The TSC1-2 tumor suppressor controls insulin–PI3K signaling via regulation of IRS proteins
Institute of Cancer Research · Cancer Research UK · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Insulin-like growth factors elicit many responses through activation of phosphoinositide 3-OH kinase (PI3K). The tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC1-2) suppresses cell growth by negatively regulating a protein kinase, p70S6K (S6K1), which generally requires PI3K signals for its activation. Here, we show that TSC1-2 is required for insulin signaling to PI3K. TSC1-2 maintains insulin signaling to PI3K by restraining the activity of S6K, which when activated inactivates insulin receptor substrate (IRS) function, via repression of IRS-1 gene expression and via direct phosphorylation of IRS-1. Our results argue that the low malignant potential of tumors arising from TSC1-2 dysfunction may be explained by the failure…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 26.70
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 57
Authors
13- LHLaura HarringtonCorresponding
Institute of Cancer Research, Cancer Research UK
- GMGreg M. Findlay
Institute of Cancer Research, Cancer Research UK
- AGAlex Gray
University of Dundee
- ТАТ. А. Толкачева
Institute of Cancer Research, Cancer Research UK
- SWSimon Wigfield
Institute of Cancer Research, Cancer Research UK
Topics & keywords
- P70-S6 Kinase 1
- Biology
- PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway
- TSC1
- Insulin receptor
- Cell biology
- RHEB
- TSC2