The high metabolic requirements of the mammalian central nervous system require specialized structures for the facilitated transport of nutrients across the blood-brain barrier. Stereospecific high-capacity carriers, including those that recognize glucose, are key components of this barrier, which also protects the brain against noxious substances. Facilitated glucose transport in vertebrates is catalyzed by a family of carriers consisting of at least five functional isoforms with distinct tissue distributions, subcellular localizations and transport kinetics. Several of these transporters are expressed in the mammalian brain. GLUT-1, whose sequence was originally deduced from cDNAs cloned from human hepatoma and rat brain, is present at high levels in primate erythrocytes and brain endothelial cells. GLUT1 has been cloned and positionally mapped to the short arm of chromosome 1 (1p35-p31.3; refs 6-8). Despite substantial metabolic requirements of the central nervous system, no genetic disease caused by dysfunctional blood-brain barrier transport has been identified. Several years ago, we described two patients with infantile seizures, delayed development and acquired microcephaly who have normal circulating blood glucose, low-to-normal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) lactate, but persistent hypoglycorrachia (low CSF glucose) and diminished transport of hexose into isolated red blood cells (RBC). These symptoms suggested the existence of a defect in glucose transport across the blood brain barrier. We now report two distinct classes of mutations as the molecular basis for the functional defect of glucose transport: hemizygosity of GLUT1 and nonsense mutations resulting in truncation of the GLUT-1 protein.
Glucose transport into the brain is mediated by a facilitative glucose-transporter protein, GLUT-1. A GLUT-1 defect results in the Glucose-Transporter-Protein Syndrome (GTPS), characterized by infantile epilepsy, developmental delay, and acquired microcephaly. The diagnosis is currently based on clinical features, low to normal lactate levels and low glucose levels (hypoglycorrhachia) in the cerebrospinal fluid, and the demonstration of impaired GLUT-1 function in erythrocytes as described here. Blood samples were collected in sodium-heparin or citrate-phosphate-dextrose solution and uptake of 14C-labeled 3-O-Methyl-D-glucose (3OMG into erythrocytes (0.5 mmol/L 3OMG; 1 microCi/mL) was measured at 4C and pH 7.4. Three-OMG influx was terminated at 5-second intervals, washed cells were lysed, and uptake was quantitated by liquid scintillation counting. Patients' uptake (n = 22) was 44 +/- 8% of controls (100 +/- 22%, n = 70). Statistical analyses showed an uptake cut-off point at 60% uptake, a sensitivity of 86% (95%-confidence interval 78 to 94%), and a specificity of 97% (95%-confidence interval 93 to 100%). Gender, age, and ketosis did not influence 3OMG uptake. This assay provides a reproducible and accurate laboratory test for diagnosing the GTPS.
Impaired glucose transport across brain tissue barriers causes infantile seizures, developmental delay and acquired microcephaly. Since the first report in 1991 (De Vivo et al, NEJM, 1991) 17 patients have been identified with the glucose transporter protein syndrome (GTPS). The diagnostic feature of the syndrome is an unexplained hypoglycorrhachia in the clinical setting of an infantile epileptic encephalopathy. We review our clinical experience by highlighting one illustrative case: a 6-year old girl who presented at age 2 months with infantile seizures and hypoglycorrhachia. The CSF/blood glucose ratio was 0.33. DNA sequencing identified a missense mutation in exon 7 (C1108T). Erythrocyte GLUT1 immunoreactivity was normal. The time course of 3-O-methyl-glucose (3OMG) uptake by erythrocytes of the patient was 46% that of mother and father. The apparent Km was similar in all cases (2-4 mmol/L), but the apparent Vmax in the patient was only 28% that of the parents (500 versus 1,766 fmol/s/10(6)RBC; p < 0.004). In addition, a 3-month trial of oral thioctic acid also benefited the patient and increased the Vmax to 935 fmol/s/10(6) RBC (p < 3 x 10(-7)). Uptake of dehydroascorbic acid by erythrocytes of the patient was impaired to the same degree as that of 3OMG (Vmax was 38% of that of the mother's), which supports previous observations of GLUT1 being multifunctional. These studies confirm the molecular basis of the GTPS and the multifunctional role of GLUT1. The need for more effective treatment is compelling.
The specific intracellular signals initiated by nerve growth factor (NGF) that lead to neurite formation in PC12 rat pheochromocytoma cells are as of yet unclear. Protein kinase C-delta (PKC delta) is translocated from the soluble to the particulate subcellular fraction during NGF-induced-neuritogenesis; however, this does not occur after treatment with the epidermal growth factor, which is mitogenic but does not induce neurite formation. PC12 cells also contain both Ca(2+)-sensitive and Ca(2+)-independent PKC enzymatic activities, and express mRNA and immunoreactive proteins corresponding to the PKC isoforms alpha, beta, delta, epsilon, and zeta. There are transient decreases in the levels of immunoreactive PKCs alpha, beta, and epsilon after 1-3 days of NGF treatment, and after 7 days there is a 2.5-fold increase in the level of PKC alpha, and a 1.8-fold increase in total cellular PKC activity. NGF-induced PC12 cell neuritogenesis is enhanced by 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol-13-acetate (TPA) in a TPA dose- and time-dependent manner, and this differentiation coincides with abrogation of the down-regulation of PKC delta and other PKC isoforms, when the cells are treated with TPA. Thus a selective activation of PKC delta may play a role in neuritogenic signals in PC12 cells.
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