Abstract

Nutritional stress caused by amino acid starvation involves a coordinated cellular response that includes the global decrease of protein synthesis and the increased production of cell defense proteins. Part of this response is the induction of transport system A for neutral amino acids that leads to the recovery of cell volume and amino acid levels once extracellular amino acid availability is restored. Hypertonic stress also increases system A activity as a mechanism to promote a rapid recovery of cell volume. Both a starvation-dependent and a hypertonic increase of system A transport activity are due to the induction of SNAT2, the ubiquitous member of SLC38 family. The molecular mechanisms underlying SNAT2 induction were investigated in tissue culture cells. We show that the increase in system A transport activity and SNAT2 mRNA levels upon amino acid starvation were blunted in cells with a mutant eIF2α that cannot be phosphorylated. In contrast, the induction of system A activity and SNAT2 mRNA levels by hypertonic stress were independent of eIF2α phosphorylation. The translational control of the SNAT2 mRNA during amino acid starvation was also investigated. It is shown that the 5′-untranslated region contains an internal ribosome entry site that is constitutively active in amino acid-fed and -deficient cells and in a cell-free system. We also show that amino acid starvation caused a 2.5-fold increase in mRNA and protein expression from a reporter construct containing both the SNAT2 intronic amino acid response element and the SNAT2-untranslated region. We conclude that the adaptive response of system A activity to amino acid starvation requires eukaryotic initiation factor 2α phosphorylation, increased gene transcription, and internal ribosome entry site-mediated translation. In contrast, the response to hypertonic stress does not involve eukaryotic initiation factor 2α phosphorylation, suggesting that SNAT2 expression can be modulated by specific signaling pathways in response to different stresses.

Highlights

  • The severe nutritional stress caused by amino acid starvation triggers several adaptive changes

  • We show that the increase in system A transport activity and SNAT2 mRNA levels upon amino acid starvation were blunted in cells with a mutant eIF2␣ that cannot be phosphorylated

  • To test this hypothesis we studied the accumulation of SNAT2 mRNA in mouse embryonic fibroblast cells (MEFs) homozygous for a Ser-51 to Ala mutation in eIF2␣ (A/A) and wild type MEFs (S/S) during amino acid starvation and hypertonic stress

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Summary

Introduction

The severe nutritional stress caused by amino acid starvation triggers several adaptive changes. We show that the increase in system A transport activity and SNAT2 mRNA levels upon amino acid starvation were blunted in cells with a mutant eIF2␣ that cannot be phosphorylated. We demonstrate that eIF2␣ phosphorylation is required for the increase of SNAT2 expression and the maintenance of cell viability during amino acid starvation but not hypertonic stress.

Results
Conclusion

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