Previous work suggests that normal GLUT4 content is sufficient for increases in muscle glucose uptake (MGU) during hyperinsulinemia, because glucose phosphorylation is the more formidable barrier to insulin-stimulated MGU. It was hypothesized that a partial ablation of GLUT4 would not impair insulin-stimulated MGU when glucose phosphorylation capacity is normal but would do so when glucose phosphorylation capacity is increased. Thus, chow-fed C57BL/6J mice with a GLUT4 partial knockout (GLUT4+/-), hexokinase II overexpression (HKTg), or both (HKTg + GLUT4 +/-) and wild-type littermates were studied. Carotid artery and jugular vein catheters were implanted for sampling and infusions at 4 months of age. After a 5-d recovery, 5-h fasted mice (n = 8-11/group) underwent a 120-min saline infusion or insulin clamp (4 mU/kg·min insulin with glucose maintained at 165 mg/dl) and received a 2-deoxy[3H]glucose bolus to provide an index of MGU (Rg) for the soleus, gastrocnemius, and superficial vastus lateralis. Basal Rg from all muscles studied from saline-infused mice were not changed by any of the genetic modifications. HKTg mice had augmented insulin-stimulated Rg in all muscles studied compared with remaining genotypes. Insulin-stimulated R g was not impaired in any of the muscles studied from GLUT4 mice. However, the enhanced insulin-stimulated Rg created by HK overexpression was ablated in HKTg + GLUT4+/- mice. Thus, a 50% reduction of normal GLUT4 content in the presence of normal HK activity does not impair insulin-stimulated MGU. However, when the glucose phosphorylation barrier is lowered by HK overexpression, GLUT4 availability becomes a limitation to insulin-stimulated MGU.
CITATION STYLE
Fueger, P. T., Hess, H. S., Bracy, D. P., Pencek, R. R., Posey, K. A., Charron, M. J., & Wasserman, D. H. (2004). Regulation of insulin-stimulated muscle glucose uptake in the conscious mouse: Role of glucose transport is dependent on glucose phosphorylation capacity. Endocrinology, 145(11), 4912–4916. https://doi.org/10.1210/en.2004-0465
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.