- Shin, Hijai R;
- Citron, Y Rose;
- Wang, Lei;
- Tribouillard, Laura;
- Goul, Claire S;
- Stipp, Robin;
- Sugasawa, Yusuke;
- Jain, Aakriti;
- Samson, Nolwenn;
- Lim, Chun-Yan;
- Davis, Oliver B;
- Castaneda-Carpio, David;
- Qian, Mingxing;
- Nomura, Daniel K;
- Perera, Rushika M;
- Park, Eunyong;
- Covey, Douglas F;
- Laplante, Mathieu;
- Evers, Alex S;
- Zoncu, Roberto
Lysosomes coordinate cellular metabolism and growth upon sensing of essential nutrients, including cholesterol. Through bioinformatic analysis of lysosomal proteomes, we identified lysosomal cholesterol signaling (LYCHOS, previously annotated as G protein-coupled receptor 155), a multidomain transmembrane protein that enables cholesterol-dependent activation of the master growth regulator, the protein kinase mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1). Cholesterol bound to the amino-terminal permease-like region of LYCHOS, and mutating this site impaired mTORC1 activation. At high cholesterol concentrations, LYCHOS bound to the GATOR1 complex, a guanosine triphosphatase (GTPase)-activating protein for the Rag GTPases, through a conserved cytoplasm-facing loop. By sequestering GATOR1, LYCHOS promotes cholesterol- and Rag-dependent recruitment of mTORC1 to lysosomes. Thus, LYCHOS functions in a lysosomal pathway for cholesterol sensing and couples cholesterol concentrations to mTORC1-dependent anabolic signaling.