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1.
Alpha lipoic acid (lipoate [LA]), a cofactor of alpha-ketodehydrogenase, exhibits unique antioxidant properties. Recent studies suggest a direct effect of LA on glucose metabolism in both human and experimental diabetes. This study examines the possibility that LA positively affects glucose homeostasis in streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats by altering skeletal muscle glucose utilization. Blood glucose concentration in STZ-diabetic rats following 10 days of intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection of LA 30 mg/kg was reduced compared with that in vehicle-treated diabetic rats (495 +/- 131 v 641 +/- 125 mg/dL in fed state, P = .003, and 189 +/- 48 v 341 +/- 36 mg/dL after 12-hour fast, P = .001). No effect of LA on plasma insulin was observed. Gastrocnemius muscle crude membrane GLUT4 protein was elevated both in control and in diabetic rats treated with LA by 1.5- and 2.8-fold, respectively, without significant changes in GLUT4 mRNA levels. Gastrocnemius lactic acid was increased in diabetic rats (19.9 +/- 5.5 v 10.4 +/- 2.8 mumol/g muscle, P < .05 v nondiabetic rats), and was normal in LA-treated diabetic rats (9.1 +/- 5.0 mumol/g muscle). Insulin-stimulated 2-deoxyglucose (2 DG) uptake into isolated soleus muscle was reduced in diabetic rats compared with the control group (474 +/- 15 v 568 +/- 52 pmol/mg muscle 30 min, respectively, P = .05). LA treatment prevented this reduction, resulting in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake comparable to that of nondiabetic animals. These results suggest that daily LA treatment may reduce blood glucose concentrations in STZ-diabetic rats by enhancing muscle GLUT4 protein content and by increasing muscle glucose utilization.  相似文献   

2.
Dehydroascorbic acid (DHA) is rapidly taken up by cells and reduced to ascorbic acid (AA). Using the Xenopus laevis oocyte expression system we examined transport of DHA and AA via glucose transporter isoforms GLUT1-5 and SGLT1. The apparent Km of DHA transport via GLUT1 and GLUT3 was 1.1 +/- 0.2 and 1.7 +/- 0.3 mM, respectively. High performance liquid chromatography analysis confirmed 100% reduction of DHA to AA within oocytes. GLUT4 transport of DHA was only 2-4-fold above control and transport kinetics could not be calculated. GLUT2, GLUT5, and SGLT1 did not transport DHA and none of the isoforms transported AA. Radiolabeled sugar transport confirmed transporter function and identity of all cDNA clones was confirmed by restriction fragment mapping. GLUT1 and GLUT3 cDNA were further verified by polymerase chain reaction. DHA transport activity in both GLUT1 and GLUT3 was inhibited by 2-deoxyglucose, D-glucose, and 3-O-methylglucose among other hexoses while fructose and L-glucose showed no inhibition. Inhibition by the endofacial inhibitor, cytochalasin B, was non-competitive and inhibition by the exofacial inhibitor, 4,6-O-ethylidene-alpha-glucose, was competitive. Expressed mutant constructs of GLUT1 and GLUT3 did not transport DHA. DHA and 2-deoxyglucose uptake by Chinese hamster ovary cells overexpressing either GLUT1 or GLUT3 was increased 2-8-fold over control cells. These studies suggest GLUT1 and GLUT3 isoforms are the specific glucose transporter isoforms which mediate DHA transport and subsequent accumulation of AA.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of insulin on the rates of glucose disposal were studied in soleus muscles isolated from hyper- or hypothyroid rats. Treatment with triiodothyronine for 5 or 10 days decreased the sensitivity of glycogen synthesis but increased the sensitivity of lactate formation to insulin. The sensitivity of 3-O methylglucose to insulin was increased only after 10 days of treatment and was accompanied by an increase in the sensitivity of 2-deoxyglucose phosphorylation; however, 2-deoxyglucose and glucose 6-phosphate in response to insulin remained unaltered. In hypothyroidism, insulin-stimulated rates of 3-O-methylglucose transport and 2-deoxyglucose phosphorylation were decreased; however, at basal levels of insulin, 3-O-methylglucose transport was increased, while 2-deoxyglucose phosphorylation was normal. In these muscles, the sensitivity of lactate formation to insulin was decreased; this defect was improved after incubation of the muscles with prostaglandin E2. The results suggest: (a) in hyperthyroidism, insulin-stimulated rates of glucose utilization in muscle to form lactate are increased mainly because of a decrease in glycogen synthesis; when hyperthyroidism progresses in severity, increases in the sensitivity of glucose transport to insulin and in the activity of hexokinase may also be involved; (b) in hypothyroidism, the decrease in insulin-stimulated rates of glucose utilization is caused by decreased rates of glycolysis; (c) prostaglandins may be involved in the changes in sensitivity of glucose utilization to insulin observed in muscle in altered thyroid states.  相似文献   

