Differential regulation of glucose transporter isoforms by the src oncogene in chicken embryo fibroblasts

1991 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 4448-4454
Author(s):  
M K White ◽  
T B Rall ◽  
M J Weber

The increase in glucose transport that occurs when chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEFs) are transformed by src is associated with an increase in the amount of type 1 glucose transporter protein, and we have previously shown that this effect is due to a decrease in the degradation rate of this protein. The rate of CEF type 1 glucose transporter biosynthesis and the level of its mRNA are unaffected by src transformation. To study the molecular basis of this phenomenon, we have been isolating chicken glucose transporter cDNAs by hybridization to a rat type 1 glucose transporter probe at low stringency. Surprisingly, these clones corresponded to a message encoding a protein which has most sequence similarity to the human type 3 glucose transporter and which we refer to as CEF-GT3. CEF-GT3 is clearly distinct from the CEF type 1 transporter that we have previously described. Northern (RNA) analysis of CEF RNA with CEF-GT3 cDNA revealed two messages of 1.7 and 3.3 kb which were both greatly induced by src transformation. When the CEF-GT3 cDNA was expressed in rat fibroblasts, a three-to fourfold enhancement of 2-deoxyglucose uptake was observed, indicating that CEF-GT3 is a functional glucose transporter. Northern analyses using a CEF-GT3 and a rat type 1 probe demonstrated that there is no hybridization between different isoforms but that there is cross-species hybridization between the rat type 1 probe and the chicken homolog. Southern blot analyses confirmed that the chicken genomic type 1 and type 3 transporters are encoded by distinct genes. We conclude that CEFs express two types of transporter, type 1 (which we have previously reported to be regulated posttranslationally by src) and a novel type 3 isoform which, unlike type 1, shows mRNA induction upon src transformation. We conclude that src regulates glucose transport in CEFs simultaneously by two different mechanisms.

1991 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 4448-4454 ◽  
Author(s):  
M K White ◽  
T B Rall ◽  
M J Weber

The increase in glucose transport that occurs when chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEFs) are transformed by src is associated with an increase in the amount of type 1 glucose transporter protein, and we have previously shown that this effect is due to a decrease in the degradation rate of this protein. The rate of CEF type 1 glucose transporter biosynthesis and the level of its mRNA are unaffected by src transformation. To study the molecular basis of this phenomenon, we have been isolating chicken glucose transporter cDNAs by hybridization to a rat type 1 glucose transporter probe at low stringency. Surprisingly, these clones corresponded to a message encoding a protein which has most sequence similarity to the human type 3 glucose transporter and which we refer to as CEF-GT3. CEF-GT3 is clearly distinct from the CEF type 1 transporter that we have previously described. Northern (RNA) analysis of CEF RNA with CEF-GT3 cDNA revealed two messages of 1.7 and 3.3 kb which were both greatly induced by src transformation. When the CEF-GT3 cDNA was expressed in rat fibroblasts, a three-to fourfold enhancement of 2-deoxyglucose uptake was observed, indicating that CEF-GT3 is a functional glucose transporter. Northern analyses using a CEF-GT3 and a rat type 1 probe demonstrated that there is no hybridization between different isoforms but that there is cross-species hybridization between the rat type 1 probe and the chicken homolog. Southern blot analyses confirmed that the chicken genomic type 1 and type 3 transporters are encoded by distinct genes. We conclude that CEFs express two types of transporter, type 1 (which we have previously reported to be regulated posttranslationally by src) and a novel type 3 isoform which, unlike type 1, shows mRNA induction upon src transformation. We conclude that src regulates glucose transport in CEFs simultaneously by two different mechanisms.


1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 138-144
Author(s):  
M K White ◽  
M J Weber

Transformation of both rat and chicken fibroblasts by the src oncogene leads to a four- to fivefold increase in the rate of glucose transport and in the level of the glucose transporter protein. We have previously shown that, with chicken embryo fibroblasts, transformation leads to a reduction in the rate of degradation of the transporter, with little or no increase in the rate of its biosynthesis. We now show that, with the rat-1 cell line, the opposite result was obtained. src-induced transformation led to an increase in transporter biosynthesis, with little effect on turnover. A src-induced increase in transporter mRNA entirely accounted for the increase in biosynthesis of the protein. By contrast, in chicken embryo fibroblasts, the level of transporter mRNA was low and was not induced to rise by src transformation. Thus, src induced an increase in the level of the glucose transport protein by fundamentally different mechanisms in chicken embryo fibroblasts and rat-1 cells. To test whether this difference was due to rat-1 cells being an immortalized cell line, we measured transporter mRNA levels in primary fibroblast cultures from rat embryos and in parallel cultures transformed by src. Transporter mRNA was inducible by src in these cells. Thus, the difference in mRNA inducibility between chicken and rat cells is not due to immortalization.


1995 ◽  
Vol 6 (11) ◽  
pp. 1575-1589 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Wagstaff ◽  
H Y Kang ◽  
D Mylott ◽  
P J Robbins ◽  
M K White

Vertebrate cells that are transformed by oncogenes such as v-src or are stimulated by mitogens have increased rates of glucose uptake. In rodent cells, the mechanisms whereby glucose transport is up-regulated are well understood. Stimulation of glucose transport involves an elevation in mRNA encoding the GLUT1 glucose transporter that is controlled at the levels of both transcription and mRNA stability. Cloning and sequencing of chicken GLUT1 cDNA showed that it shares 95% amino acid sequence similarity to mammalian GLUT1s. Nevertheless, unlike mammalian GLUT1 mRNA, it was not induced by v-src, serum addition, or treatment with the tumor promoter 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate in chicken embryo fibroblasts. Rather, the induction of glucose transport in chicken embryo fibroblasts by v-src, serum, and 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate was associated with induction of GLUT3 mRNA level and GLUT3 transcription. Rat fibroblasts were also found to express both GLUT1 and GLUT3 isoforms, but v-src induced GLUT1 and not GLUT3. This suggests that animal cells require both a basal and an upregulatable glucose transporter and that these functions have been subsumed by different GLUT isoforms in avian and mammalian cells.


