scholarly journals Determination of the rates of appearance and loss of glucose transporters at the cell surface of rat adipose cells

1991 ◽  
Vol 278 (1) ◽  
pp. 235-241 ◽  
Author(s):  
A E Clark ◽  
G D Holman ◽  
I J Kozka

We have used an impermeant bis-mannose compound (2-N-[4-(1-azi-2,2,2-trifluoroethyl)benzoyl]-1,3-bis-(D-mannos+ ++- 4-yloxy)-2- propylamine; ATB-BMPA) to photolabel the glucose transporter isoforms GLUT4 and GLUT1 that are present in rat adipose cells. Plasma-membrane fractions and light-microsome membrane fractions were both labelled by ATB-BMPA. The labelling of GLUT4 in the plasma membrane fraction from insulin-treated cells was approximately 3-fold higher than that of basal cells and corresponded with a decrease in the labelling of the light-microsome fraction. In contrast with this, the cell-surface labelling of GLUT4 from insulin-treated intact adipose cells was increased approximately 15-fold above basal levels. In these adipose cell preparations, insulin stimulated glucose transport activity approximately 30-fold. Thus the cell-surface labelling, but not the labelling of membrane fractions, closely corresponded with the stimulation of transport. The remaining discrepancy may be due to an approx. 2-fold activation of GLUT4 intrinsic transport activity. We have studied the kinetics of trafficking of transporters and found the following. (1) Lowering the temperature to 18 degrees C increased basal glucose transport and levels of cell-surface glucose transporters by approximately 3-fold. This net increase in transporters probably occurs because the process of recruitment of transporters is less temperature-sensitive than the process involved in internalization of cell-surface transporters. (2) The time course for insulin stimulation of glucose transport activity occurred with a slight lag period of 47 s and a t 1/2 3.2 min. The time course of GLUT4 and GLUT1 appearance at the cell surface showed no lag and a t 1/2 of approximately 2.3 min for both isoforms. Thus at early times after insulin stimulation there was a discrepancy between transporter abundance and transport activity. The lag period in the stimulation of transport activity may represent the time required for the approximately 2-fold stimulation of transporter intrinsic activity. (3) The decrease in transport activity after insulin removal occurred with a very high activation energy of 159 kJ.mol-1. There was thus no significant decrease in transport or less of cell-surface transporters over 60 min at 18 degrees C. The decrease in transport activity occurred with a t1/2 of 9-11 min at 37 degrees C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

1999 ◽  
Vol 343 (3) ◽  
pp. 571-577 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cynthia M. FERRARA ◽  
Samuel W. CUSHMAN

Agents that activate the G-protein Gi (e.g. adenosine) increase, and agents that activate Gs [e.g. isoprenaline (isoproterenol)] decrease, steady-state insulin-stimulated glucose transport activity and cell-surface GLUT4 in isolated rat adipose cells without changing plasma membrane GLUT4 content. Here we have further examined the effects of RsGs and RiGi ligands (in which Rs and Ri are Gs- and Gi-coupled receptors respectively) on insulin-stimulated cell-surface GLUT4 and the kinetics of GLUT4 trafficking in these same cells. Rat adipose cells were preincubated for 2 min with or without isoprenaline (200 nM) and adenosine deaminase (1 unit/ml), to stimulate Gs and decrease the stimulation of Gi respectively, followed by 0-20 min with insulin (670 nM). Treatment with isoprenaline and adenosine deaminase decreased insulin-stimulated glucose transport activity by 58%. Treatment with isoprenaline and adenosine deaminase also resulted in similar decreases in insulin-stimulated cell-surface GLUT4 as assessed by both bis-mannose photolabelling of the substrate-binding site and biotinylation of the extracellular carbohydrate moiety when evaluated under similar experimental conditions. After stimulation with insulin in the absence of Gs and the presence of Gi agents, a distinct sequence of plasma membrane events took place, starting with an increase in immunodetectable GLUT4, then an increase in the accessibility of GLUT4 to bis-mannose photolabel, and finally an increase in glucose transport activity. Pretreatment with isoprenaline and adenosine deaminase before stimulation with insulin did not affect the time course of the increase in immunodetectable GLUT4 in the plasma membrane, but did delay both the increase in accessibility of GLUT4 to photolabel and the increase in glucose transport activity. These results suggest that RsGs and RiGi modulate insulin-stimulated glucose transport by influencing the extent to which GLUT4 is associated with occluded vesicles attached to the plasma membrane during exocytosis, perhaps by regulating the fusion process through which the GLUT4 in docked vesicles becomes exposed on the cell surface.