4.
We tested the hypothesis that endothelium-dependent vasodilatation is a determinant of insulin resistance of skeletal muscle glucose uptake in human obesity. Eight obese (age 26+/-1 yr, body mass index 37+/-1 kg/m2) and seven nonobese males (25+/-2 yr, 23+/-1 kg/m2) received an infusion of bradykinin into the femoral artery of one leg under intravenously maintained normoglycemic hyperinsulinemic conditions. Blood flow was measured simultaneously in the bradykinin and insulin- and the insulin-infused leg before and during hyperinsulinemia using [15O]-labeled water ([15O]H2O) and positron emission tomography (PET). Glucose uptake was quantitated immediately thereafter in both legs using [18F]- fluoro-deoxy-glucose ([18F]FDG) and PET. Whole body insulin-stimulated glucose uptake was lower in the obese (507+/-47 mumol/m2 . min) than the nonobese (1205+/-97 micromol/m2 . min, P < 0.001) subjects. Muscle glucose uptake in the insulin-infused leg was 66% lower in the obese (19+/-4 micromol/kg muscle . min) than in the nonobese (56+/-9 micromol/kg muscle . min, P < 0.005) subjects. Bradykinin increased blood flow during hyperinsulinemia in the obese subjects by 75% from 16+/-1 to 28+/-4 ml/kg muscle . min (P < 0.05), and in the normal subjects by 65% from 23+/-3 to 38+/-9 ml/kg muscle . min (P < 0.05). However, this flow increase required twice as much bradykinin in the obese (51+/-3 microg over 100 min) than in the normal (25+/-1 mug, P < 0.001) subjects. In the obese subjects, blood flow in the bradykinin and insulin-infused leg (28+/-4 ml/kg muscle . min) was comparable to that in the insulin-infused leg in the normal subjects during hyperinsulinemia (24+/-5 ml/kg muscle . min). Despite this, insulin-stimulated glucose uptake remained unchanged in the bradykinin and insulin-infused leg (18+/-4 mumol/kg . min) compared with the insulin-infused leg (19+/-4 micromol/kg muscle . min) in the obese subjects. Insulin-stimulated glucose uptake also was unaffected by bradykinin in the normal subjects (58+/-10 vs. 56+/-9 micromol/kg . min, bradykinin and insulin versus insulin leg). These data demonstrate that obesity is characterized by two distinct defects in skeletal muscle: insulin resistance of cellular glucose extraction and impaired endothelium-dependent vasodilatation. Since a 75% increase in blood flow does not alter glucose uptake, insulin resistance in obesity cannot be overcome by normalizing muscle blood flow.  相似文献   

