Carson Thoreen, PhD
Associate Professor Term of Cellular & Molecular PhysiologyCards
About
Research
Overview
The mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway is an evolutionarily conserved master regulator of cell growth with important roles in metabolism, aging and cancer. The pathway senses nutrient and growth signals, and responds to these by regulating many major metabolic pathways, but particularly mRNA translation. We found that acute inhibition of mTOR selectively inhibits the translation of large class of mRNAs containing a terminal oligopyrimidine (TOP) motif at the 5’ terminus by disrupting the mRNA cap-binding complex, eIF4F. The mTOR pathway has many additional targets in the translational machinery, but the functional significance of these is unknown. We want to understand how mTOR-regulated translational mechanisms work in molecular detail, what features in mRNAs determine their dependence on mTOR activity, and how these controls are employed physiologically.
Medical Research Interests
News
News
- January 23, 2022Source: YaleNews
Yale Researchers Track the Lifespan and Myriad Functions of mRNA
- January 09, 2020
Cellular and Molecular Physiology Annual Retreat 2019
- December 06, 2018
Cellular and Molecular Physiology Annual Retreat 2018
- September 25, 2018
Faculty and trainees from across Connecticut assemble at the Yale Center for RNA Science and Medicine’s 7th Annual Retreat
Get In Touch
Contacts
Locations
Sterling Hall of Medicine, B-Wing
Academic Office
333 Cedar Street, Ste 163 B
New Haven, CT 06510