-BP1, eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E-binding protein 1.
FIGURE 2Schematic drawing of the structure of mammalian LARS (A), and its canonical catalytic function (B). Gray, N/C terminal extension; green, aminoacylation domain; gold, editing domain; red, tRNA-binding domain. The canonical catalytic function of LARS including tRNA-independent pre-transfer editing, tRNA-dependent pre-transfer editing, and post-transfer editing.
FIGURE 3The leucine sensing signaling pathway upstream of mTORC1 and the potential role of exercise. ➞, activate; ⊣, inhibit; ?, unknown mechanism.