5.
In humans, ingestion of carbohydrates causes an increase in blood glucose concentration, pancreatic insulin release, and increased glucose disposal into skeletal muscle. The underlying molecular mechanism for the increase in glucose disposal in human skeletal muscle after carbohydrate ingestion is not known. We determined whether glucose ingestion increases glucose uptake in human skeletal muscle by increasing the number of glucose transporter proteins at the cell surface and/or by increasing the activity of the glucose transporter proteins in the plasma membrane. Under local anesthesia, approximately 1 g of vastus lateralis muscle was obtained from six healthy subjects before and 60 min after ingestion of a 75-g glucose load. Plasma membranes were isolated from the skeletal muscle and used to measure GLUT4 and GLUT1 content and glucose transport in plasma membrane vesicles. Glucose ingestion increased the plasma membrane content of GLUT4 per gram muscle (3,524 +/- 729 vs. 4,473 +/- 952 arbitrary units for basal and 60 min, respectively; P < 0.005). Transporter-mediated glucose transport into plasma membrane vesicles was also significantly increased (130 +/- 11 vs. 224 +/- 38 pmol.mg-1.s-1; P < 0.017), whereas the calculated ratio of glucose transport to GLUT4, an indication of transporter functional activity, was not significantly increased 60 min after glucose ingestion (2.3 +/- 0.4 vs. 3.0 +/- 0.5 pmol.GLUT4 arbitrary units-1.s-1; P < 0.17). These results demonstrate that oral ingestion of glucose increases the rate of glucose transport across the plasma membrane and causes GLUT4 translocation in human skeletal muscle. These findings suggest that under physiological conditions the translocation of GLUT4 is an important mechanism for the stimulation of glucose uptake in human skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

6.
Endurance exercise training induces a rapid increase in the GLUT-4 isoform of the glucose transporter in muscle. In fasted rats, insulin-stimulated muscle glucose transport is increased in proportion to the increase in GLUT-4. There is evidence that high muscle glycogen may decrease insulin-stimulated glucose transport. This study was undertaken to determine whether glycogen supercompensation interferes with the increase in glucose transport associated with an exercise-induced increase in GLUT-4. Rats were trained by means of swimming for 6 h/day for 2 days. Rats fasted overnight after the last exercise bout had an approximately twofold increase in epitrochlearis muscle GLUT-4 and an associated approximately twofold increase in maximally insulin-stimulated glucose transport activity. Epitrochlearis muscles of rats fed rodent chow after exercise were glycogen supercompensated (86.4 +/- 4.8 micromol/g wet wt) and showed no significant increase in maximally insulin-stimulated glucose transport above the sedentary control value despite an approximately twofold increase in GLUT-4. Fasting resulted in higher basal muscle glucose transport rates in both sedentary and trained rats but did not significantly increase maximally insulin-stimulated transport in the sedentary group. We conclude that carbohydrate feeding that results in muscle glycogen supercompensation prevents the increase in maximally insulin-stimulated glucose transport associated with an exercise training-induced increase in muscle GLUT-4.  相似文献   

7.
Previous studies from this laboratory demonstrate insulin regulation of vascular smooth muscle intracellular calcium transport and of vascular tone. Accordingly, we measured insulin regulated glucose transport and GLUT4 protein in aortic tissue from insulin-resistant and sensitive rats in order to document classical insulin action in this tissue. We assessed (via in vitro muscle-bath and perfusion) basal and insulin-stimulated [3H]-2-deoxyglucose transport in aorta from lean and obese Zucker rats. In the muscle-bath system, insulin significantly stimulated aortic 2-deoxyglucose transport by 30%, but there was no difference in either baseline or insulin-stimulated glucose transport in lean versus obese rats. However, in the perfusion system, in which only the luminal surface of the vessel was exposed, insulin significantly (p < 0.04) stimulated 2-deoxyglucose transport in the aorta of only the lean animals. Western blot analysis demonstrated that aorta from lean and obese Zucker rats contained substantial concentrations of GLUT4 protein. Surprisingly, in the muscle-bath system 2-deoxyglucose transport was markedly higher in the aorta than in the soleus (p < 0.0002). These data demonstrate that vascular smooth muscle is an insulin-sensitive tissue which may be partially impaired in insulin resistant animals.  相似文献   

