Abstract

The trafficking kinetics of Glut4, the transferrin (Tf) receptor, and LRP1 were quantified in adipocytes and undifferentiated fibroblasts. Six steps were identified that determine steady state cell surface Glut4: (i) endocytosis, (ii) degradation, (iii) sorting, (iv) sequestration, (v) release, and (vi) tethering/docking/fusion. Endocytosis of Glut4 is 3 times slower than the Tf receptor in fibroblasts (ken = 0.2 min(-1) versus 0.6 min(-1)). Differentiation decreases Glut4 ken 40% (ken = 0.12 min(-1)). Differentiation also decreases Glut4 degradation, increasing total and cell surface Glut4 3-fold. In fibroblasts, Glut4 is recycled from endosomes through a slow constitutive pathway (kex = 0.025-0.038 min(-1)), not through the fast Tf receptor pathway (kex = 0.2 min(-1)). The kex measured in adipocytes after insulin stimulation is similar (kex = 0.027 min(-1)). Differentiation decreases the rate constant for sorting into the Glut4 recycling pathway (ksort) 3-fold. In adipocytes, Glut4 is also sorted from endosomes into a second exocytic pathway through Glut4 storage vesicles (GSVs). Surprisingly, transfer from endosomes into GSVs is highly regulated; insulin increases the rate constant for sequestration (kseq) 8-fold. Release from sequestration in GSVs is rate-limiting for Glut4 exocytosis in basal adipocytes. AS160 regulates this step. Tethering/docking/fusion of GSVs to the plasma membrane is regulated through an AS160-independent process. Insulin increases the rate of release and fusion of GSVs (kfuseG) 40-fold. LRP1 cycles with the Tf receptor and Glut4 in fibroblasts but predominantly with Glut4 after differentiation. Surprisingly, AS160 knockdown accelerated LRP1 exocytosis in basal and insulin-stimulated adipocytes. These data indicate that AS160 may regulate trafficking into as well as release from GSVs.

Highlights

  • Cell surface levels of glucose transporter glucose transporter 4 (Glut4) are tightly controlled in adipocytes

  • Differentiation induces the expression of Glut4 and the proteins required for its specialized insulin-dependent trafficking [12, 20, 21]

  • Differentiation decreased total Glut4 at the plasma membrane 4.2-fold in basal adipocytes compared with fibroblasts (Fig. 1B)

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Summary

Introduction

Cell surface levels of glucose transporter Glut are tightly controlled in adipocytes. Results: The effects of insulin and differentiation on the trafficking kinetics of Glut, the transferrin receptor, and LRP1 were measured to identify regulatory steps. Conclusion: Six independent steps determine cell surface Glut; insulin stimulates three of these. Significance: These results provide a framework for functionally mapping treatments/proteins that affect Glut translocation. The trafficking kinetics of Glut, the transferrin (Tf) receptor, and LRP1 were quantified in adipocytes and undifferentiated fibroblasts. Six steps were identified that determine steady state cell surface Glut: (i) endocytosis, (ii) degradation, (iii) sorting,

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