scholarly journals Biochemical and immunocytochemical localization of the ‘GLUT5 glucose transporter’ in human skeletal muscle

1992 ◽  
Vol 286 (2) ◽  
pp. 339-343 ◽  
Author(s):  
H S Hundal ◽  
A Ahmed ◽  
A Gumà ◽  
Y Mitsumoto ◽  
A Marette ◽  
...  

Using biochemical and immunocytochemical techniques, we have assessed both the protein expression and the cellular localization of the GLUT5 transporter in human skeletal muscle. Human muscle membranes, prepared by subcellular fractionation, were subjected to SDS/PAGE and Western-blot analyses using antiserum raised against a specific C-terminal amino acid sequence of the human GLUT5 transporter. GLUT5 was detected as a discrete 49 kDa protein band in a plasma-membrane-enriched fraction prepared from either soleus or gracilis muscle. In contrast, GLUT5 protein was not detectable to any significant extent in fractions which were devoid of muscle plasma membranes (mean GLUT5 abundance in intracellular fractions from three muscle preparations amounted to approximately 10% of that in the plasma-membrane-enriched fraction). Immunofluorescence studies using cryostat sections of human triceps muscle supported the biochemical observations and revealed that GLUT5 antibody selectivity labelled the plasma membrane of muscle cells. This immuno-labelling was significantly suppressed after tissue incubation with antiserum in the presence of a 14-amino-acid synthetic peptide corresponding to a specific C-terminus sequence of human GLUT5. These results indicate that human skeletal muscle expresses the GLUT5 transporter and that it is specifically localized to the plasma membrane, where it may participate in regulating hexose transfer across the sarcolemma.

1994 ◽  
Vol 107 (3) ◽  
pp. 487-496 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Guillet-Deniau ◽  
A. Leturque ◽  
J. Girard

Skeletal muscle regeneration is mediated by the proliferation of myoblasts from stem cells located beneath the basal lamina of myofibres, the muscle satellite cells. They are functionally indistinguishable from embryonic myoblasts. The myogenic process includes the fusion of myoblasts into multinucleated myotubes, the biosynthesis of proteins specific for skeletal muscle and proteins that regulates glucose metabolism, the glucose transporters. We find that three isoforms of glucose transporter are expressed during foetal myoblast differentiation: GLUT1, GLUT3 and GLUT4; their relative expression being dependent upon the stage of differentiation of the cells. GLUT1 mRNA and protein were abundant only in myoblasts from 19-day-old rat foetuses or from adult muscles. GLUT3 mRNA and protein, detectable in both cell types, increased markedly during cell fusion, but decreased in contracting myotubes. GLUT4 mRNA and protein were not expressed in myoblasts. They appeared only in spontaneously contracting myotubes cultured on an extracellular matrix. Insulin or IGF-I had no effect on the expression of the three glucose transporter isoforms, even in the absence of glucose. The rate of glucose transport, assessed using 2-[3H]deoxyglucose, was 2-fold higher in myotubes than in myoblasts. Glucose deprivation increased the basal rate of glucose transport by 2-fold in myoblasts, and 4-fold in myotubes. The cellular localization of the glucose transporters was directly examined by immunofluorescence staining. GLUT1 was located on the plasma membrane of myoblasts and myotubes. GLUT3 was located intracellularly in myoblasts and appeared also on the plasma membrane in myotubes. Insulin or IGF-I were unable to target GLUT3 to the plasma membrane. GLUT4, the insulin-regulatable glucose transporter isoform, appeared only in contracting myotubes in small intracellular vesicles. It was translocated to the plasma membrane after a short exposure to insulin, as it is in skeletal muscle in vivo. These results show that there is a switch in glucose transporter isoform expression during myogenic differentiation, dependent upon the energy required by the different stages of the process. GLUT3 seemed to play a role during cell fusion, and could be a marker for the muscle's ability to regenerate.


1995 ◽  
Vol 268 (4) ◽  
pp. E613-E622 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Guma ◽  
J. R. Zierath ◽  
H. Wallberg-Henriksson ◽  
A. Klip

Understanding the molecular mechanisms involved in the regulation of glucose transport into human muscle is necessary to unravel possible defects in glucose uptake associated with insulin resistance in humans. Here we report a strategy to subfractionate human skeletal muscle biopsies (0.5 g) removed from vastus lateralis during a euglycemic insulinemic clamp procedure. A sucrose gradient separated total membranes into five fractions. Fraction 25 (25% sucrose) contained the plasma membrane markers alpha 1- and alpha 2-subunits of the Na(+)-K(+)-adenosinetriphosphatase and the GLUT-5 hexose transporter, recently immunolocalized to the cell surface of human skeletal muscle. The dihydropyridine receptor, a transverse tubule marker, was present exclusively in this fraction. The GLUT-4 glucose transporter was more concentrated in fraction 27.5 (27.5% sucrose) and largely diminished in plasma membrane markers. Open skeletal muscle biopsies were removed before and 30 min after clamping insulin to 550 pM. This increased GLUT-4 protein by 1.61-fold in fraction 25 and lowered it by 50% in fraction 27.5. Thus physiological concentrations of insulin induce translocation of glucose transporters from an internal membrane pool to surface membranes in human skeletal muscle.


