The human erythrocyte glucose transporter is an allosteric complex of four GLUT1 proteins whose structure and substrate binding properties are stabilized by reductant-sensitive, noncovalent subunit interactions [Hebert, D. N., & Carruthers, A. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 23829-23838]. In the present study, we use biochemical and molecular approaches to isolate specific determinants of transporter oligomeric structure and transport function. When unfolded in denaturant, each subunit (GLUT1 protein) of the transporter complex exposes two sulfhydryl groups. Four additional thiol groups are accessible following subunit exposure to reductant. Assays of subunit disulfide bridge content suggest that two inaccessible sulfhydryl groups form an internal disulfide bridge. Differential alkylation/peptide mapping/N-terminal sequence analyses show that a GLUT1 carboxyl-terminal peptide (residues 232-492) contains three inaccessible sulfhydryl groups and that an N-terminal GLUT1 peptide (residues 147-261/299) contains two accessible thiols. The carboxyl-terminal peptide most likely contains the intramolecular disulfide bridge since neither its yield nor its electrophoretic mobility is altered by addition of reductant. Each GLUT1 cysteine was changed to serine by oligonucleotide-directed, in vitro mutagenesis. The resulting transport proteins were expressed in CHO cells and screened by immunofluorescence microscopy for their ability to expose tetrameric GLUT1-specific epitopes. Serine substitution at cysteine residues 133, 201, 207, and 429 does not inhibit exposure of tetrameric GLUT1-specific epitopes. Serine substitution at cysteines 347 or 421 prevents exposure of tetrameric GLUT1-specific epitopes. Hydrodynamic analysis of GLUT1/GLUT4 chimeras expressed in and subsequently solubilized from CHO cells indicates that GLUT1 residues 1-199 promote chimera dimerization and permit GLUT1/chimera heterotetramerization. This GLUT1 N-terminal domain is insufficient for chimera tetramerization which additionally requires GLUT1 residues 200-463. Extracellular reductants (dithiothreitol, beta-mercaptoethanol, or glutathione) reduce erythrocyte 3-O-methylglucose uptake by up to 15-fold. This noncompetitive inhibition of sugar uptake is reversed by the cell-impermeant, oxidized glutathione. Reductant is without effect on sugar exit from erythrocytes. Dithiothreitol doubles the cytochalasin B binding capacity of erythrocyte-resident glucose transporter, abolishes allosteric interactions between substrate binding sites on adjacent subunits, and occludes tetrameric GLUT1-specific GLUT1 epitopes in situ. CHO cell-resident GLUT1 structure and transport function are similarly affected by extracellular reductant. We conclude that each subunit of the glucose transporter contains an extracellular disulfide bridge (Cys347 and Cys421) that stabilizes transporter oligomeric structure and thereby accelerates transport function.
GLUT1-mediated, passive D-glucose transport in human erythrocytes is asymmetric, Vmax and K(m)(app) for D-glucose uptake at 4 degrees C are 10-fold lower than Vmax and K(m)(app) for D-glucose export. Transport asymmetry is not observed for GLUT1-mediated 3-O-methylglucose transport in rat, rabbit, and avian erythrocytes and rat adipocytes where Vmax for sugar uptake and exit are identical. This suggests that transport asymmetry is either an intrinsic catalytic property of human GLUT1 or that factors present in human erythrocytes affect GLUT1-mediated sugar transport. In the present study we assess human erythrocyte sugar transport asymmetry by direct measurement of sugar transport rates and by analysis of the effects of intra- and extracellular sugars on cytochalasin B binding to the sugar export site. We also perform internal consistency tests to determine whether the measured, steady-state 3-O-methylglucose transport properties of human erythrocytes agree with those expected of two hypothetical models for protein-mediated sugar transport. The simple-carrier hypothesis describes a transporter that alternately exposes sugar import and sugar export pathways. The fixed-site carrier hypothesis describes a sugar transporter that simultaneously exposes sugar import and sugar export pathways. Steady-state 3-O-methylglucose transport in human erythrocytes at 4 degrees C is asymmetric. Vmax and K(m)(app) for sugar uptake are 10-fold lower than Vmax and K(m)(app) for sugar export. Phloretin-inhibitable cytochalasin B binding to intact red cells is unaffected by extracellular D-glucose but is competitively inhibited by intracellular D-glucose. This inhibition is reduced by 13% +/- 4% when saturating extracellular D-glucose levels are also present. Assuming transport is mediated by a simple-carrier and that cytochalasin B and intracellular D-glucose binding sites are mutually exclusive, the cytochalasin B binding data are explained only if transport is almost symmetric (Vmax exit = 1.4 Vmax entry). The cytochalasin B binding data are consistent with both symmetric and asymmetric fixed-site carriers. Analysis of 3-O-methylglucose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose, and D-glucose uptake in the presence of intracellular 3-O-methylglucose, demonstrates significant divergence in experimental and theoretical transport behaviors. We conclude either that human erythrocyte sugar transport is mediated by a carrier mechanism that is fundamentally different from those considered previously or that human erythrocyte-specific factors prevent accurate determination of GLUT1-mediated sugar translocation across the cell membrane. We suggest that GLUT1-mediated sugar transport in all cells is an intrinsically symmetric process but that intracellular sugar complexation in human red cells prevents accurate determination of transport rates.
