Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.1.1 (hexokinase)
5,274 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Voluntary wheel running induces an increase in the concentration of the regulatable glucose transporter (GLUT4) in rat plantaris muscle but not in soleus muscle (K. J. Rodnick, J. O. Holloszy, C. E. Mondon, and D. E. James. Diabetes 39: 1425-1429, 1990). Wheel running also causes hypertrophy of the soleus in rats. This study was undertaken to ascertain whether endurance training that induces enzymatic adaptations but no hypertrophy results in an increase in the concentration of GLUT4 protein in rat soleus (slow-twitch red) muscle and, if it does, to determine whether there is a concomitant increase in maximal glucose transport activity. Female rats were trained by treadmill running at 25 m/min up a 15% grade, 90 min/day, 6 days/wk for 3 wk. This training program induced increases of 52% in citrate synthase activity, 66% in hexokinase activity, and 47% in immunoreactive GLUT4 protein concentration in soleus muscles without causing hypertrophy. Glucose transport activity stimulated maximally with insulin plus contractile activity was increased to roughly the same extent (44%) as GLUT4 protein content in soleus muscle by the treadmill exercise training. In a second set of experiments, we examined whether a swim-training program increases glucose transport activity in the soleus in the presence of a maximally effective concentration of insulin. The swimming program induced a 44% increase in immunoreactive GLUT4 protein concentration. Glucose transport activity maximally stimulated with insulin was 62% greater in soleus muscle of the swimmers than in untrained controls. Training did not alter the basal rate of 2-deoxyglucose uptake.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Glucose transporters and maximal transport are increased in endurance-trained rat soleus. 139 70

The hexokinases, by converting glucose to glucose-6-phosphate, help maintain the downhill gradient that results in movement of glucose into cells through the facilitative glucose transporters. GLUT4 and hexokinase (HK) II are the major transporter and hexokinase isoforms in skeletal muscle, heart, and adipose tissue, wherein insulin promotes glucose utilization. To understand whether hormones influence the contribution of phosphorylation to cellular glucose utilization, we investigated the effects that catecholamines, cyclic AMP (cAMP), and insulin have on HKII gene expression in cells representative of muscle (L6 cells) and brown (BFC-1B cells) and white (3T3-F442A cells) adipose tissues. Isoproterenol or the cAMP analog 8-chlorophenylthio-cAMP selectively increase HKII gene transcription in L6 cells, as does insulin (Printz RL, Koch S, Potter LP, O'Doherty RM, Tiesinga JJ, Moritz S, Granner DK: Hexokinase II mRNA and gene structure, regulation by insulin, and evolution. J Biol Chem 268:5209-5219, 1993), and cause a concentration- and time-dependent increase of HKII mRNA in both muscle and fat cell lines without changing HKI mRNA. Isoproterenol and insulin also increase the rate of synthesis of HKII protein and increase glucose phosphorylation and glucose utilization in L6 cells.
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PMID:Regulation of hexokinase II gene transcription and glucose phosphorylation by catecholamines, cyclic AMP, and insulin. 758 50

Glucose transport and phosphorylation are the first steps in the utilization of extracellular glucose by skeletal muscle. We have examined the relationships between proteins mediating these steps in single fibers of identified type dissected from rabbit skeletal muscle. The level of the glucose transporter isoform GLUT4, measured by immunoblotting, varied among fibers by a factor of 20 (slow oxidative > fast oxidative glycolytic > fast glycolytic). In fibers from the tibialis anterior muscle, GLUT4 was correlated (r2 = 0.75) with the activity of malate dehydrogenase, an enzyme representative of oxidative energy metabolism. In these fibers a strong correlation (r2 = 0.70) was also observed between GLUT4 and hexokinase activity. GLUT1 levels were barely detectable, regardless of fiber type. To investigate the possible role of muscle activity in controlling the expression of transporters, tibialis anterior muscles were activated by chronic electrical stimulation of the peroneal nerves. GLUT1 levels increased after 1 day of stimulation to a plateau that was severalfold higher than the level in non-stimulated cells. Hexokinase activity and the GLUT4 level changed in parallel: both were increased by approximately 2.5-fold after 1 day and by 14-fold after 21 days. Thus, while both GLUT1 and GLUT4 were regulated by muscle activity, only GLUT4 expression was coordinated with the expression of hexokinase.
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PMID:Glucose transporters in single skeletal muscle fibers. Relationship to hexokinase and regulation by contractile activity. 817 14

