Literature DB >> 7493965

Essential amino acids regulate fatty acid synthase expression through an uncharged transfer RNA-dependent mechanism.

S M Dudek1, C F Semenkovich.   

Abstract

To better understand the regulation of gene expression by amino acids, we studied the effects of these macronutrients on fatty acid synthase (FAS), an enzyme crucial for energy storage. When HepG2 cells were fed serum-free media selectively deficient in each amino acid, the omission of any single classic essential amino acid as well as Arg or His (essential in some rapidly growing cells) resulted in FAS mRNA levels that were about half of those in complete medium. Control message levels were unaffected and omission of nonessential amino acids did not alter FAS expression. FAS mRNA levels peaked 12-16 h after feeding complete and Ser (nonessential)-deficient media but did not increase in cells fed Lys (essential)-deficient medium. With Lys, FAS mRNA increased over the physiologic concentration range of 15-150 microM, and low concentrations of lysine decreased FAS but not apoB protein mass. Transcription inhibitors mimicked treatment with Lys-deficient media, and nuclear run-off assays showed that Lys-deficient media abolished FAS but not apoB transcription. After treatment with Lys-deficient media, the intracellular Lys pool was rapidly depleted in association with an increase of uncharged (deacylated) tRNA Lys from < 1 to 64% of available tRNA Lys. Even in the presence of the essential amino acid His, increasing the level of uncharged tRNA His with histidinol, a competitive inhibitor of the histidinyl-tRNA synthetase, blocked FAS expression. Tyrosinol treatment did not alter FAS mRNA levels. These results suggest that essential amino acids regulate FAS expression by altering uncharged tRNA levels, a novel mechanism for nutrient control of gene expression in mammalian cells.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7493965     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.270.49.29323

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  13 in total

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Authors:  John D Bagert; Yushu J Xie; Michael J Sweredoski; Yutao Qi; Sonja Hess; Erin M Schuman; David A Tirrell
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4.  FGF21 is an endocrine signal of protein restriction.

Authors:  Thomas Laeger; Tara M Henagan; Diana C Albarado; Leanne M Redman; George A Bray; Robert C Noland; Heike Münzberg; Susan M Hutson; Thomas W Gettys; Michael W Schwartz; Christopher D Morrison
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5.  Effect of anaplerotic fluxes and amino acid availability on hepatic lipoapoptosis.

Authors:  Yasushi Noguchi; Jamey D Young; Jose O Aleman; Michael E Hansen; Joanne K Kelleher; Gregory Stephanopoulos
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Review 6.  Asparagine synthetase: regulation by cell stress and involvement in tumor biology.

Authors:  Mukundh N Balasubramanian; Elizabeth A Butterworth; Michael S Kilberg
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7.  Compromised responses to dietary methionine restriction in adipose tissue but not liver of ob/ob mice.

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8.  Brain fatty acid synthase activates PPARalpha to maintain energy homeostasis.

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9.  The impact of dietary methionine restriction on biomarkers of metabolic health.

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10.  Leucine deprivation decreases fat mass by stimulation of lipolysis in white adipose tissue and upregulation of uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) in brown adipose tissue.

Authors:  Ying Cheng; Qingshu Meng; Chunxia Wang; Houkai Li; Zhiying Huang; Shanghai Chen; Fei Xiao; Feifan Guo
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