Abstract
Recent studies documented regulation of hypothalamic astrocyte mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways, including p38, by the plasma membrane glucose carrier/sensor glucose transporter-2 (GLUT2). Sex-specific GLUT2 control of p38 phosphorylation was observed, but effects on individual p38 family protein profiles were not investigated. Current research employed an established primary astrocyte culture model, gene knockdown tools, and selective primary antisera against p38-alpha, p38-beta, p38-gamma, and p38-delta isoforms to investigate whether GLUT2 governs expression of one or more of these variants in a glucose-dependent manner. Data show that GLUT2 inhibits baseline expression of each p38 protein in male cultures, yet stimulates p38-delta profiles without affecting other p38 proteins in female. Glucose starvation caused selective up-regulation of p38-delta profiles in male versus p38-alpha and -gamma proteins in female; these positive responses were amplified by GLUT2 siRNA pretreatment. GLUT2 opposes or enhances basal p38 phosphorylation in male versus female, respectively. GLUT2 siRNA pretreatment did not affect glucoprivic patterns of phospho-p38 protein expression in either sex. Outcomes document co-expression of the four principal p38 MAPK family proteins in hypothalamic astrocytes, and implicate GLUT2 in regulation of all (male) versus one (female) variant(s). Glucoprivation up-regulated expression of distinctive p38 isoforms in each sex; these stimulatory responses are evidently blunted by GLUT2. Glucoprivic-associated loss of GLUT2 gene silencing effects on p38 phosphorylation infers either that glucose status determines whether this sensor controls phosphorylation, or that decrements in screened glucose in each instance are of sufficient magnitude to abolish GLUT2 regulation of that function.
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