Abstract

Stimulations of glucose transport produced by insulin action, contraction, or through a change in cell energy status are mediated by separate signaling pathways. These are the wortmannin-sensitive phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase pathway leading to the intermediate Akt and the wortmannin-insensitive AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) pathway. Electrical stimulation of cardiomyocytes produced a rapid, insulin-like, wortmannin-sensitive stimulation of glucose transport activity, but this occurred without extensive activation of Akt. Although AMPK phosphorylation was increased by contraction, this response was not wortmannin-inhibitable and consequently did not correlate with the wortmannin sensitivity of the transport stimulation. Oxidative metabolism stress due to hypoxia or treatment with oligomycin led to increased AMPK activity with a corresponding increase in glucose transport activity. We show here that these separate signaling pathways converge on GLUT4 trafficking at separate steps. The rate of exocytosis of GLUT4 was rapidly stimulated by insulin, but insulin treatment did not alter the endocytosis rate. Like insulin stimulation, electrical stimulation of contraction led to a stimulation of GLUT4 exocytosis without any marked change in endocytosis. By contrast, after oxidative metabolism stress, no stimulation of GLUT4 exocytosis occurred; instead, this treatment led to a reduction in GLUT4 endocytosis.

Highlights

  • Contraction of skeletal myocytes is known to lead to increased levels of glucose transport

  • We show here that these separate signaling pathways conincreased glucose transport in cell lines [3, 4] and skeletal muscle that have been challenged by a metabolic stress stimulus or more direct activation of the kinase by the AMP analogue, ZMP, which is produced from the nucleoside AICAR [5, 6]

  • The present study examines whether the stimulatory effect of insulin on GLUT4 translocation in cardiomyocytes is likewise due to stimulation of exocytosis

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Summary

Introduction

Contraction of skeletal myocytes is known to lead to increased levels of glucose transport. Activation of Signaling via Akt and AMPK Leads to Contrasting Effects on Glucose Transport Activity—Transport of 2-deoxy-D-glucose in cardiomyocytes was stimulated by both insulin and the oxidative metabolism stress that followed hypoxia or treatment of cardiomyocytes with the mitochondrial inhibitor oligomycin (Fig. 1).

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