Monoclonal antibodies are high value agents used for disease therapy (‘biologic drugs’) or as diagnostic tools which are widely used in the health care sector. They are generally manufactured in mammalian cells, in particular Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells cultured in defined media, and are harvested from the medium. Rheb is a small GTPase which, when bound to GTP, activates mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1), a protein kinase that drives anabolic processes including protein synthesis and ribosome biogenesis. Here we show that certain constitutively-active mutants of Rheb drive faster protein synthesis in CHO cells and increase the expression of proteins involved in the processing of secreted proteins via the endoplasmic reticulum, which expands in response to expression of Rheb. Active Rheb mutants, in particular Rheb[T23M], drive increased cell number under serum-free conditions similar to those used in the biotechnology industry. Rheb[T23M] also enhances the expression of the reporter protein luciferase and, especially strongly, the secreted Gaussia luciferase. Moreover, Rheb[T23M] markedly (2-3 fold) enhances the amount of this luciferase and of a model immunoglobulin into the medium. Our data clearly demonstrate that expressing Rheb[T23M] in CHO cells provides a simple approach to promoting cell growth in defined medium and the production of secreted proteins of high commercial value