8.
Effects of 24-h and 48-h fasting on maximal insulin-stimulated whole-body and muscle glucose uptake, glycogen synthesis, and glycolysis were studied in conscious rats by combining the glucose clamp technique with tracer methods. Fasting decreased body weight and basal plasma glucose, plasma insulin, hepatic glucose output, and glucose clearance (P < 0.05 for all). However, maximal insulin-stimulated whole-body glucose uptake, normalized to body weight, was almost identical in fed, 24-h fasted, and 48-h fasted rats (191 +/- 8, 185 +/- 14, and 182 +/- 5 mumol.kg-1.min-1, respectively; P > 0.7). Similarly, rates of insulin-stimulated glucose uptake by four different skeletal muscles, estimated by the 2-deoxyglucose injection technique, were not different among the three groups. In contrast to glucose uptake, insulin-stimulated whole-body glycolysis was decreased significantly after fasting (36% after 48 h fasting; P < 0.05), whereas insulin-stimulated whole-body glycogen synthesis was increased (44% after 48 h fasting; P < 0.05). In fed rats, glycolysis was the major pathway for glucose metabolism during hyperinsulinemia, accounting for 60 +/- 5% of glucose uptake. This fraction was decreased significantly by fasting (P < 0.01), so that after a 48-h fast, glycolysis accounted for only 40 +/- 3% of insulin-stimulated glucose uptake and glycogen synthesis became predominant pathway, accounting for 60 +/- 3% of whole-body glucose utilization. Whole-body patterns of glucose metabolism during hyperinsulinemia were paralleled by glucose metabolism in individual muscles.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Patients with coronary artery disease or heart failure have been shown to be insulin resistant. Whether in these patients heart muscle participates in the insulin resistance, and whether reduced blood flow is a mechanism for such resistance is not known. We measured heart and skeletal muscle blood flow and glucose uptake during euglycemic hyperinsulinemia (insulin clamp) in 15 male patients with angiographically proven coronary artery disease and chronic regional wall motion abnormalities. Six age- and weight-matched healthy subjects served as controls. Regional glucose uptake was measured by positron emission tomography using [18F]2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG), blood flow was measured by the H2(15)O method. Myocardial glucose utilization was measured in regions with normal perfusion and wall motion as assessed by radionuclide ventriculography. Whole-body glucose uptake was 37+/-4 micromol x min(-1) x kg(-1) in controls and 14+/-2 mciromol x min(-1) x kg(-1) in patients (P = 0.001). Myocardial blood flow (1.09+/-0.06 vs. 0.97+/-0.04 ml x min(-1) x g(-1), controls vs. patients) and skeletal muscle (arm) blood flow (0.046+/-0.012 vs. 0.043+/-0.006 ml x min(-1) x g(-1)) were similar in the two groups (P = NS for both). In contrast, in patients both myocardial (0.38+/-0.03 vs. 0.70+/-0.03 micromol x min(-1) x g(-1), P = 0.0005) and muscle glucose uptake (0.026+/-0.004 vs. 0.056+/-0.006 micromol x min(-1) x g(-1), P = 0.005) were markedly reduced in comparison with controls. In the whole dataset, a direct relationship existed between insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in heart and skeletal muscle. Patients with a history of myocardial infarction and a low ejection fraction are insulin resistant. This insulin resistance affects both the myocardium and skeletal muscle and is independent of blood flow.  相似文献   