GLUT4 glucose transporter content and glucose transport capacity are closely correlated in skeletal muscle. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that a rapid increase in GLUT4 expression occurs as part of the early adaptive response of muscle to exercise and serves to enhance glycogen storage. Rats exercised by swimming had a approximately 2-fold increase in GLUT4 mRNA and a 50% increase in GLUT4 protein expression in epitrochlearis muscle 16 h after one prolonged exercise session. After a 2nd day of exercise, muscle GLUT4 protein was increased further to approximately 2-fold while there was no additional increase in GLUT4 mRNA. Muscle hexokinase activity also doubled in response to 2 days of exercise. Glucose transport activity maximally stimulated with insulin, contractions, or hypoxia was increased roughly in proportion to the adaptive increase in GLUT4 protein in epitrochlearis muscles. Treatment with insulin prior to subcellular fractionation of muscle resulted in a approximately 2-fold greater increase in GLUT4 content of a plasma membrane fraction in the 2-day swimmers than in controls. When epitrochlearis muscles were incubated with glucose and insulin, glycogen accumulation over 3 h was twice as great in muscles from 2-day swimmers as in control muscles. Our results show that a rapid increase in GLUT4 expression is an early adaptive response of muscle to exercise. This adaptation appears to be mediated by pretranslational mechanisms. We hypothesize that the physiological role of this adaptation is to enhance replenishment of muscle glycogen stores.
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PMID:Exercise induces rapid increases in GLUT4 expression, glucose transport capacity, and insulin-stimulated glycogen storage in muscle. 818 45

We examined the effects of voluntary exercise on glucose transporter concentration in skeletal muscle from young adult and old female Long-Evans rats. Rats had free access to voluntary running wheels beginning at 4 months of age or remained sedentary. Exercising rats ran approximately 7.5, 6.2, 5.6 and 5.3 km/day during their 6th, 8th, 9th and 10th month of age, respectively. During the 23rd, 24th and 25th month of age running distance averaged 3.0, 2.8 and 2.4 km/day, respectively. At 10 and 25 months of age, glucose transporter protein concentration was assessed in epitrochlearis and flexor digitorum brevis muscles with a polyclonal antibody directed against the GLUT4 transporter isoform. GLUT4 protein concentration was not altered by the aging process (i.e., comparing 10- and 25-month-old rats) in either muscle type. Wheel running increased GLUT4 protein concentration by 45% in epitrochlearis muscles of 10-month-old rats relative to age-matched sedentary controls. The training-induced adaptation in GLUT4 protein was no longer present at age 25 months, probably because the running distance had declined by 50%. In the flexor digitorum brevis, exercise did not alter GLUT4 concentration at either 10 or 25 months, presumably due to insufficient recruitment of this muscle during wheel running as assessed by measurement of citrate synthase and hexokinase enzyme activities. Wheel running induced cardiac and soleus muscle hypertrophy in 10- and 25-month-old rats. In summary, voluntary wheel running can induce an increase in skeletal muscle GLUT4 protein concentration in adult rats. Older rats that run less exhibit cardiac and soleus muscle hypertrophy, but do not maintain an elevated GLUT4 protein concentration in the epitrochlearis muscle. Aging does not alter GLUT4 protein concentration in the epitrochlearis or FDB muscles.
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PMID:Effects of wheel running on glucose transporter (GLUT4) concentration in skeletal muscle of young adult and old rats. 846 30