1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 138-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
M K White ◽  
M J Weber

Transformation of both rat and chicken fibroblasts by the src oncogene leads to a four- to fivefold increase in the rate of glucose transport and in the level of the glucose transporter protein. We have previously shown that, with chicken embryo fibroblasts, transformation leads to a reduction in the rate of degradation of the transporter, with little or no increase in the rate of its biosynthesis. We now show that, with the rat-1 cell line, the opposite result was obtained. src-induced transformation led to an increase in transporter biosynthesis, with little effect on turnover. A src-induced increase in transporter mRNA entirely accounted for the increase in biosynthesis of the protein. By contrast, in chicken embryo fibroblasts, the level of transporter mRNA was low and was not induced to rise by src transformation. Thus, src induced an increase in the level of the glucose transport protein by fundamentally different mechanisms in chicken embryo fibroblasts and rat-1 cells. To test whether this difference was due to rat-1 cells being an immortalized cell line, we measured transporter mRNA levels in primary fibroblast cultures from rat embryos and in parallel cultures transformed by src. Transporter mRNA was inducible by src in these cells. Thus, the difference in mRNA inducibility between chicken and rat cells is not due to immortalization.


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 1301-1306
Author(s):  
M K White ◽  
M J Weber

When fibroblasts are transformed by the src oncogene, there is a two- to fivefold increase in glucose transport and in the level of immunoprecipitable glucose transporter protein. In chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEFs), this increase is correlated with a comparable reduction in the rate at which the glucose transporter protein is turned over. In contrast, in mammalian fibroblasts glucose transporter biosynthesis is increased by src, but there is little or no change in its turnover. To further understand the action of src on transporter turnover, we investigated whether a mammalian transporter can be stabilized by src in a chicken cell environment. The human type 1 glucose transporter protein (hGT), originally cloned from HepG2 cells, was expressed in CEFs or Rat-1 fibroblasts by using a retroviral vector. In CEFs transformed by a temperature-sensitive src mutant, tsNY68, turnover of hGT was lower at the permissive temperature (36 degrees C) than at the nonpermissive temperature (42 degrees C). When this protein was expressed in CEFs transformed by wild-type src, no difference in turnover was observed at the two temperatures. In the case of Rat-1 cells transformed by the temperature-sensitive src mutant tsLA29, turnover of hGT was the same at the permissive temperature (35 degrees C) as at the nonpermissive temperature (39.5 degrees C). These data demonstrate that a heterologous glucose transporter behaves in the same way in chicken and rat cells as the respective endogenous transporter, i.e., when src is active, the protein is stablilized against turnover in chicken cells but not in rat cells.


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 1301-1306 ◽  
Author(s):  
M K White ◽  
M J Weber

When fibroblasts are transformed by the src oncogene, there is a two- to fivefold increase in glucose transport and in the level of immunoprecipitable glucose transporter protein. In chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEFs), this increase is correlated with a comparable reduction in the rate at which the glucose transporter protein is turned over. In contrast, in mammalian fibroblasts glucose transporter biosynthesis is increased by src, but there is little or no change in its turnover. To further understand the action of src on transporter turnover, we investigated whether a mammalian transporter can be stabilized by src in a chicken cell environment. The human type 1 glucose transporter protein (hGT), originally cloned from HepG2 cells, was expressed in CEFs or Rat-1 fibroblasts by using a retroviral vector. In CEFs transformed by a temperature-sensitive src mutant, tsNY68, turnover of hGT was lower at the permissive temperature (36 degrees C) than at the nonpermissive temperature (42 degrees C). When this protein was expressed in CEFs transformed by wild-type src, no difference in turnover was observed at the two temperatures. In the case of Rat-1 cells transformed by the temperature-sensitive src mutant tsLA29, turnover of hGT was the same at the permissive temperature (35 degrees C) as at the nonpermissive temperature (39.5 degrees C). These data demonstrate that a heterologous glucose transporter behaves in the same way in chicken and rat cells as the respective endogenous transporter, i.e., when src is active, the protein is stablilized against turnover in chicken cells but not in rat cells.


1982 ◽  
Vol 206 (2) ◽  
pp. 301-309 ◽  
Author(s):  
R J Gay ◽  
H Amos

Enhanced rates of carrier-mediated 3-O-methyl-D-glucose (0.1 mM) transport were observed in primary cell cultures of chicken embryo fibroblasts deprived of glucose for 1 day. The addition of 5.5 mM-glucose, glucosamine or 2-deoxy-D-glucose for 15 min (37 degrees C) to glucose-starved cultures followed by washing and immediate measurement of 3-O-methyl-D-glucose transport resulted in an apparent further stimulation of transport. Transport stimulation increased with increasing concentrations of the added preincubation sugar and was observed at test concentrations ranging from 0.1 mM- to 10 mM-3-O-methyl-D-glucose. This enhancement occurred when the preloaded sugar was rapidly effluxing from cells and was eliminated by allowing cultures to incubate in buffer without sugar for 30 min (37 degrees C) after the removal of hexose and before measuring transport. A transient overshoot in the cumulative uptake of 3-O-methyl-D-glucose was observed in glucose-starved cultures that were pre-incubated in the presence of 55 mM-glucose or -glucosamine for 15 min (37 degrees C). These data suggest that counter-transport accounts for the apparent enhancement of glucose-transport capability observed in glucose-starved cells when they are briefly re-exposed to hexose.


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