1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 193-198 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. J. Goodyear ◽  
M. F. Hirshman ◽  
P. A. King ◽  
E. D. Horton ◽  
C. M. Thompson ◽  
...  

Recent reports have shown that immediately after an acute bout of exercise the glucose transport system of rat skeletal muscle plasma membranes is characterized by an increase in both glucose transporter number and intrinsic activity. To determine the duration of the exercise response we examined the time course of these changes after completion of a single bout of exercise. Male rats were exercised on a treadmill for 1 h (20 m/min, 10% grade) or allowed to remain sedentary. Rats were killed either immediately or 0.5 or 2 h after exercise, and red gastrocnemius muscle was used for the preparation of plasma membranes. Plasma membrane glucose transporter number was elevated 1.8- and 1.6-fold immediately and 30 min after exercise, although facilitated D-glucose transport in plasma membrane vesicles was elevated 4- and 1.8-fold immediately and 30 min after exercise, respectively. By 2 h after exercise both glucose transporter number and transport activity had returned to nonexercised control values. Additional experiments measuring glucose uptake in perfused hindquarter muscle produced similar results. We conclude that the reversal of the increase in glucose uptake by hindquarter skeletal muscle after exercise is correlated with a reversal of the increase in the glucose transporter number and activity in the plasma membrane. The time course of the transport-to-transporter ratio suggests that the intrinsic activity response reverses more rapidly than that involving transporter number.


1995 ◽  
Vol 73 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia A. King ◽  
Mary N. Rosholt ◽  
Kenneth B. Storey

One of the critical adaptations for freeze tolerance by the wood frog, Rana sylvatica, is the production of large quantities of glucose as an organ cryoprotectant during freezing exposures. Glucose export from the liver, where it is synthesized, and its uptake by other organs is dependent upon carrier-mediated transport across plasma membranes by glucose-transporter proteins. Seasonal changes in the capacity to transport glucose across plasma membranes were assessed in liver and skeletal muscle of wood frogs; summer-collected (June) frogs were compared with autumn-collected (September) cold-acclimated (5 °C for 3–4 weeks) frogs. Plasma membrane vesicles prepared from liver of autumn-collected frogs showed 6-fold higher rates of carrier-mediated glucose transport than vesicles from summer-collected frogs, maximal velocity (Vmax) values for transport being 72 ± 14 and 12.0 + 2.9 nmol∙mg protein−1∙s−1, respectively (at 10 °C). However, substrate affinity constants for carrier-mediated glucose transport (K1/2) did not change seasonally. The difference in transport rates was due to greater numbers of glucose transporters in liver plasma membranes from autumn-collected frogs. The total number of transporter sites, as determined by cytochalasin B binding, was 8.5-fold higher in autumn than in summer. Glucose transporters in wood frog liver membranes cross-reacted with antibodies to the rat GluT-2 glucose transporter (the mammalian liver isoform), and Western blots further confirmed a large increase in transporter numbers in liver membranes from autumn- versus summer-collected frogs. By contrast with the liver, however, there were no seasonal changes in glucose-transporter activity or numbers in plasma membranes isolated from skeletal muscle. We conclude that an enhanced capacity for glucose transport across liver, but not muscle, plasma membranes during autumn cold-hardening is an important adaptation that anticipates the need for rapid export of cryoprotectant from liver during natural freezing episodes.


