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    Date Issued2005 (1)1999 (1)AuthorCarruthers, Anthony (2)
    Sultzman, Lisa A. (2)
    Hamill, Stephanie (1)Levine, Kara B. (1)Robichaud, Trista K. (1)UMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology (2)Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (2)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordLife Sciences (2)Medicine and Health Sciences (2)3-O-Methylglucose; Binding Sites; Biological Transport; Blood Glucose; Cytochalasin B; Erythrocytes; Glucose Transporter Type 1; Humans; Kinetics; Ligands; Liposomes; Maltose; Monosaccharide Transport Proteins; Proteolipids; Spectrometry, Fluorescence (1)Amino Acid Substitution; Biological Transport, Active; Cell Compartmentation; Erythrocytes; Gene Deletion; Genes, Fungal; Glucose; Glucose Transporter Type 1; Humans; Kinetics; Models, Biological; Monosaccharide Transport Proteins; Mutagenesis, Site-Directed; Recombinant Proteins; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Transfection (1)View MoreJournalBiochemistry (2)

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    Properties of the human erythrocyte glucose transport protein are determined by cellular context

    Levine, Kara B.; Robichaud, Trista K.; Hamill, Stephanie; Sultzman, Lisa A.; Carruthers, Anthony (2005-04-13)
    Human erythrocyte hexose transfer is mediated by the glucose transport protein GLUT1 and is characterized by a complexity that is unexplained by available hypotheses for carrier-mediated sugar transport [Cloherty, E. K., Heard, K. S., and Carruthers, A. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 10411-10421]. The study presented here examines the possibility that the operational properties of GLUT1 are determined by host cell environment. A glucose transport-null strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (RE700A) was transfected with the p426 GPD yeast expression vector containing DNA encoding the wild-type human glucose transport protein (GLUT1), mutant GLUT1 (GLUT1(338)(-)(A3)), or carboxy-terminal hemagglutinin-polyHis-tagged GLUT1 (GLUT1-HA-H6). GLUT1 and GLUT1-HA-H6 are expressed at the yeast cell membrane and restore 2-deoxy-d-glucose, 3-O-methylglucose, and d-glucose transport capacity to RE700A. GLUT1-HA-H6 confers GLUT1-specific sugar transport characteristics to transfected RE700A, including inhibition by cytochalasin B and high-affinity transport of the nonmetabolized sugar 3-O-methylglucose. GLUT1(338)(-)(A3), a catalytically inactive GLUT1 mutant, is expressed but fails to restore RE700A sugar uptake capacity or growth on glucose. In contrast to transport in human red cells, K(m(app)) for 2-deoxy-d-glucose uptake equals K(i(app)) for 2-deoxy-d-glucose inhibition of 3-O-methylglucose uptake. Unlike transport in human red cells or transport in human embryonic kidney cells transfected with GLUT1-HA-H6, unidirectional sugar uptake in RE700A-GLUT1-HA-H6 is not inhibited by reductant and is not stimulated by intracellular sugar. Net uptake of subsaturating 3-O-methylglucose by RE700A-GLUT1-HA-H6 is a simple, first-order process. These findings support the hypothesis that red cell sugar transport complexity is host cell-specific.
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    Stop-flow analysis of cooperative interactions between GLUT1 sugar import and export sites

    Sultzman, Lisa A.; Carruthers, Anthony (1999-06-03)
    The human erythrocyte sugar transporter is thought to function either as a simple carrier (sugar import and sugar export sites are presented sequentially) or as a fixed-site carrier (sugar import and sugar export sites are presented simultaneously). The present study examines each hypothesis by analysis of the rapid kinetics of reversible cytochalasin B binding to the sugar export site in the presence and absence of sugars that bind to the sugar import site. Cytochalasin B binding to the purified, human erythrocyte glucose transport protein (GLUT1) induces quenching of GLUT1 intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence. The time-course of GLUT1 fluorescence quenching reflects a second-order process characterized by simple exponential kinetics. The pseudo-first-order rate constant describing fluorescence decay (kobs) increases linearly with [cytochalasin B] while the extent of fluorescence quenching increases in a saturable manner with [cytochalasin B]. Rate constants for cytochalasin B binding to GLUT1 (k1) and dissociation from the GLUT1.cytochalasin B complex (k-1) are obtained from the relationship: kobs = k-1 + k1[cytochalasin B]. Low concentrations of maltose, D-glucose, 3-O-methylglucose, and other GLUT1 import-site reactive sugars increase k-1(app) and reduce k1(app) for cytochalasin B interaction with GLUT1. Higher sugar concentrations decrease k1(app) further. The simple carrier mechanism predicts that k1(app) alone is modulated by import- and export-site reactive sugars and is thus incompatible with these findings. These results are consistent with a fixed-site carrier mechanism in which GLUT1 simultaneously presents cooperative sugar import and export sites.
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