Walker P S, Donovan J A, Van Ness B G, Fellows R E, Pessin J E
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Iowa, Iowa City 52242.
J Biol Chem. 1988 Oct 25;263(30):15594-601.
D-Glucose deprivation of primary rat brain glial cell cultures, by incubation with 25 mM D-fructose for 24 h, resulted in a 4-5-fold induction of D-glucose transport activity. In contrast, 24-h D-glucose starvation of primary rat brain neuronal cultures had only a marginal effect (1.5-2-fold) on D-glucose transport activity. Northern blot analysis of total cellular RNA demonstrated that under these conditions the rat brain glial cells specifically increased the steady-state level of the D-glucose transporter mRNA 4-6-fold, whereas Northern blot analysis of the neuronal cell cultures revealed no significant alteration in the amount of D-glucose transporter mRNA by D-glucose deprivation. These findings demonstrated that the D-glucose-dependent regulation of the D-glucose transporter system occurred in a brain cell type-specific manner. The ED50 for the D-glucose starvation increase in the D-glucose transporter mRNA, in the glial cell cultures, occurred at approximately 3.5 mM D-glucose with maximal effect at 0.5 mM D-glucose. Readdition of D-glucose to the starved cell cultures reversed the increase in the D-glucose transporter mRNA levels and D-glucose transport activity to control values within 24 h. The increase in the D-glucose transporter mRNA was relatively rapid with half-maximal stimulation at approximately 2 h and maximal induction by 6-12 h of D-glucose deprivation. A similar time course was also observed for the starvation-induced increase in D-glucose transport activity and D-glucose transporter protein, as determined by Western blot analysis. These results document that, in rat brain glial cells, D-glucose transport activity, protein, and mRNA are regulated by the extracellular D-glucose concentration. Further, this suggests a potential role for hyperglycemia in the down-regulation of the D-glucose transport system in vivo.
将原代大鼠脑胶质细胞培养物与25 mM D-果糖孵育24小时以剥夺D-葡萄糖,导致D-葡萄糖转运活性诱导增加4-5倍。相比之下,原代大鼠脑神经元培养物24小时的D-葡萄糖饥饿对D-葡萄糖转运活性仅产生轻微影响(1.5-2倍)。对总细胞RNA进行的Northern印迹分析表明,在这些条件下,大鼠脑胶质细胞特异性地将D-葡萄糖转运体mRNA的稳态水平提高了4-6倍,而对神经元细胞培养物的Northern印迹分析显示,D-葡萄糖剥夺并未使D-葡萄糖转运体mRNA的量发生显著改变。这些发现表明,D-葡萄糖转运体系统的D-葡萄糖依赖性调节以脑细胞类型特异性方式发生。在胶质细胞培养物中,D-葡萄糖饥饿导致D-葡萄糖转运体mRNA增加的半数有效浓度(ED50)约为3.5 mM D-葡萄糖,在0.5 mM D-葡萄糖时达到最大效应。向饥饿的细胞培养物中重新添加D-葡萄糖可在24小时内将D-葡萄糖转运体mRNA水平和D-葡萄糖转运活性的增加逆转至对照值。D-葡萄糖转运体mRNA的增加相对较快,在约2小时时达到半数最大刺激,在D-葡萄糖剥夺6-12小时时达到最大诱导。通过蛋白质印迹分析确定,饥饿诱导的D-葡萄糖转运活性和D-葡萄糖转运体蛋白增加也观察到类似的时间进程。这些结果证明,在大鼠脑胶质细胞中,D-葡萄糖转运活性、蛋白质和mRNA受细胞外D-葡萄糖浓度调节。此外,这表明高血糖在体内D-葡萄糖转运系统下调中可能发挥作用。