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A feedback transcriptional mechanism controls the level of the arginine/lysine transporter cat-1 during amino acid starvation

  1. Author:
    Lopez, A. B.
    Wang, C. P.
    Huang, C. C.
    Yaman, I.
    Li, Y.
    Chakravarty, K.
    Johnson, P. F.
    Chiang, C. M.
    Snider, M. D.
    Wek, R. C.
    Hatzoglou, M.
  2. Author Address

    Case Western Reserve Univ, Sch Med, Dept Nutr, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA. Case Western Reserve Univ, Sch Med, Dept Biochem, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA. NCI, Lab Prot Dynam & Signaling, Frederick, MD 21702 USA. Indiana Univ, Sch Med, Dept Biochem & Mol Biol, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA.;Hatzoglou, M, Case Western Reserve Univ, Sch Med, Dept Nutr, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA.;mxh8@case.edu
    1. Year: 2007
    2. Date: Feb
  1. Journal: Biochemical Journal
    1. 402
    2. Pages: 163-173
  2. Type of Article: Article
  3. ISSN: 0264-6021
  1. Abstract:

    The adaptive response to amino acid limitation in mammalian cells inhibits global protein synthesis and promotes the expression of proteins that protect cells from stress. The arginine/lysine transporter, cat-1, is induced during amino acid starvation by transcriptional and post-transcriptional mechanisms. It is shown in the present study that the transient induction of cat-1 transcription is regulated by the stress response pathway that involves phosphorylation of the translation initiation factor, eIF2 (eukaryotic initiation factor-2). This phosphorylation induces expression of the bZIP (basic leucine zipper protein) transcription factors C/ EBP (CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein)-beta and ATF (activating transcription factor) 4, which in turn induces ATF3. Transfection experiments in control and mutant cells, and chromatin immuno-precipitations showed that ATF4 activates, whereas ATF3 represses cat-1 transcription, via an AARE (amino acid response element), TGATGAAAC, in the first exon of the cat-1 gene, which functions both in the endogenous and in a heterologous promoter. ATF4 and C/EBP beta activated transcription when expressed in transfected cells and they bound as heterodimers to the AARE in vitro. The induction of transcription by ATF4 was inhibited by ATF3, which also bound to the AARE as a heterodimer with C/EBP beta. These results suggest that the transient increase in cat-1 transcription is due to transcriptional activation caused by ATF4 followed by transcriptional repression by ATF3 via a feedback mechanism.

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External Sources

  1. DOI: 10.1042/bj20060941
  2. WOS: 000244284400017

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