Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (starvation)
24,951 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

GCN2 is a protein kinase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae that is required for increased expression of the transcriptional activator GCN4 in amino acid-starved cells. GCN2 stimulates GCN4 synthesis at the translational level by phosphorylating the alpha subunit of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 (eIF-2). We identified a truncated form of the GLC7 gene, encoding the catalytic subunit of a type 1 protein phosphatase, by its ability to restore derepression of GCN4 expression in a strain containing the partially defective gcn2-507 allele. Genetic analysis suggests that the truncated GLC7 allele has a dominant negative phenotype, reducing the level of native type 1 protein phosphatase activity in the cell. The truncated form of GLC7 does not suppress the regulatory defect associated with a gcn2 deletion or a mutation in the phosphorylation site of eIF-2 alpha (Ser-51). In addition, the presence of multiple copies of wild-type GLC7 impairs the derepression of GCN4 that occurs in response to amino acid starvation or dominant-activating mutations in GCN2. These findings suggest that the phosphatase activity of GLC7 acts in opposition to the kinase activity of GCN2 in modulating the level of eIF-2 alpha phosphorylation and the translational efficiency of GCN4 mRNA. This conclusion is supported by biochemical studies showing that the truncated GLC7 allele increases the level of eIF-2 alpha phosphorylation in the gcn2-507 mutant to a level approaching that seen in wild-type cells under starvation conditions. The truncated GLC7 allele also leads to reduced glycogen accumulation, indicating that this protein phosphatase is involved in regulating diverse metabolic pathways in yeast cells.
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PMID:Truncated protein phosphatase GLC7 restores translational activation of GCN4 expression in yeast mutants defective for the eIF-2 alpha kinase GCN2. 133 44

Levels of the mRNA encoding the catalytic subunit of protein phosphatase type-1 (PP-1cat) were reduced in skeletal muscle but not liver in response to short-term (2h) chow refeeding after prolonged (40h) starvation in the rat. This reduction did not appear to be mediated by insulin per se since streptozotocin-induced diabetes was associated with a reduction in PP-1cat levels in skeletal muscle. It is suggested that glucose levels may be one factor that modulates skeletal muscle PP-1cat mRNA levels. Despite the changes in PP-1cat mRNA levels in skeletal muscle, total protein phosphatase-1 catalytic activity was not altered by either chow refeeding or streptozotocin-diabetes. By contrast, although total hepatic PP-1cat mRNA levels were not altered in response to chow refeeding, there was a marked reduction in glycogen phosphorylase phosphatase activity in the cytosol but not in the glycogen/microsomal fraction.
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PMID:Protein phosphatase type-1 mRNA levels in response to starvation-refeeding and streptozotocin-diabetes. 754 40