1989 ◽  
Vol 257 (4) ◽  
pp. E520-E530
Author(s):  
M. F. Hirshman ◽  
L. J. Wardzala ◽  
L. J. Goodyear ◽  
S. P. Fuller ◽  
E. D. Horton ◽  
...  

We studied the mechanism for the increase in glucose transport activity that occurs in adipose cells of exercise-trained rats. Glucose transport activity, glucose metabolism, and the subcellular distribution of glucose transporters were measured in adipose cells from rats raised in wheel cages for 6 wk (mean total exercise 350 km/rat), age-matched sedentary controls, and young sedentary controls matched for adipose cell size. Basal rates of glucose transport and metabolism were greater in cells from exercise-trained rats compared with young controls, and insulin-stimulated rates were greater in the exercise-trained rats compared with both age-matched and young controls. The numbers of plasma membrane glucose transporters were not different among groups in the basal state; however, with insulin stimulation, cells from exercise-trained animals had significantly more plasma membrane transporters than young controls or age-matched controls. Exercise-trained rats also had more low-density microsomal transporters than control rats in the basal state. When the total number of glucose transporters/cell was calculated, the exercise-trained rats had 42% more transporters than did either control group. These studies demonstrate that the increased glucose transport and metabolism observed in insulin-stimulated adipose cells from exercise-trained rats is due, primarily, to an increase in the number of plasma membrane glucose transporters translocated from an enlarged intracellular pool.


1992 ◽  
Vol 281 (3) ◽  
pp. 809-817 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Yang ◽  
A E Clark ◽  
R Harrison ◽  
I J Kozka ◽  
G D Holman

We have compared the rates of insulin stimulation of cell-surface availability of glucose-transporter isoforms (GLUT1 and GLUT4) and the stimulation of 2-deoxy-D-glucose transport in 3T3-L1 cells. The levels of cell-surface transporters have been assessed by using the bismannose compound 2-N-[4-(1-azi-2,2,2-trifluoroethyl)benzoyl]-1,3-bis(D-mannos -4-yloxy) propyl-2-amine (ATB-BMPA). At 27 degrees C the half-times for the appearance of GLUT1 and GLUT4 at the cell surface were 5.7 and 5.4 min respectively and were slightly shorter than that for the observed stimulation of transport activity (t 1/2 8.6 min). This lag may be due to a slow dissociation of surface transporters from trafficking proteins responsible for translocation. When fully-insulin-stimulated cells were subjected to a low-pH washing procedure to remove insulin at 37 degrees C, the cell-surface levels of GLUT1 and GLUT4 decreased, with half-times of 9.2 and 6.8 min respectively. These times correlated well with decrease in 2-deoxy-D-glucose transport activity that occurred during this washing procedure (t1/2 6.5 min). When fully-insulin-stimulated cells were treated with phenylarsine oxide (PAO), a similar decrease in transport activity occurred (t1/2 9.8 min). However, surface labelling showed that this corresponded with a decrease in GLUT4 only (t1/2 7.8 min). The cell-surface level of GLUT1 remained high throughout the PAO treatment. Light-microsome membranes were isolated from cells which had been cell-surface-labelled with ATB-BMPA. Internalization of both transporter isoforms to this pool occurred when cells were maintained in the presence of insulin for 60 min. In contrast with the surface-labelling results, we have shown that the transfer to the light-microsome pool of both transporters occurred in cells treated with insulin and PAO. These results suggest that both transporters are recycled by fluid-phase endocytosis and exocytosis. PAO may inhibit this recycling at a stage which involves the re-emergence of internalized transporters at the plasma membrane. The GLUT1 transporters that are recycled to the surface in insulin- and PAO-treated cells appear to have low transport activity. This may be because of a failure to dissociate fully from trafficking proteins at the cell surface. GLUT4 transporters appear to have a greater tendency to remain internalized if the normal mechanisms that commit transporters to the cell surface, such as dissociation from trafficking proteins, are uncoupled.


1994 ◽  
Vol 299 (3) ◽  
pp. 755-759 ◽  
Author(s):  
C M Wilson ◽  
S W Cushman

We have used a photoaffinity label to quantify cell surface GLUT4 glucose transporters in isolated rat soleus muscles. In this system, insulin stimulated an 8.6-fold increase in 3-O-methylglucose glucose transport, while photolabelled GLUT4 increased 8-fold. These results demonstrate that the insulin-stimulated increase in glucose transport activity in skeletal muscle can be accounted for by an increase in surface-accessible GLUT4 content.