10.
Murine models of insulin resistance and diabetes are versatile and have been used to investigate genetic and metabolic disorders. However, the principal assays to assess insulin action, i.e., the euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp and subcellular distribution of glucose transporters, have not been implemented in this species. Here we describe procedures which allow these methods to be adapted to mice. When normal C57bl/6j mice were infused with graded doses of insulin (1, 3, 10 or 30 mU/kg/min) during a euglycemic-hyerinsulinemic clamp, the glucose infusion rate necessary to maintain euglycemia increased in a dose-dependent manner (7.4 +/- 1.7, 13.1 +/- 3.6, 24.1 +/- 2.3 or 34.8 +/- 7.5 mg/kg/min), respectively. Hindlimb muscles were isolated and samples of 2-3 g were subjected to subcellular fractionation finalizing on 25%, 30% and 35% sucrose gradients. Fraction F25 (plasma membranes) was enriched in alpha 2 Na+/K(+)-ATPase and GLUT1 glucose transporters, whereas fraction F35 (intracellular membranes) was enriched in Ca(2+)-ATPase and GLUT4 glucose transporters. Following insulin treatment, GLUT4 increased in F25 and decreased in F35. Insulin treatment had no effect on GLUT1 in F25. However, unlike in rat skeletal muscle, GLUT1 was detectable in F35 and its content decreased in this fraction following insulin treatment. The results demonstrate that whole-body glucose utilization can be assessed in mice using euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamps and demonstrate how subcellular fractionation procedures can be applied to murine muscle. Murine muscle GLUT4 translocates from an intracellular storage site to the plasma membrane in response to insulin.  相似文献   

11.
Complete spinal cord lesion leads to profound metabolic abnormalities and striking changes in muscle morphology. Here we assess the effects of electrically stimulated leg cycling (ESLC) on whole body insulin sensitivity, skeletal muscle glucose metabolism, and muscle fiber morphology in five tetraplegic subjects with complete C5-C7 lesions. Physical training (seven ESLC sessions/wk for 8 wk) increased whole body insulin-stimulated glucose uptake by 33+/-13%, concomitant with a 2.1-fold increase in insulin-stimulated (100 microU/ml) 3-O-methylglucose transport in isolated vastus lateralis muscle. Physical training led to a marked increase in protein expression of GLUT4 (378+/-85%), glycogen synthase (526+/-146%), and hexokinase II (204+/-47%) in vastus lateralis muscle, whereas phosphofructokinase expression (282+/-97%) was not significantly changed. Hexokinase II activity was significantly increased, whereas activity of phosphofructokinase, glycogen synthase, and citrate synthase was not changed after training. Muscle fiber type distribution and fiber area were markedly altered compared to able-bodied subjects before ESLC training, with no change noted in either parameter after ECSL training. In conclusion, muscle contraction improves insulin action on whole body and cellular glucose uptake in cervical cord-injured persons through a major increase in protein expression of key genes involved in the regulation of glucose metabolism. Furthermore, improvements in insulin action on glucose metabolism are independent of changes in muscle fiber type distribution.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The effects of the diuretic furosemide on the sensitivity of glucose disposal to insulin were investigated in rat soleus muscle in vitro. At basal levels of insulin, the rates of 3-O-methylglucose transport, 2-deoxyglucose phosphorylation and lactate formation were not affected significantly by furosemide (0.5 mmol/l). However, furosemide significantly decreased these rates at physiological and maximal levels of insulin. The contents of 2-deoxyglucose and glucose 6-phosphate in the presence of furosemide were not significantly different from those in control muscles at all levels of insulin studied. It is concluded that furosemide decreases the sensitivity of glucose utilization to insulin in skeletal muscle by directly inhibiting the glucose transport process.  相似文献   

