What Is mTOR?
The growth-or-repair dial
mTOR — mechanistic target of rapamycin — is a cellular nutrient sensor that decides whether your cells are in "build" mode or "repair" mode. When protein, glucose, or growth signals are plentiful, mTOR switches on and cells grow. When nutrients are scarce, mTOR turns off and autophagy cleans up damaged parts.
Chronic activation speeds aging
Almost every long-lived model organism — yeast, worms, flies, mice — has reduced mTOR activity. Mice genetically engineered with lower mTOR live 20% longer. The same pattern appears when mTOR is pharmacologically suppressed with rapamycin, from middle age onwards.
Tap to learn what activates vs inhibits mTOR
Tap each factor to see how it nudges the growth-or-repair dial.
This step is interactive — open the Thier app to try it.
The longevity tension
High mTOR builds muscle, fuels sport, supports recovery. Low mTOR unlocks autophagy, repair, and longevity signalling. Humans evolved to toggle between them — fed/fasted, training/rest. The modern problem: constant snacking keeps mTOR on all day, which no evolutionary ancestor experienced.
Two complexes, two jobs: mTORC1 vs mTORC2
mTOR isn't a single switch — it sits in two distinct protein complexes. **mTORC1** (with raptor) is the nutrient sensor: amino acids and insulin activate it; it drives protein synthesis, ribosome production, and lipid synthesis. **mTORC2** (with rictor) controls cytoskeleton and **insulin signalling itself**. Rapamycin acutely inhibits mTORC1; *chronic* high-dose rapamycin also hits mTORC2, which is why long-term continuous rapamycin causes glucose intolerance. The intermittent dosing protocols (5–8 mg once weekly) try to inhibit mTORC1 without crossing into mTORC2 territory.
Counter-intuitive: leucine matters more than total protein
Conventional wisdom: "more protein = more mTOR." The mechanism is more specific. Of the 20 amino acids, **leucine alone** is the dominant mTOR activator — sensed via the Sestrin2 / GATOR2 pathway. A 30 g whey shake (~3 g leucine) hits the leucine threshold for muscle protein synthesis; a 30 g plant-protein meal often falls short because plant proteins have lower leucine density. This is why bodybuilders chase whey and BCAAs, and why pure leucine supplementation (3 g) can spike mTOR almost as hard as a full protein meal.
How the drug got its name (and why it matters)
**Rapamycin** was discovered in soil samples from **Rapa Nui (Easter Island)** in 1972 — produced by *Streptomyces hygroscopicus* bacteria. It was developed first as an anti-fungal, then as the immunosuppressant that prevents organ-transplant rejection. The longevity story came accidentally: in 2009 the NIH-funded Interventions Testing Program found that giving rapamycin to genetically heterogeneous mice **starting at 600 days old** (~middle age) extended median lifespan ~14% in females, ~9% in males. First drug to extend mammalian lifespan when started in middle age.
True or False
Statement: chronic, daily, high-dose rapamycin is the best longevity protocol because more inhibition = more autophagy.
This step is interactive — open the Thier app to try it.
Key Takeaway
mTOR isn't "good" or "bad" — it's a switch you need both sides of. mTORC1 (the nutrient-sensing complex) is what diet, fasting, training, and rapamycin actually toggle; mTORC2 you mostly want to leave alone. Aim for clean on/off cycling: fed when you're training + recovering, fasted + plant-forward for the rest. That toggling pattern is what long-lived species share — and what intermittent rapamycin pharmacologically copies.