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Dive into the research topics where Shomit Sengupta is active.

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Featured researches published by Shomit Sengupta.


Molecular Cell | 2010

Regulation of the mTOR Complex 1 Pathway by Nutrients, Growth Factors, and Stress

Shomit Sengupta; Timothy R. Peterson; David M. Sabatini

The large serine/threonine protein kinase mTOR regulates cellular and organismal homeostasis by coordinating anabolic and catabolic processes with nutrient, energy, and oxygen availability and growth factor signaling. Cells and organisms experience a wide variety of insults that perturb the homeostatic systems governed by mTOR and therefore require appropriate stress responses to allow cells to continue to function. Stress can manifest from an excess or lack of upstream signals or as a result of genetic perturbations in upstream effectors of the pathway. mTOR nucleates two large protein complexes that are important nodes in the pathways that help buffer cells from stresses, and are implicated in the progression of stress-associated phenotypes and diseases, such as aging, tumorigenesis, and diabetes. This review focuses on the key components of the mTOR complex 1 pathway and on how various stresses impinge upon them.


Nature | 2002

p63 and p73 are required for p53-dependent apoptosis in response to DNA damage

Elsa R. Flores; Kenneth Y. Tsai; Denise Crowley; Shomit Sengupta; Annie Yang; Frank McKeon; Tyler Jacks

The tumour-suppressor gene p53 is frequently mutated in human cancers and is important in the cellular response to DNA damage. Although the p53 family members p63 and p73 are structurally related to p53, they have not been directly linked to tumour suppression, although they have been implicated in apoptosis. Given the similarity between this family of genes and the ability of p63 and p73 to transactivate p53 target genes, we explore here their role in DNA damage-induced apoptosis. Mouse embryo fibroblasts deficient for one or a combination of p53 family members were sensitized to undergo apoptosis through the expression of the adenovirus E1A oncogene. While using the E1A system facilitated our ability to perform biochemical analyses, we also examined the functions of p63 and p73 using an in vivo system in which apoptosis has been shown to be dependent on p53. Using both systems, we show here that the combined loss of p63 and p73 results in the failure of cells containing functional p53 to undergo apoptosis in response to DNA damage.


Cell | 2011

mTOR Complex 1 Regulates Lipin 1 Localization to Control the SREBP Pathway

Timothy R. Peterson; Shomit Sengupta; Thurl E. Harris; Anne E. Carmack; Seong A. Kang; Eric Balderas; David A. Guertin; Katherine L. Madden; Anne E. Carpenter; Brian N. Finck; David M. Sabatini

The nutrient- and growth factor-responsive kinase mTOR complex 1 (mTORC1) regulates many processes that control growth, including protein synthesis, autophagy, and lipogenesis. Through unknown mechanisms, mTORC1 promotes the function of SREBP, a master regulator of lipo- and sterolgenic gene transcription. Here, we demonstrate that mTORC1 regulates SREBP by controlling the nuclear entry of lipin 1, a phosphatidic acid phosphatase. Dephosphorylated, nuclear, catalytically active lipin 1 promotes nuclear remodeling and mediates the effects of mTORC1 on SREBP target gene, SREBP promoter activity, and nuclear SREBP protein abundance. Inhibition of mTORC1 in the liver significantly impairs SREBP function and makes mice resistant, in a lipin 1-dependent fashion, to the hepatic steatosis and hypercholesterolemia induced by a high-fat and -cholesterol diet. These findings establish lipin 1 as a key component of the mTORC1-SREBP pathway.


Nature | 2010

mTORC1 controls fasting-induced ketogenesis and its modulation by ageing

Shomit Sengupta; Timothy R. Peterson; Mathieu Laplante; Stephanie Oh; David M. Sabatini

The multi-component mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) kinase is the central node of a mammalian pathway that coordinates cell growth with the availability of nutrients, energy and growth factors. Progress has been made in the identification of mTORC1 pathway components and in understanding their functions in cells, but there is relatively little known about the role of the pathway in vivo. Specifically, we have little knowledge regarding the role mTOCR1 has in liver physiology. In fasted animals, the liver performs numerous functions that maintain whole-body homeostasis, including the production of ketone bodies for peripheral tissues to use as energy sources. Here we show that mTORC1 controls ketogenesis in mice in response to fasting. We find that liver-specific loss of TSC1 (tuberous sclerosis 1), an mTORC1 inhibitor, leads to a fasting-resistant increase in liver size, and to a pronounced defect in ketone body production and ketogenic gene expression on fasting. The loss of raptor (regulatory associated protein of mTOR, complex 1) an essential mTORC1 component, has the opposite effects. In addition, we find that the inhibition of mTORC1 is required for the fasting-induced activation of PPARα (peroxisome proliferator activated receptor α), the master transcriptional activator of ketogenic genes, and that suppression of NCoR1 (nuclear receptor co-repressor 1), a co-repressor of PPARα, reactivates ketogenesis in cells and livers with hyperactive mTORC1 signalling. Like livers with activated mTORC1, livers from aged mice have a defect in ketogenesis, which correlates with an increase in mTORC1 signalling. Moreover, we show that the suppressive effects of mTORC1 activation and ageing on PPARα activity and ketone production are not additive, and that mTORC1 inhibition is sufficient to prevent the ageing-induced defect in ketogenesis. Thus, our findings reveal that mTORC1 is a key regulator of PPARα function and hepatic ketogenesis and suggest a role for mTORC1 activity in promoting the ageing of the liver.