The GLUT4 glucose transporter and type II hexokinase are predominantly expressed in skeletal muscle and adipose tissue. The effects of insulin and glucose on the expression of GLUT4 and HKII were studied in vivo by using the euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic and hyperglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp methods. The clamps were maintained in conscious rats for 6 or 24 h after a 1-day starvation period. Adipose tissue GLUT4 mRNA was increased 4-fold after 6 h and 23-fold after 24 h of hyperinsulinemia; HKII mRNA was increased by four- and eightfold after 6 and 24 h, respectively. In contrast, GLUT4 mRNA was not significantly changed in skeletal muscle by either the euglycemic- or hyperglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamps. Each of these treatments resulted in a fourfold induction of HKII mRNA. No changes of GLUT4 protein and hexokinase activity were detected after 6 h of hyperinsulinemia in either skeletal muscle or adipose tissue. After 24 h of hyperinsulinemia, adipose tissue GLUT4 protein had doubled, whereas skeletal muscle GLUT4 was unchanged. In contrast, hexokinase activity increased by two- to eightfold in skeletal muscle and adipose tissue. Hyperinsulinemia alone was sufficient to mediate the effects observed, because no additional effects were seen when hyperglycemia accompanied hyperinsulinemia. These results reveal the lack of coordinate regulation of GLUT4 and HKII in adipose tissue and skeletal muscle. Whereas hyperinsulinemia increases both GLUT4 and HKII mRNA and protein levels in adipose tissue, this treatment increases HKII mRNA and protein in skeletal muscle, but has no effect on GLUT4 in this tissue.
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PMID:The effects of hyperinsulinemia and hyperglycemia on GLUT4 and hexokinase II mRNA and protein in rat skeletal muscle and adipose tissue. 849 14

Insulin resistance of muscle glucose metabolism is a hallmark of NIDDM. The obese Zucker (fa/fa) rat--an animal model of muscle insulin resistance--was used to test whether acute (100 mg/kg body wt for 1 h) and chronic (5-100 mg/kg for 10 days) parenteral treatments with a racemic mixture of the antioxidant alpha-lipoic acid (ALA) could improve glucose metabolism in insulin-resistant skeletal muscle. Glucose transport activity (assessed by net 2-deoxyglucose [2-DG] uptake), net glycogen synthesis, and glucose oxidation were determined in the isolated epitrochlearis muscles in the absence or presence of insulin (13.3 nmol/l). Severe insulin resistance of 2-DG uptake, glycogen synthesis, and glucose oxidation was observed in muscle from the vehicle-treated obese rats compared with muscle from vehicle-treated lean (Fa/-) rats. Acute and chronic treatments (30 mg.kg-1.day-1, a maximally effective dose) with ALA significantly (P < 0.05) improved insulin-mediated 2-DG uptake in epitrochlearis muscles from the obese rats by 62 and 64%, respectively. Chronic ALA treatment increased both insulin-stimulated glucose oxidation (33%) and glycogen synthesis (38%) and was associated with a significantly greater (21%) in vivo muscle glycogen concentration. These adaptive responses after chronic ALA administration were also associated with significantly lower (15-17%) plasma levels of insulin and free fatty acids. No significant effects on glucose transporter (GLUT4) protein level or on the activities of hexokinase and citrate synthase were observed. Collectively, these findings indicate that parenteral administration of the antioxidant ALA significantly enhances the capacity of the insulin-stimulatable glucose transport system and of both oxidative and nonoxidative pathways of glucose metabolism in insulin-resistant rat skeletal muscle.
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PMID:The antioxidant alpha-lipoic acid enhances insulin-stimulated glucose metabolism in insulin-resistant rat skeletal muscle. 869 Jan 47

