Gut microbiota and mTOR signaling: Insight on a new pathophysiological interaction
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Academic Press
Abstract
The gut microbiota plays a substantial role in regulating the host metabolic and immune functions. Dysbiosis, resulting from disruption of gut microbiota, predisposes many morbid pathologies like obesity and its associated comorbidities, diabetes and inflammatory conditions including some types of cancer. There are numerous proposed signaling pathways through which alterations in gut microbiota and its metabolites can disturb the host's normal physiological functions. Interestingly, many of these processes happen to be controlled by the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR). The mTOR pathway responds to environmental changes and regulates accordingly many intracellular processes such as transcription, translation, cell growth, cytoskeletal organization and autophagy. In this review, we aim to highlight the cross-talk between the gut microbiota and the mTOR pathway and discuss how this emerging field of research gives a beautiful insight into how the mentioned cross-talk impacts the body's homeostasis thus leading to undesirable complications including obesity, diabetes, colon and pancreatic cancer, immune system malfunctioning and ageing. Although there are a limited number of studies investigating the crosstalk between the gut microbiota and the mTOR pathway, the results obtained so far are enough to elucidate the key role of the mTOR signaling in microbiota-associated metabolic and immune regulations. © 2018 Elsevier Ltd
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Butyrate, Colon cancer, Diabetes, Gut microbiota, Mtor, Obesity, Animals, Butyrates, Cellular senescence, Colonic neoplasms, Diabetes complications, Gastrointestinal microbiome, Gastrointestinal tract, Homeostasis, Humans, Immune system, Immunity, Inflammation, Metabolic diseases, Pancreatic neoplasms, Signal transduction, Tor serine-threonine kinases, Adenylate kinase, Initiation factor 4e binding protein 1, Mammalian target of rapamycin, Mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1, Mammalian target of rapamycin complex 2, Messenger rna, Protein kinase b, Toll like receptor 4, Transcription factor, Transcription factor skn 1, Tuberin, Unclassified drug, Butyric acid derivative, Target of rapamycin kinase, Aging, Akkermansia muciniphila, Bacterium, Caenorhabditis elegans, Cancer inhibition, Diabetes mellitus, Feces microflora, Glucose tolerance, Goblet cell, Human, Immunoregulation, Intestine flora, Metabolic regulation, Metabolite, Mtor signaling, Nonhuman, Pancreas cancer, Priority journal, Protein phosphorylation, Regulatory t lymphocyte, Review, Abnormalities, Animal, Cell aging, Colon tumor, Complication, Diabetic complication, Immunology, Metabolic disorder, Microbiology, Pancreas tumor, Pathophysiology, Physiology