1998 ◽  
Vol 336 (2) ◽  
pp. 361-366 ◽  
Author(s):  
Froogh DARAKHSHAN ◽  
Eric HAJDUCH ◽  
Søren KRISTIANSEN ◽  
Erik A. RICHTER ◽  
Harinder S. HUNDAL

Previous work has demonstrated that human skeletal muscle and adipose tissue both express the GLUT5 fructose transporter, but to date the issue of whether this protein is also expressed in skeletal muscle and adipose tissue of rodents has remained unresolved. In the present study we have used a combination of biochemical and molecular approaches to ascertain whether rat skeletal muscle expresses GLUT5 protein and, if so, whether it possesses the capacity to transport fructose. An isoform-specific antibody against rat GLUT5 reacted positively with crude membranes prepared from rat skeletal muscle. A single immunoreactive band of approx. 50 kDa was visualized on immunoblots which was lost when using anti-(rat GLUT5) serum that had been pre-adsorbed with the antigenic peptide. Subcellular fractionation of skeletal muscle localized this immunoreactivity to a single membrane fraction that was enriched with sarcolemma. Plasma membranes, but not low-density microsomes, from rat adipose tissue also displayed a single protein band of equivalent molecular mass to that seen in muscle. Reverse transcription–PCR analyses, using rat-specific GLUT5 primers, of muscle and jejunal RNA revealed a single PCR fragment of the expected size in jejunum and in four different skeletal muscle types. Sarcolemmal vesicles from rat muscle displayed fructose and glucose uptake. Vesicular uptake of glucose was inhibited by nearly 90% in the presence of cytochalasin B, whereas that of fructose was unaffected. To determine whether fructose could regulate GLUT5 expression in skeletal muscle, rats were maintained on a fructose-enriched diet for 4 days. This procedure increased jejunal and renal GLUT5 protein expression by approx. 4- and 2-fold respectively, but had no detectable effects on the abundance of GLUT5 protein in skeletal muscle or on fructose uptake in rat adipocytes. The present results show that GLUT5 is expressed in the sarcolemma of rat skeletal muscle and that it is likely to mediate fructose uptake in this tissue. Furthermore, unlike the situation in absorptive and re-absorptive epithelia, GLUT5 expression in insulin-sensitive tissues is not regulated by increased substrate supply.


1991 ◽  
Vol 261 (5) ◽  
pp. E556-E561 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. J. Goodyear ◽  
M. F. Hirshman ◽  
R. J. Smith ◽  
E. S. Horton

The fiber type composition of a skeletal muscle is an important determinant of its ability to take up glucose. Although numerous factors may account for this phenomenon, we have hypothesized that fiber type differences in glucose transporter number, isoform content, and/or intrinsic activity play an important role. Skeletal muscle plasma membranes were prepared from red and white gastrocnemius muscle from male Sprague-Dawley rats that were either exercised on a treadmill (1 h, 20 m/min, 10% grade), injected with 20 U insulin, or remained sedentary. In sedentary rats, plasma membrane glucose transporter number (cytochalasin B binding) was 2.4-fold greater in red compared with white muscle. Exercise and insulin both increased glucose transporter number by 40% in red muscle and twofold in white muscle. Maximal velocity of glucose transport (Vmax) was 2-fold greater in red compared with white muscle, whereas exercise and insulin increased Vmax by 2.3-fold in red muscle and 3.6-fold in white muscle. Glucose transporter turnover number, a measure of the average intrinsic activity of transporters in the plasma membrane, was not different between red and white muscle and increased 80–90% with exercise and insulin in both red and white muscle. Both GLUT-1 and GLUT-4 isoform content were greater in red than white muscle. These results suggest that fiber type differences in rates of glucose uptake in resting, insulin-stimulated, and contraction-stimulated skeletal muscle may be due to differences in the number but not the intrinsic activity of glucose transporter proteins.


1992 ◽  
Vol 284 (2) ◽  
pp. 341-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Dimitrakoudis ◽  
T Ramlal ◽  
S Rastogi ◽  
M Vranic ◽  
A Klip

The number of glucose transporters was measured in isolated membranes from diabetic-rat skeletal muscle to determine the role of circulating blood glucose levels in the control of glucose uptake into skeletal muscle. Three experimental groups of animals were investigated in the post-absorptive state: normoglycaemic/normoinsulinaemic, hyperglycaemic/normoinsulinaemic and hyperglycaemic/normoinsulinaemic made normoglycaemic/normoinsulinaemic by phlorizin treatment. Hyperglycaemia caused a reversible decrease in total transporter number, as measured by cytochalasin B binding, in both plasma membranes and internal membranes of skeletal muscle. Changes in GLUT4 glucose transporter protein mirrored changes in cytochalasin B binding in plasma membranes. However, there was no recovery of GLUT4 levels in intracellular membranes with correction of glycaemia. GLUT4 mRNA levels decreased with hyperglycaemia and recovered only partially with correction of glycaemia. Conversely, GLUT1 glucose transporters were only detectable in the plasma membranes; the levels of this protein varied directly with glycaemia, i.e. in the opposite direction to GLUT4 glucose transporters. This study demonstrates that hyperglycaemia, in the absence of hypoinsulinaemia, is capable of down-regulating the glucose transport system in skeletal muscle, the major site of peripheral resistance to insulin-stimulated glucose transport in diabetes. Furthermore, correction of hyperglycaemia causes a complete restoration of the transport system in the basal state (determined by the transporter number in the plasma membrane), but possibly only an incomplete recovery of the transport system's ability to respond to insulin (since there is no recovery of GLUT4 levels in the intracellular membrane insulin-responsive transporter pool). Finally, the effect of hyperglycaemia is specific for glucose transporter isoforms, with GLUT1 and GLUT4 proteins varying respectively in parallel and opposite directions to levels of glycaemia.


