Abstract

IMPACT, a highly conserved protein, is an inhibitor of the eIF2α kinase GCN2. In mammals, it is preferentially expressed in neurons. Knock-down of IMPACT expression in neuronal cells increases basal GCN2 activation and eIF2α phosphorylation and decreases translation initiation. In the mouse brain, IMPACT is particularly abundant in the hypothalamus. Here we describe that the lack of IMPACT in mice affects hypothalamic functions. Impact-/- mice (Imp-KO) are viable and have no apparent major phenotypic defect. The hypothalamus in these animals shows increased levels of eIF2α phosphorylation, as expected from the described role of IMPACT in inhibiting GCN2 and from its abundance in this brain region. When fed a normal chow, animals lacking IMPACT weight slightly less than wild-type mice. When fed a high-fat diet, Imp-KO animals gain substantially less weight due to lower food intake when compared to wild-type mice. STAT3 signaling was depressed in Imp-KO animals even though leptin levels were identical to the wild-type mice. This finding supports the observation that Imp-KO mice have defective thermoregulation upon fasting. This phenotype was partially dependent on GCN2, whereas the lean phenotype was independent of GCN2. Taken together, our results indicate that IMPACT contributes to GCN2-dependent and -independent mechanisms involved in the regulation of autonomic functions in response to energy availability.

Highlights

  • The protein IMPACT was first identified as the product of an imprinted gene in mice, containing a so-called "ancient domain" due to its strong similarity with bacterial proteins [1]

  • To determine whether the genomic alteration resulted in the complete lack of the protein IMPACT, different organs were obtained from these animals and subjected to immunoblots using anti-IMPACT antibodies

  • We have previously shown that IMPACT is highly abundant in the hypothalamus

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Summary

Introduction

The protein IMPACT was first identified as the product of an imprinted gene in mice, containing a so-called "ancient domain" due to its strong similarity with bacterial proteins [1] Another domain of the IMPACT protein and of its yeast ortholog, Yih, shares sequence similarity with a region present in GCN2, a kinase that regulates protein synthesis. GCN2 is one of the four kinases in mammals, activated by different stress conditions, that phosphorylate the translation initiation factor eIF2 at residue Ser of its alpha subunit, triggering a program known as the integrated stress response (ISR) (reviewed in [8, 9]). Mammalian GCN2 controls feeding behavior and memory, immune system regulation and cancer cell survival (reviewed in [12])

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