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Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab (January 21, 2009). doi:10.1152/ajpendo.91002.2008
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Submitted on December 15, 2008
Revised on January 12, 2009
Accepted on January 13, 2009

Amino Acid Transceptors: Gate Keepers Of Nutrient Exchange And Regulators Of Nutrient Signaling

Harinder Singh Hundal1* and Peter Maving Taylor2

1 The University of Dundee
2 University of Dundee

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: h.s.hundal{at}dundee.ac.uk.

Amino acid transporters at the surface of cells are in an ideal location to relay nutritional information, as well as nutrients themselves, to the cell interior. These transporters are able to modulate signaling downstream of intracellular amino acid receptors by regulating intracellular amino acid concentrations through processes of coupled transport. The concept of dual function amino acid transporter - receptor (or "transceptor") proteins is well-established in primitive eukaryotes such as yeast, where detection of extracellular amino acid deficiency leads to upregulation of proteins involved in biosynthesis and transport of the deficient amino acid(s). The evolution of the "extracellular milieu" and nutrient-regulated endocrine controls in higher eukaryotes, alongside their frequent inability to synthesize all proteinaceous amino acids (and hence the requirement for indispensable amino acids in their diet), appears to have lessened the priority of extracellular amino acid sensing as a stimulus for metabolic signals. Nevertheless, recent studies of amino acid transporters in flies and mammalian cell-lines have revealed perhaps unanticipated "echoes" of these transceptor functions which are revealed by cellular stresses (notably starvation) or gene modification / silencing. APC-transporter superfamily members including slimfast, path and SNAT2 all appear capable of sensing and signaling amino acid availability to the TOR pathway, possibly through PI3K dependent mechanisms. We hypothesize (by extrapolation from knowledge of the yeast Ssy1 transceptor) that, at least for SNAT2, the transceptor discriminates between extracellular and intracellular amino acid stimuli when evoking a signal.




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