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AgtA, the dicarboxylic amino acid transporter of Aspergillus nidulans, is concertedly down-regulated by exquisite sensitivity to nitrogen metabolite repression and ammonium-elicited endocytosis

Authors :
Apostolaki, Angeliki
Erpapazoglou, Zoi
Harispe, Laura
Billini, Maria
Kafasla, Panagiota
Kizis, Dimosthenis
Peñalva, Miguel Ángel
Scazzocchio, Claudio
Sophianopoulou, Vicky
Apostolaki, Angeliki
Erpapazoglou, Zoi
Harispe, Laura
Billini, Maria
Kafasla, Panagiota
Kizis, Dimosthenis
Peñalva, Miguel Ángel
Scazzocchio, Claudio
Sophianopoulou, Vicky
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

We identified agtA, a gene that encodes the specific dicarboxylic amino acid transporter of Aspergillus nidulans. The deletion of the gene resulted in loss of utilization of aspartate as a nitrogen source and of aspartate uptake, while not completely abolishing glutamate utilization. Kinetic constants showed that AgtA is a high-affinity dicarboxylic amino acid transporter and are in agreement with those determined for a cognate transporter activity identified previously. The gene is extremely sensitive to nitrogen metabolite repression, depends on AreA for its expression, and is seemingly independent from specific induction. We showed that the localization of AgtA in the plasma membrane necessitates the ShrA protein and that an active process elicited by ammonium results in internalization and targeting of AgtA to the vacuole, followed by degradation. Thus, nitrogen metabolite repression and ammonium-promoted vacuolar degradation act in concert to downregulate dicarboxylic amino acid transport activity.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1103409878
Document Type :
Electronic Resource