1992 ◽  
Vol 288 (1) ◽  
pp. 325-330 ◽  
Author(s):  
S J Vannucci ◽  
H Nishimura ◽  
S Satoh ◽  
S W Cushman ◽  
G D Holman ◽  
...  

Insulin-stimulated glucose transport activity in rat adipocytes is inhibited by isoprenaline and enhanced by adenosine. Both of these effects occur without corresponding changes in the subcellular distribution of the GLUT4 glucose transporter isoform. In this paper, we have utilized the impermeant, exofacial bis-mannose glucose transporter-specific photolabel, 2-N-4-(1-azi-2,2,2-trifluoroethyl)benzoyl-1,3-bis-(D-mannos- 4-yloxy)-2-propylamine (ATB-BMPA) [Clark & Holman (1990) Biochem. J. 269, 615-622], to examine the cell surface accessibility of GLUT4 glucose transporters under these conditions. Compared with cells treated with insulin alone, adenosine in the presence of insulin increased the accessibility of GLUT4 to the extracellular photolabel by approximately 25%, consistent with its enhancement of insulin-stimulated glucose transport activity; the plasma membrane concentration of GLUT4 as assessed by Western blotting was unchanged. Conversely, isoprenaline, in the absence of adenosine, promoted a time-dependent (t1/2 approximately 2 min) decrease in the accessibility of insulin-stimulated cell surface GLUT4 of > 50%, which directly correlated with the observed inhibition of transport activity; the plasma membrane concentration of GLUT4 decreased by 0-15%. Photolabelling the corresponding plasma membranes revealed that these alterations in the ability of the photolabel to bind to GLUT4 are transient, as the levels of both photolabel incorporation and plasma membrane glucose transport activity were consistent with the observed GLUT4 concentration. These data suggest that insulin-stimulated GLUT4 glucose transporters can exist in two distinct states within the adipocyte plasma membrane, one which is functional and accessible to extracellular substrate, and one which is non-functional and unable to bind extracellular substrate. These effects are only observed in the intact adipocyte and are not retained in plasma membranes isolated from these cells when analysed for their ability to transport glucose or bind photolabel.


1988 ◽  
Vol 249 (1) ◽  
pp. 155-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
H G Joost ◽  
T M Weber ◽  
S W Cushman

Conditions are described which allow the isolation of rat adipose-cell plasma membranes retaining a large part of the stimulatory effect of insulin in intact cells. In these membranes, the magnitude of glucose-transport stimulation in response to insulin was compared with the concentration of transporters as measured with the cytochalasin-B-binding assay or by immunoblotting with an antiserum against the human erythrocyte glucose transporter. Further, the substrate- and temperature-dependencies of the basal and insulin-stimulated states were compared. Under carefully controlled homogenization conditions, insulin-treated adipose cells yielded plasma membranes with a glucose transport activity 10-15-fold higher than that in membranes from basal cells. Insulin increased the transport Vmax. (from 1,400 +/- 300 to 15,300 +/- 3,400 pmol/s per mg of protein; means +/- S.E.M.; assayed at 22 degrees C) without any significant change in Km (from 17.8 +/- 4.4 to 18.9 +/- 1.4 nM). Arrhenius plots of plasma-membrane transport exhibited a break at 21 degrees C, with a higher activation energy over the lower temperature range. The activation energy over the higher temperature range was significantly lower in membranes from basal than from insulin-stimulated cells [27.7 +/- 5.0 kJ/mol (6.6 +/- 1.2 kcal/mol) and 45.3 +/- 2.1 kJ/mol (10.8 +/- 0.5 kcal/mol) respectively], giving rise to a larger relative response to insulin when transport was assayed at 37 degrees C as compared with 22 degrees C. The stimulation of transport activity at 22 degrees C was fully accounted for by an increase in the concentration of transporters measured by cytochalasin B binding, if a 5% contamination of plasma membranes with low-density microsomes was assumed. However, this 10-fold stimulation of transport activity contrasted with an only 2-fold increase in transporter immunoreactivity in membranes from insulin-stimulated cells. These data suggest that, in addition to stimulating the translocation of glucose transporters to the plasma membrane, insulin appears to induce a structural or conformational change in the transporter, manifested in an altered activation energy for plasma-membrane transport and possibly in an altered immunoreactivity as assessed by Western blotting.