Human erythrocyte sugar transport is mediated by the integral membrane protein GLUT1 and is regulated by cytosolic ATP [Carruthers, A., and Helgerson, A. L. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 8337-8346]. This study asks the following questions. (1) Where is the GLUT1 ATP binding site? (2) Is ATP-GLUT1 interaction sufficient for sugar transport regulation? (3) Is ATP modulation of transport subject to metabolic control? GLUT1 residues 301-364 were identified as one element of the GLUT1 ATP binding domain by peptide mapping and N-terminal sequence analysis of proteolytic fragments of azidoATP-photolabeled GLUT1. Nucleotide binding and sugar transport experiments undertaken with dimeric and tetrameric forms of GLUT1 indicate that only tetrameric GLUT1 binds and is subject to modulation by ATP. Reconstitution experiments indicate that nucleotide and tetrameric GLUT1 are sufficient for ATP modulation of sugar transport. Feedback control of GLUT1 regulation by ATP was investigated by measuring sugar uptake into erythrocyte ghosts containing or lacking ATP and glycolytic intermediates. Only AMP and ADP modulate ATP regulation of transport. Reduced cytosolic pH inhibits ATP modulation of GLUT1-mediated 3OMG uptake and increases Kd(app) for ATP interaction with GLUT1. We conclude that tetrameric but not dimeric GLUT1 is subject to direct regulation by cytosolic ATP and that this regulation is antagonized by intracellular AMP and acidification.
The human erythrocyte sugar transporter presents sugar import (e2) and sugar export (e1) sites simultaneously. This study asks whether the sugar transporter exposes only one or multiple import sites. We approached this question by analysis of cytochalasin B binding to the human erythrocyte sugar export site in the presence of sugars that bind to the sugar import site. Extracellular maltose does not enter human erythrocytes. High concentrations of maltose (1-100 mM) inhibit cytochalasin B binding to human red cells. Low concentrations (25-500 microM) increase the level of erythrocyte cytochalasin B binding. Maltose modulation of cytochalasin B binding is mediated by altered affinity of sugar export sites for cytochalasin B. Similar results are obtained with other cell-impermeant inhibitors of sugar uptake. Extracellular D-glucose (a transported sugar) stimulates cytochalasin B binding at low D-glucose concentrations (10-250 microM), but this effect is lost at higher concentrations. Intracellular D-glucose inhibits cytochalasin B binding. Low concentrations of extracellular maltose and other nontransported inhibitors stimulate 3-O-methylglucose uptake in erythrocytes. Higher sugar concentrations (1-100 mM) inhibit transport. These data support the hypothesis that the erythrocyte sugar transporter presents two sugar import sites and at least one sugar export site. This conclusion is consistent with the proposed oligomeric structure of the sugar transporter, a complex of four GluT1 proteins in which each subunit presents a translocation pathway.
Glucose transport protein deficiency due to mutation in the GLUT1 gene is characterized by infantile onset and chronic seizure disorder, microcephaly, global developmental delays, and hypoglycorrhachia. We describe a 10-year-old normocephalic male with prominent ataxia, dystonia, choreoathetosis, and GLUT1 deficiency whose motor abnormalities improved with a ketogenic diet. We illustrate the motor abnormalities, at baseline and after ketogenic diet, that characterize this unusual case. This case broadens the phenotype of GLUT1 deficiency and illustrates the importance of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) evaluation in detecting potentially treatable conditions in children with undiagnosed movement disorders.
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