Back to Search Start Over

Genome-scale RNAi on living-cell microarrays identifies novel regulators of Drosophila melanogaster TORC1–S6K pathway signaling

Authors :
David M. Sabatini
Anne E. Carpenter
Carson C. Thoreen
David A. Guertin
Siraj M. Ali
Katherine L. Madden
Robert A. Lindquist
Michael R. Lamprecht
Adam Papallo
Peggy P. Hsu
Kathleen A. Ottina
Shomit Sengupta
Thouis R. Jones
Yoav D. Shaul
Douglas B. Wheeler
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biology
Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research
Lindquist, Robert A.
Ottina, Kathleen
Wheeler, Douglas B.
Hsu, Peggy P.
Thoreen, Carson C.
Guertin, David A.
Ali, Siraj M.
Sengupta, Shomit
Shaul, Yoav D.
Lamprecht, Michael R.
Papallo, Adam R.
Jones, Thouis R.
Sabatini, David M.
Carpenter, Anne E.
Source :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 2010.

Abstract

The evolutionarily conserved target of rapamycin complex 1 (TORC1) controls cell growth in response to nutrient availability and growth factors. TORC1 signaling is hyperactive in cancer, and regulators of TORC1 signaling may represent therapeutic targets for human diseases. To identify novel regulators of TORC1 signaling, we performed a genome-scale RNA interference screen on microarrays of Drosophila melanogaster cells expressing human RPS6, a TORC1 effector whose phosphorylated form we detected by immunofluorescence. Our screen revealed that the TORC1–S6K–RPS6 signaling axis is regulated by many subcellular components, including the Class I vesicle coat (COPI), the spliceosome, the proteasome, the nuclear pore, and the translation initiation machinery. Using additional RNAi reagents, we confirmed 70 novel genes as significant on-target regulators of RPS6 phosphorylation, and we characterized them with extensive secondary assays probing various arms of the TORC1 pathways, identifying functional relationships among those genes. We conclude that cell-based microarrays are a useful platform for genome-scale and secondary screening in Drosophila, revealing regulators that may represent drug targets for cancers and other diseases of deregulated TORC1 signaling.<br />National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (R01 GM072555)<br />National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (CA103866)<br />National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (R01 GM089652)<br />United States. Dept. of Defense (DOD TSC Research Program (W81XWH-05-1-0318-DS))<br />LAM Foundation<br />Society for Biomolecular Sciences<br />Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research<br />Broad Institute

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0c8a4cf4de0eb3a16d0146240f06adb3