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Cell Growth and Development

Signaling from Akt to FRAP/TOR Targets both 4E-BP and S6K in Drosophila melanogaster

, &
Pages 9117-9126 | Received 18 Jun 2003, Accepted 16 Sep 2003, Published online: 27 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

The eIF4E-binding proteins (4E-BPs) interact with translation initiation factor 4E to inhibit translation. Their binding to eIF4E is reversed by phosphorylation of several key Ser/Thr residues. In Drosophila, S6 kinase (dS6K) and a single 4E-BP (d4E-BP) are phosphorylated via the insulin and target of rapamycin (TOR) signaling pathways. Although S6K phosphorylation is independent of phosphoinositide 3-OH kinase (PI3K) and serine/threonine protein kinase Akt, that of 4E-BP is dependent on PI3K and Akt. This difference prompted us to examine the regulation of d4E-BP in greater detail. Analysis of d4E-BP phosphorylation using site-directed mutagenesis and isoelectric focusing-sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicated that the regulatory interplay between Thr37 and Thr46 of d4E-BP is conserved in flies and that phosphorylation of Thr46 is the major phosphorylation event that regulates d4E-BP activity. We used RNA interference (RNAi) to target components of the PI3K, Akt, and TOR pathways. RNAi experiments directed at components of the insulin and TOR signaling cascades show that d4E-BP is phosphorylated in a PI3K- and Akt-dependent manner. Surprisingly, RNAi of dAkt also affected insulin-stimulated phosphorylation of dS6K, indicating that dAkt may also play a role in dS6K phosphorylation.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank C. Lister for excellent technical assistance and T. Radimerski, G. Thomas, D. Pan, and S. J. Leevers for gifts of reagents. We thank T. Radimerski and N. Hay for critically reading the manuscript.

This work was supported by grants from the National Cancer Institute of Canada and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute grant. M.M. was supported by a graduate fellowship from the Cancer Research Society.

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