14.
Skeletal muscle glucose utilization, a major factor in the control of whole-body glucose tolerance, is modulated in accordance with the muscle metabolic demand. For instance, it is increased in chronic contraction or exercise training in association with elevated expression of GLUT4 and hexokinase II (HK-II). In this work, the contribution of increased metabolic flux to the regulation of the glucose transport capacity was analyzed in cultured human skeletal muscle engineered to overexpress glycogen phosphorylase (GP). Myocytes treated with an adenovirus-bearing muscle GP cDNA (AdCMV-MGP) expressed 10 times higher GP activity and exhibited a twofold increase in the Vmax for 2-deoxy-D-[3H]glucose (2-DG) uptake, with no effect on the apparent Km. The stimulatory effect of insulin on 2-DG uptake was also markedly enhanced in AdCMV-MGP-treated cells, which showed maximal insulin stimulation 2.8 times higher than control cells. No changes in HKII total activity or the intracellular compartmentalization were found. GLUT4, protein, and mRNA were raised in AdCMV-MGP-treated cells, suggesting pretranslational activation. GLUT4 was immunodetected intracellularly with a perinuclear predominance. Culture in glucose-free or high-glucose medium did not alter GLUT4 protein content in either control cells or AdCMV-MGP-treated cells. Control and GP-overexpressing cells showed similar autoinhibition of glucose transport, although they appeared to differ in the mechanism(s) involved in this effect. Whereas GLUT1 protein increased in control cells when they were switched from a high-glucose to a glucose-free medium, GLUT1 remained unaltered in GP-expressing cells upon glucose deprivation. Therefore, the increased intracellular metabolic (glycogenolytic-glycolytic) flux that occurs in muscle cells overexpressing GP causes an increase in GLUT4 expression and enhances basal and insulin-stimulated glucose transport, without significant changes in the autoinhibition of glucose transport. This mechanism of regulation may be operative in the postexercise situation in which GLUT4 expression is upregulated in coordination with increased glycolytic flux and energy demand.  相似文献   

15.
Insulin resistance is instrumental in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes mellitus and the Insulin Resistance Syndrome. While insulin resistance involves decreased glucose transport activity in skeletal muscle, its molecular basis is unknown. Since muscle GLUT4 glucose transporter levels are normal in type 2 diabetes, we have tested the hypothesis that insulin resistance is due to impaired translocation of intracellular GLUT4 to sarcolemma. Both insulin-sensitive and insulin-resistant nondiabetic subgroups were studied, in addition to type 2 diabetic patients. Biopsies were obtained from basal and insulin-stimulated muscle, and membranes were subfractionated on discontinuous sucrose density gradients to equilibrium or under nonequilibrium conditions after a shortened centrifugation time. In equilibrium fractions from basal muscle, GLUT4 was decreased by 25-29% in both 25 and 28% sucrose density fractions and increased twofold in both the 32% sucrose fraction and bottom pellet in diabetics compared with insulin-sensitive controls, without any differences in membrane markers (phospholemman, phosphalamban, dihydropyridine-binding complex alpha-1 subunit). Thus, insulin resistance was associated with redistribution of GLUT4 to denser membrane vesicles. No effects of insulin stimulation on GLUT4 localization were observed. In non-equilibrium fractions, insulin led to small GLUT4 decrements in the 25 and 28% sucrose fractions and increased GLUT4 in the 32% sucrose fraction by 2.8-fold over basal in insulin-sensitive but only by 1.5-fold in both insulin-resistant and diabetic subgroups. The GLUT4 increments in the 32% sucrose fraction were correlated with maximal in vivo glucose disposal rates (r = +0.51, P = 0.026), and, therefore, represented GLUT4 recruitment to sarcolemma or a quantitative marker for this process. Similar to GLUT4, the insulin-regulated aminopeptidase (vp165) was redistributed to a dense membrane compartment and did not translocate in response to insulin in insulin-resistant subgroups. In conclusion, insulin alters the subcellular localization of GLUT4 vesicles in human muscle, and this effect is impaired equally in insulin-resistant subjects with and without diabetes. This translocation defect is associated with abnormal accumulation of GLUT4 in a dense membrane compartment demonstrable in basal muscle. We have previously observed a similar pattern of defects causing insulin resistance in human adipocytes. Based on these data, we propose that human insulin resistance involves a defect in GLUT4 traffic and targeting leading to accumulation in a dense membrane compartment from which insulin is unable to recruit GLUT4 to the cell surface.  相似文献   

