Baqué S, Montell E, Guinovart J J, Newgard C B, Gómez-Foix A M
Department de Bioquímica i Biologia Molecular, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain.
Diabetes. 1998 Sep;47(9):1392-8. doi: 10.2337/diabetes.47.9.1392.
Insulin resistance, as is found in skeletal muscle of individuals with obesity and NIDDM, appears to involve a reduced capacity of the hormone to stimulate glucose uptake and/or phosphorylation. The glucose phosphorylation step, as catalyzed by hexokinase II, has been described as rate limiting for glucose disposal in muscle, but overexpression of this enzyme under control of a muscle-specific promoter in transgenic mice has had limited metabolic impact. In the current study, we investigated in a cultured muscle model whether expression of glucokinase, which in contrast to hexokinase II is not inhibited by glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-P), would have a pronounced metabolic impact. We used a recombinant adenovirus containing the cDNA-encoding rat liver glucokinase (AdCMV-GKL) to increase the glucose phosphorylating activity in cultured human muscle cells by fourfold. G-6-P levels increased in AdCMV-GKL-treated cells in a glucose concentration-dependent manner over the range of 1-30 mmol/l, whereas the much smaller increases in G-6-P in control cells were maximal at glucose concentrations <5 mmol/l. Further, cells expressing glucokinase accumulated 17 times more 2-deoxyglucose-6-phosphate than control cells. In AdCMV-GKL-treated cells, the time-dependent rise in G-6-P correlated with an increase in the activity ratio of glycogen synthase. AdCMV-GKL-treated cells also exhibited a 2.5- to 3-fold increase in glycogen content and a four- to fivefold increase in glycolytic flux, proportional to the increase in glucose phosphorylating capacity. All of these observations were made in the absence of insulin. Thus we concluded that expression of glucokinase in cultured human muscle cells results in proportional increases in insulin-independent glucose disposal, and that muscle glucose storage and utilization becomes controlled in a glucose concentration-dependent manner in AdCMV-GKL-treated cells. These results encourage testing whether delivery of glucokinase to muscle in vivo has an impact on glycemic control, which could be a method for circumventing the failure of insulin to stimulate glucose uptake and/or phosphorylation in muscle normally in insulin-resistant subjects.
胰岛素抵抗,如在肥胖和非胰岛素依赖型糖尿病个体的骨骼肌中所发现的那样,似乎涉及该激素刺激葡萄糖摄取和/或磷酸化的能力降低。由己糖激酶II催化的葡萄糖磷酸化步骤,已被描述为肌肉中葡萄糖处置的限速步骤,但在转基因小鼠中,在肌肉特异性启动子控制下该酶的过表达对代谢的影响有限。在当前研究中,我们在培养的肌肉模型中研究了与己糖激酶II不同、不受6-磷酸葡萄糖(G-6-P)抑制的葡萄糖激酶的表达是否会产生显著的代谢影响。我们使用了一种含有编码大鼠肝脏葡萄糖激酶cDNA的重组腺病毒(AdCMV-GKL),以使培养的人肌肉细胞中的葡萄糖磷酸化活性提高四倍。在1至30 mmol/l的范围内,AdCMV-GKL处理的细胞中G-6-P水平以葡萄糖浓度依赖性方式增加,而对照细胞中G-6-P的较小增加在葡萄糖浓度<5 mmol/l时达到最大值。此外,表达葡萄糖激酶的细胞积累的6-磷酸-2-脱氧葡萄糖比对照细胞多17倍。在AdCMV-GKL处理的细胞中,G-6-P随时间的增加与糖原合酶活性比的增加相关。AdCMV-GKL处理的细胞还表现出糖原含量增加2.5至3倍,糖酵解通量增加4至5倍,与葡萄糖磷酸化能力的增加成比例。所有这些观察结果都是在没有胰岛素的情况下进行的。因此我们得出结论,在培养的人肌肉细胞中葡萄糖激酶的表达导致不依赖胰岛素的葡萄糖处置成比例增加,并且在AdCMV-GKL处理的细胞中,肌肉葡萄糖储存和利用以葡萄糖浓度依赖性方式受到控制。这些结果促使人们测试在体内将葡萄糖激酶递送至肌肉是否会对血糖控制产生影响,这可能是一种规避胰岛素抵抗个体中胰岛素通常无法刺激肌肉中葡萄糖摄取和/或磷酸化的方法。