Abstract

The Glut4 glucose transporter undergoes complex insulin-regulated subcellular trafficking in adipocytes. Much effort has been expended in an attempt to identify targeting motifs within Glut4 that direct its subcellular trafficking, but an amino acid motif responsible for the targeting of the transporter to insulin-responsive intracellular compartments in the basal state or that is directly responsible for its insulin-stimulated redistribution to the plasma membrane has not yet been delineated. In this study we define amino acid residues within the C-terminal cytoplasmic tail of Glut4 that are essential for its insulin-stimulated translocation to the plasma membrane. The residues were identified based on sequence similarity (LXXLXPDEXD) between cytoplasmic domains of Glut4 and the insulin-responsive aminopeptidase (IRAP). Alteration of this putative targeting motif (IRM, insulin-responsive motif) resulted in the targeting of the bulk of the mutant Glut4 molecules to dispersed membrane vesicles that lacked detectable levels of wild-type Glut4 in either the basal or insulin-stimulated states and completely abolished the insulin-stimulated translocation of the mutant Glut4 to the plasma membrane in 3T3L1 adipocytes. The bulk of the dispersed membrane vesicles containing the IRM mutant did not contain detectable levels of any subcellular marker tested. A fraction of the total IRM mutant was also detected in a wild-type Glut4/Syntaxin 6-containing perinuclear compartment. Interestingly, mutation of the IRM sequence did not appreciably alter the subcellular trafficking of IRAP. We conclude that residues within the IRM are critical for the targeting of Glut4, but not of IRAP, to insulin-responsive intracellular membrane compartments in 3T3-L1 adipocytes.

Highlights

  • Regulation of insulin-stimulated Glut4 activity appears to be the proximal cause of insulin resistance associated with type 2 diabetes [6, 7], and there has been an intensive effort to understand the molecular mechanisms involved in insulin-stimulated Glut4 function

  • A conserved motif (IRM) is shared between these two proteins corresponding to the amino acid sequence LXXLXPDEX(D/ E), where X is any amino acid

  • To determine whether residues within this shared sequence are involved in the regulated subcellular trafficking of Glut4, a mutant was constructed in which the six conserved residues were all changed to alanine residues, and the mutant was tagged with a HA epitope in the first exofacial loop (HA-IRAP. A conserved motif (IRM)) (Fig. 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Regulation of insulin-stimulated Glut4 activity appears to be the proximal cause of insulin resistance associated with type 2 diabetes [6, 7], and there has been an intensive effort to understand the molecular mechanisms involved in insulin-stimulated Glut4 function. Ior of the ectopically expressed wild-type Glut4/eGFP by comparing its subcellular distribution to that of endogenous IRAP, a protein that appears to target very if not identically, to Glut4 in the basal and insulin-stimulated states [40].

Results
Conclusion
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