16.
The GLUT4 glucose transporter appears to be targeted to a unique insulin-sensitive intracellular membrane compartment in fat and muscle cells. Insulin stimulates glucose transport in these cell types by mediating the partial redistribution of GLUT4 from this intracellular compartment to the plasma membrane. The structural basis for the unique targeting behavior of GLUT4 was investigated in the insulin-sensitive L6 myoblast cell line. Analysis of immunogold-labeled cells of independent clonal lines by electron microscopy indicated that 51-53% of GLUT1 was present in the plasma membrane in the basal state. Insulin did not significantly affect this distribution. In contrast, only 4.2-6.1% of GLUT4 was present in the plasma membrane of basal L6 cells and insulin increased this percentage by 3.7-6.1-fold. Under basal conditions and after insulin treatment, GLUT4 was detected in tubulovesicular structures, often clustered near Golgi stacks, and in endosome-like vesicles. Analysis of 25 chimeric transporters consisting of reciprocal domains of GLUT1 and GLUT4 by confocal immunofluorescence microscopy indicated that only the final 25 amino acids of the COOH-terminal cytoplasmic tail of GLUT4 were both necessary and sufficient for the targeting pattern observed for GLUT4. A dileucine motif present in the COOH-terminal tail of GLUT4 was found to be necessary, but not sufficient, for intracellular targeting. Contrary to previous studies, the NH2 terminus of GLUT4 did not affect the subcellular distribution of chimeras. Analysis of a chimera containing the COOH-terminal tail of GLUT4 by immunogold electron microscopy indicated that its subcellular distribution in basal cells was very similar to that of wild-type GLUT4 and that its content in the plasma membrane increased 6.8-10.5-fold in the presence of insulin. Furthermore, only the chimera containing the COOH terminus of GLUT4 enhanced insulin responsive 2-deoxyglucose uptake. GLUT1 and two other chimeras lacking the COOH terminus of GLUT4 were studied by immunogold electron microscopy and did not demonstrate insulin-mediated changes in subcellular distribution. The NH2-terminal cytoplasmic tail of GLUT4 did not confer intracellular sequestration and did not cause altered subcellular distribution in the presence of insulin. Intracellular targeting of one chimera to non-insulin-sensitive compartments was also observed. We conclude that the COOH terminus of GLUT4 is both necessary and sufficient to confer insulin-sensitive subcellular targeting of chimeric glucose transporters in L6 myoblasts.  相似文献   

17.
1. The direct short-term effects of troglitazone on parameters of glucose metabolism were investigated in rat soleus muscle strips. 2. In muscle strips from Sprague-Dawley rats, troglitazone (3.25 micromol l(-1)) increased basal and insulin-stimulated glucose transport by 24% and 41%, respectively (P<0.01 each). 3. In the presence of 5 nmol l(-1) insulin, stimulation of glucose transport by 3.25 micromol l(-1) troglitazone was accompanied by a 36% decrease in glycogen synthesis, while glycolysis was increased (112% increase in lactate production) suggesting a catabolic response of intracellular glucose handling. 4. Whereas insulin retained its stimulant effect on [3H]-2-deoxy-glucose transport in hypoxia-stimulated muscle (by 44%; c.p.m. mg(-1) h(-1): 852+/-77 vs 1229+/-75, P<0.01), 3.25 micromol l(-1) troglitazone failed to increase glucose transport under hypoxic conditions (789+/-40 vs 815+/-28, NS) suggesting that hypoxia and troglitazone address a similar, non-insulin-like mechanism. 5. No differences between troglitazone and hypoxia were identified in respective interactions with insulin. 6. Troglitazone acutely stimulated muscle glucose metabolism in a hypoxia/contraction-like manner, but it remains to be elucidated whether this contributes to the long-term antidiabetic and insulin enhancing potential in vivo or is to be regarded as an independent pharmacological effect.  相似文献   