Biochemistry ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. 1151-1158 ◽  
Author(s):  
Visvanathan Chandramouli ◽  
Marianne Milligan ◽  
James R. Carter

2000 ◽  
Vol 113 (23) ◽  
pp. 4203-4210 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Malide ◽  
G. Ramm ◽  
S.W. Cushman ◽  
J.W. Slot

We used an improved cryosectioning technique in combination with quantitative immunoelectron microscopy to study GLUT4 compartments in isolated rat white adipose cells. We provide clear evidence that in unstimulated cells most of the GLUT4 localizes intracellularly to tubulovesicular structures clustered near small stacks of Golgi and endosomes, or scattered throughout the cytoplasm. This localization is entirely consistent with that originally described in brown adipose tissue, strongly suggesting that the GLUT4 compartments in white and brown adipose cells are morphologically similar. Furthermore, insulin induces parallel increases (with similar magnitudes) in glucose transport activity, approximately 16-fold, and cell-surface GLUT4, approximately 12-fold. Concomitantly, insulin decreases GLUT4 equally from all intracellular locations, in agreement with the concept that the entire cellular GLUT4 pool contributes to insulin-stimulated exocytosis. In the insulin-stimulated state, GLUT4 molecules are not randomly distributed on the plasma membrane, but neither are they enriched in caveolae. Importantly, the total number of GLUT4 C-terminal epitopes detected by the immuno-gold method is not significantly different between basal and insulin-stimulated cells, thus arguing directly against a reported insulin-induced unmasking effect. These results provide strong morphological evidence (1) that GLUT4 compartments are similar in all insulin-sensitive cells and (2) for the concept that GLUT4 translocation almost fully accounts for the increase in glucose transport in response to insulin.


1998 ◽  
Vol 85 (6) ◽  
pp. 2106-2111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cynthia M. Ferrara ◽  
Thomas H. Reynolds ◽  
Mary Jane Zarnowski ◽  
Joseph T. Brozinick ◽  
Samuel W. Cushman

This investigation examined the effects of short-term exercise training on insulin-stimulated GLUT-4 glucose transporter translocation and glucose transport activity in rat adipose cells. Male Wistar rats were randomly assigned to a sedentary (Sed) or swim training group (Sw, 4 days; final 3 days: 2 × 3 h/day). Adipose cell size decreased significantly but minimally (∼20%), whereas total GLUT-4 increased by 30% in Sw vs. Sed rats. Basal 3- O-methyl-d-[14C]glucose transport was reduced by 62%, whereas maximally insulin-stimulated (MIS) glucose transport was increased by 36% in Sw vs. Sed rats. MIS cell surface GLUT-4 photolabeling was 44% higher in the Sw vs. Sed animals, similar to the increases observed in MIS glucose transport activity and total GLUT-4. These results suggest that increases in total GLUT-4 and GLUT-4 translocation to the cell surface contribute to the increase in MIS glucose transport with short-term exercise training. In addition, the results suggest that the exercise training-induced adaptations in glucose transport occur more rapidly than previously thought and with minimal changes in adipose cell size.


1991 ◽  
Vol 70 (4) ◽  
pp. 1593-1600 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. D. Cartee ◽  
A. G. Douen ◽  
T. Ramlal ◽  
A. Klip ◽  
J. O. Holloszy

Hypoxia caused a progressive cytochalasin B-inhibitable increase in the rate of 3-O-methylglucose transport in rat epitrochlearis muscles to a level approximately six-fold above basal. Muscle ATP concentration was well maintained during hypoxia, and increased glucose transport activity was still present after 15 min of reoxygenation despite repletion of phosphocreatine. However, the increase in glucose transport activity completely reversed during a 180-min-long recovery in oxygenated medium. In perfused rat hindlimb muscles, hypoxia caused an increase in glucose transporters in the plasma membrane, suggesting that glucose transporter translocation plays a role in the stimulation of glucose transport by hypoxia. The maximal effects of hypoxia and insulin on glucose transport activity were additive, whereas the effects of exercise and hypoxia were not, providing evidence suggesting that hypoxia and exercise stimulate glucose transport by the same mechanism. Caffeine, at a concentration too low to cause muscle contraction or an increase in glucose transport by itself, markedly potentiated the effect of a submaximal hypoxic stimulus on sugar transport. Dantrolene significantly inhibited the hypoxia-induced increase in 3-O-methylglucose transport. These effects of caffeine and dantrolene suggest that Ca2+ plays a role in the stimulation of glucose transport by hypoxia.


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