Nature | 2012

mTORC1 in the Paneth cell niche couples intestinal stem-cell function to calorie intake

Ömer H. Yilmaz; Pekka Katajisto; Dudley W. Lamming; Yetis Gultekin; Khristian E. Bauer-Rowe; Shomit Sengupta; Kivanc Birsoy; Abdulmetin Dursun; V. Onur Yilmaz; Martin K. Selig; G. Petur Nielsen; Mari Mino-Kenudson; Lawrence R. Zukerberg; Atul K. Bhan; Vikram Deshpande; David M. Sabatini

How adult tissue stem and niche cells respond to the nutritional state of an organism is not well understood. Here we find that Paneth cells, a key constituent of the mammalian intestinal stem-cell (ISC) niche, augment stem-cell function in response to calorie restriction. Calorie restriction acts by reducing mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) signalling in Paneth cells, and the ISC-enhancing effects of calorie restriction can be mimicked by rapamycin. Calorie intake regulates mTORC1 in Paneth cells, but not ISCs, and forced activation of mTORC1 in Paneth cells during calorie restriction abolishes the ISC-augmenting effects of the niche. Finally, increased expression of bone stromal antigen 1 (Bst1) in Paneth cells—an ectoenzyme that produces the paracrine factor cyclic ADP ribose—mediates the effects of calorie restriction and rapamycin on ISC function. Our findings establish that mTORC1 non-cell-autonomously regulates stem-cell self-renewal, and highlight a significant role of the mammalian intestinal niche in coupling stem-cell function to organismal physiology.


PLOS Genetics | 2009

p63 and p73 Transcriptionally Regulate Genes Involved in DNA Repair

Yu Li Lin; Shomit Sengupta; Katherine Gurdziel; George W. Bell; Tyler Jacks; Elsa R. Flores

The p53 family activates many of the same genes in response to DNA damage. Because p63 and p73 have structural differences from p53 and play distinct biological functions in development and metastasis, it is likely that they activate a unique transcriptional network. Therefore, we performed a genome-wide analysis using cells lacking the p53 family members after treatment with DNA damage. We identified over 100 genes involved in multiple pathways that were uniquely regulated by p63 or p73, and not p53. Further validation indicated that BRCA2, Rad51, and mre11 are direct transcriptional targets of p63 and p73. Additionally, cells deficient for p63 and p73 are impaired in DNA repair and p63+/−;p73+/− mice develop mammary tumors suggesting a novel mechanism whereby p63 and p73 suppress tumorigenesis.


Genome Research | 2011

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

Robert A. Lindquist; Kathleen Ottina; Douglas B. Wheeler; Peggy P. Hsu; Carson C. Thoreen; David A. Guertin; Siraj M. Ali; Shomit Sengupta; Yoav D. Shaul; Michael R. Lamprecht; Katherine L. Madden; Adam Papallo; Thouis R. Jones; David M. Sabatini; Anne E. Carpenter

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.


Molecular Cell | 2006

Prolonged Rapamycin Treatment Inhibits mTORC2 Assembly and Akt/PKB

Dos D. Sarbassov; Siraj M. Ali; Shomit Sengupta; Joon Ho Sheen; Peggy P. Hsu; Alex F. Bagley; Andrew L. Markhard; David M. Sabatini


Cancer Cell | 2005

Tumor predisposition in mice mutant for p63 and p73: Evidence for broader tumor suppressor functions for the p53 family

Elsa R. Flores; Shomit Sengupta; John B. Miller; Jamie J. Newman; Roderick T. Bronson; Denise Crowley; Annie Yang; Frank McKeon; Tyler Jacks


International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents | 2004

Infectious response to E. coli: molecular and genetic pathways

Anthony J. Schaeffer; David J. Klumpp; Adam C. Weiser; Shomit Sengupta; Sarah G. Forrestal; Robert A. Batler

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David M. Sabatini

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Elsa R. Flores

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Timothy R. Peterson

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Tyler Jacks

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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David A. Guertin

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Denise Crowley

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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