2007 ◽  
Vol 27 (9) ◽  
pp. 3456-3469 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shaohui Huang ◽  
Larry M. Lifshitz ◽  
Christine Jones ◽  
Karl D. Bellve ◽  
Clive Standley ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy reveals highly mobile structures containing enhanced green fluorescent protein-tagged glucose transporter 4 (GLUT4) within a zone about 100 nm beneath the plasma membrane of 3T3-L1 adipocytes. We developed a computer program (Fusion Assistant) that enables direct analysis of the docking/fusion kinetics of hundreds of exocytic fusion events. Insulin stimulation increases the fusion frequency of exocytic GLUT4 vesicles by ∼4-fold, increasing GLUT4 content in the plasma membrane. Remarkably, insulin signaling modulates the kinetics of the fusion process, decreasing the vesicle tethering/docking duration prior to membrane fusion. In contrast, the kinetics of GLUT4 molecules spreading out in the plasma membrane from exocytic fusion sites is unchanged by insulin. As GLUT4 accumulates in the plasma membrane, it is also immobilized in punctate structures on the cell surface. A previous report suggested these structures are exocytic fusion sites (Lizunov et al., J. Cell Biol. 169:481-489, 2005). However, two-color TIRF microscopy using fluorescent proteins fused to clathrin light chain or GLUT4 reveals these structures are clathrin-coated patches. Taken together, these data show that insulin signaling accelerates the transition from docking of GLUT4-containing vesicles to their fusion with the plasma membrane and promotes GLUT4 accumulation in clathrin-based endocytic structures on the plasma membrane.


1996 ◽  
Vol 80 (2) ◽  
pp. 699-705 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Tsakiridis ◽  
P. P. Wong ◽  
Z. Liu ◽  
C. D. Rodgers ◽  
M. Vranic ◽  
...  

Muscle fibers adapt to ionic challenges of exercise by increasing the plasma membrane Na+-K+ pump activity. Chronic exercise training has been shown to increase the total amount of Na+-K+ pumps present in skeletal muscle. However, the mechanism of adaptation of the Na+-K+ pump to an acute bout of exercise has not been determined, and it is not known whether it involves alterations in the content of plasma membrane pump subunits. Here we examine the effect of 1 h of treadmill running (20 m/min, 10% grade) on the subcellular distribution and expression of Na+-K+ pump subunits in rat skeletal muscles. Red type I and IIa (red-I/IIa) and white type IIa and IIb (white-IIa/IIb) hindlimb muscles from resting and exercised female Sprague-Dawley rats were removed for subcellular fractionation. By homogenization and gradient centrifugation, crude membranes and purified plasma membranes were isolated and subjected to gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting by using pump subunit-specific antibodies. Furthermore, mRNA was isolated from specific red type I (red-I) and white type IIb (white-IIb) muscles and subjected to Northern blotting by using subunit-specific probes. In both red-I/IIa and white-IIa/IIb muscles, exercise significantly raised the plasma membrane content of the alpha1-subunit of the pump by 64 +/- 24 and 55 +/- 22%, respectively (P < 0.05), and elevated the alpha2-polypeptide by 43 +/- 22 and 94 +/- 39%, respectively (P < 0.05). No significant effect of exercise could be detected on the amount of these subunits in an internal membrane fraction or in total membranes. In addition, exercise significantly increased the alpha1-subunit mRNA in red-I muscle (by 50 +/- 7%; P < 0.05) and the beta2-subunit mRNA in white-IIb muscles (by 64 +/- 19%; P < 0.01), but the alpha2- and beta1-mRNA levels were unaffected in this time period. We conclude that increased presence of alpha1- and alpha2-polypeptides at the plasma membrane and subsequent elevation of the alpha1- and beta2-subunit mRNAs may be mechanisms by which acute exercise regulates the Na+-K+ pump of skeletal muscle.


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