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Interactions between mTORC2 core subunits Rictor and mSin1 dictate selective and context-dependent phosphorylation of substrate kinases SGK1 and Akt

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2022.102288Get rights and content
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Mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 2 (mTORC2) is a multi-subunit kinase complex, central to multiple essential signaling pathways. Two core subunits, Rictor and mSin1, distinguish it from the related mTORC1 and support context-dependent phosphorylation of its substrates. mTORC2 structures have been determined previously; however, important questions remain, particularly regarding the structural determinants mediating substrate specificity and context-dependent activity. Here, we used cryo-EM to obtain high-resolution structures of the human mTORC2 apo-complex in the presence of substrates Akt and SGK1. Using functional assays, we then tested predictions suggested by substrate-induced structural changes in mTORC2. For the first time, we visualized in the apo-state the side chain interactions between Rictor and mTOR that sterically occlude recruitment of mTORC1 substrates and confer resistance to the mTORC1 inhibitor rapamycin. Also in the apo-state, we observed that mSin1 formed extensive contacts with Rictor via a pair of short α-helices nestled between two Rictor helical repeat clusters, as well as by an extended strand that makes multiple weak contacts with Rictor helical cluster 1. In co-complex structures, we found that SGK1, but not Akt, markedly altered the conformation of the mSin1 N-terminal extended strand, disrupting multiple weak interactions while inducing a large rotation of mSin1 residue Arg-83, which then interacts with a patch of negatively charged residues within Rictor. Finally, we demonstrate mutation of Arg-83 to Ala selectively disrupts mTORC2-dependent phosphorylation of SGK1, but not of Akt, supporting context-dependent substrate selection. These findings provide new structural and functional insights into mTORC2 specificity and context-dependent activity.

Keywords

mTORC2
structure
cryo-EM
Akt
SGK1
substrate specificity
conformation change

Abbreviations

CRIM
conserved region in the middle
FRB
FKBP12-rapamycin binding domain
HR
helical repeat
mTOR
mechanistic target of rapamycin
mTORC1
mTOR complex 1
mTORC2
mTOR complex 2
PH
pleckstrin homology
string
SGK-Targeting, Rictor-InteractING

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Zanlin Yu is a research specialist in the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics at University of California San Francisco. His main interest is to understand the molecular mechanisms underlying the function of large protein complexes including the proteasome and mTORC2 using structural biology, particularly cryo-EM. Dr. Yu has made key contributions to developing new technologies for cryo-EM of multi-protein complexes, including using spytag-spycatcher affinity grids to stabilize complexes such as mTORC2 and acquire high-resolution structures. This approach was instrumental in the recognition of context-dependent phosphorylation of mTORC2 substrates in the present publication.

Junliang Chen is a Nephrologist who works now at SinoUnited Health in Shanghai, China. He was a postdoctoral researcher in the Departments of Medicine and Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology at University of California San Francisco with a longstanding interest in the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC). This drew him to pursue the molecular mechanisms of ENaC regulation by SGK1 and its upstream kinase, mTORC2. Toward this end, he initiated a collaboration with his colleague, cryo-EM expert Zanlin Yu, to study mTORC2 substrate specificity. He tried numerous approaches to tagging and purifying mTORC2 components, and finally sorted out the best combination to gain high purity and concentration and then optimized conditions for complex formation.

Present address for Junliang Chen: Department of Internal Medicine, SinoUnited Health, Shanghai, China.

Present address for Catherine E. Gleason: Circle Pharma, South San Francisco, CA 94080.

These authors contributed equally to this work.