18.
We studied the synergistic effect of glucose and prolactin (PRL) on insulin secretion and GLUT2 expression in cultured neonatal rat islets. After 7 days in culture, basal insulin secretion (2.8 mM glucose) was similar in control and PRL-treated islets (1.84 +/- 0.06% and 2.08 +/- 0.07% of the islet insulin content, respectively). At 5.6 and 22 mM glucose, insulin secretion was significantly higher in PRL-treated than in control islets, achieving 1.38 +/- 0.15% and 3.09 +/- 0.21% of the islet insulin content in control and 2.43 +/- 0.16% and 4.31 +/- 0.24% of the islet insulin content in PRL-treated islets, respectively. The expression of the glucose transporter GLUT2 in B-cell membranes was dose-dependently increased by exposure of the islet to increasing glucose concentrations. This effect was potentiated in islets cultured for 7 days in the presence of 2 micrograms/ml PRL. At 5.6 and 10 mM glucose, the increase in GLUT2 expression in PRL-treated islets was 75% and 150% higher than that registered in the respective control. The data presented here indicate that insulin secretion, induced by different concentrations of glucose, correlates well with the expression of the B-cell-specific glucose transporter GLUT2 in pancreatic islets.  相似文献   

19.
Adenosine in the extracellular space modulates stimulated glucose transport in striated muscle. In the heart and in adipocytes, adenosine potentiates insulin-stimulated glucose transport. There is controversy regarding the effect of adenosine in skeletal muscle, with reports of both an inhibitory effect and no effect, on insulin-stimulated glucose transport. We found that, in rat epitrochlearis and soleus muscles, removing adenosine with adenosine deaminase or blocking its action with the adenosine receptor blocker CPDPX markedly reduces the responsiveness of glucose transport to stimulation by 1) insulin alone, 2) contractions alone, and 3) insulin and contractions in combination. Measurement of the increase in GLUT4 at the cell surface in response to a maximally effective insulin stimulus in the epitrochlearis muscle, using the exofacial label ATB-[3H]BMPA, showed that adenosine deaminase treatment markedly reduces cell-surface GLUT4 labeling. The reduction in cell-surface GLUT4 labeling was similar in magnitude to the decrease in maximally insulin-stimulated glucose transport activity in adenosine deaminase-treated muscles. These results show that adenosine potentiates insulin- and contraction-stimulated glucose transport in skeletal muscle by enhancing the increase in GLUT4 at the cell surface and raise the possibility that decreased adenosine production or action could play a causative role in insulin resistance.  相似文献   

20.
Exposure of adipocytes to arachidonic acid rapidly enhanced basal 2-deoxyglucose uptake, reaching maximal effect at approximately 8 hr. Insulin-stimulated 2-deoxyglucose uptake was not altered over the experimental period. While the short-term (2-h exposure) effect of arachidonic acid was negligibly influenced by cycloheximide, the enhancement of glucose transport by long-term (8-h) exposure to arachidonic acid was markedly decreased by the simultaneous presence of protein-synthesis inhibitors, implying that the short-term and long-term effects of arachidonic acid may involve distinct mechanisms. Immunoblot analysis revealed that 8-h but not 2-h exposure to arachidonic acid increased the content of the ubiquitous glucose transporter (GLUT1) in both total cellular and plasma membranes. The insulin-responsive glucose transporter (GLUT4), on the other hand, was not affected. Following 2-h exposure to arachidonic acid, kinetic studies indicated that the apparent Vmax of basal 2-deoxyglucose uptake was more than doubled, while the apparent Km for 2-deoxyglucose remained unchanged. Protein kinase C (PKC) depletion by pretreating cells with 4 beta-phorbol 12 beta-myristate 13 alpha-acetate (PMA) for 24 h had little influence on the subsequent enhancing effect of arachidonic acid on 2-deoxyglucose uptake. In addition, PMA was able to stimulate 2-deoxyglucose uptake in arachidonic-acid-pretreated cells with similar increments as in non-treated cells. Thus, our data seem to suggest that arachidonic acid may enhance the intrinsic activity of GLUT1 by a PKC-independent mechanism.  相似文献   

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