Abstract
GLUT2 may play an important role in pancreatic beta-cell glucose metabolism. A decrease in glucose uptake due to underexpression of GLUT2 has been considered as the cause of beta-cell dysfunction in diabetes with different pathogenesis. However, this view has been challenged by recent studies, in which the underexpression of GLUT2 was not accompanied by a decrease in glucose uptake. Our present aim is to evaluate the presumed importance of GLUT2 in maintaining the efficiency of beta-cell glucose uptake. We studied the kinetic characteristics of 3-O-methylglucose uptake in two beta-cell lines. One of these is the beta TC3 cell line which expresses GLUT1 and the other is the beta HC9 cell line which expresses both GLUT1 and GLUT2. Under equilibrium exchange conditions, 3-O-methylglucose transport in these two cell lines showed similar values of K(m) and V(max). The apparent IC50 of cytochalasin B for inhibiting 3-O-methylglucose transport in beta HC9 cells was nine times as high as in beta TC3 cells, indicating that GLUT1 is the critically important glucose transporter in the beta TC3 cell line and GLUT2 in the beta HC9 cell line. In both cell lines, the rates of glucose uptake were at least three times as fast as that of glucose phosphorylation. Our results suggest that GLUT1 is able to compensate for GLUT2 loss as it occurs in beta TC3 and maintains a commensurately high capacity of glucose uptake to sustain glucose metabolism in pancreatic beta-cells.
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