GENBANK/dy examines the mechanisms of glucocorticoid-induced insulin resistance in rat soleus muscle. Glucocorticoid excess was induced by administration of dexamethasone to rats for 5 days. Dexamethasone decreased the sensitivity of 3-O-methylglucose transport, 2-deoxyglucose phosphorylation, glycogen synthesis and glucose oxidation to insulin. The total content of GLUT4 glucose transporters was not decreased by dexamethasone; however, the increase in these transporters in the plasma membrane in response to insulin (100 m-units/litre) was lessened. In contrast, the sensitivity of lactate formation to insulin was normal. The content of 2-deoxyglucose in the dexamethasone-treated muscle was decreased at 100 m-units/litre insulin, while the contents of glucose 6-phosphate and fructose 2,6-bisphosphate were normal at all concentrations of insulin studied. The maximal activity of hexokinase in the soleus muscle was not affected by dexamethasone; however, inhibition of this enzyme by glucose 6-phosphate was decreased. These results suggest the following. (1) Glucocorticoid excess causes insulin resistance in skeletal muscle by directly inhibiting the translocation of the GLUT4 glucose transporters to the plasma membrane in response to insulin; since the activity of hexokinase is not affected, the changes in the sensitivity of glucose phosphorylation to insulin seen under these conditions are secondary to those in glucose transport. (2) The sensitivity of glycogen synthesis and glucose oxidation to insulin is decreased, but that of glycolysis is not affected: a redistribution of glucose away from the pathway of glycogen synthesis and glucose oxidation could maintain a normal rate of lactate formation although the rate of glucose transport is decreased.
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PMID:Effects of glucocorticoid excess on the sensitivity of glucose transport and metabolism to insulin in rat skeletal muscle. 903 57

The glucose transporter GLUT1 may play a more important role in cardiac than in skeletal muscle, but its regulation is unclear. During fasting, cardiac GLUT1 declines in the presence of low plasma insulin and glucose and high nonesterified fatty acid (NEFA) levels, whereas GLUT4 is unchanged. We investigated insulin, glucose, and NEFA levels as regulatory factors of cardiac GLUT content in chronically cannulated rats. Fasting rats were infused for 24 h with saline or insulin (2 rates) while plasma glucose was equalized by a glucose clamp; final transporter content was compared with a fed control group. There was a close association of GLUT1 content with insulin (r2 = 0.83, P < 0.001), with GLUT1 varying over a threefold range, under equivalent fasting glycemic conditions (plasma glucose, 5.1 +/- 0.1 mM). Maintenance of fed insulin levels during fasting prevented the GLUT1 fall (P < 0.01), whereas hyperinsulinemia (117 +/- 10 mU/l) led to significant overexpression of GLUT1 (155 +/- 12% of control, P < 0.01). When high glucose (7.6 +/- 0.1 mM) or high NEFA (0.76 +/- 0.05 mM) levels accompanied the hyperinsulinemia, upregulation of GLUT1 was blocked. GLUT1 content correlated with an estimate of cardiac glucose clearance across the groups. Cardiac GLUT4 content, hexokinase, and acyl-CoA synthase activities were unaffected by fasting, insulin, or substrate manipulation. In conclusion, insulin preferentially upregulates GLUT1 (but not GLUT4) in a dose-dependent manner in cardiac muscle in vivo, and substrate supply modulates this response, since upregulation can be effectively blocked by increased glucose or lipid availability. Therefore, both insulin exposure and energy status of cardiac muscle may be important determinants of cardiac GLUT1 expression.
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PMID:Selective chronic regulation of GLUT1 and GLUT4 content by insulin, glucose, and lipid in rat cardiac muscle in vivo. 932 20

To optimize glucose utilization, double transgenic mice were created by crossing mice overexpressing glucose transporter GLUT4 with mice overexpressing hexokinase (HKII) in muscle. Transgenic mice overexpressing GLUT4 alone have exhibited improvements in glucose tolerance and insulin action. In vitro studies of hexose uptake in soleus muscle from transgenic mice suggested that GLUT4 was limiting the glucose flux except at high glucose concentration, where hexokinase became the limiting step. In vivo, glucose tolerance was similar in GLUT4 and GLUT4/HKII mice, although stimulated plasma insulin values were significantly lower in the latter group. Insulin tolerance tests performed in diabetic GLUT4 vs. diabetic GLUT4/HKII transgenic mice yielded identical results. Again, endogenous insulin in GLUT4/HKII mice during a mild hyperglycemic clamp was stimulated by only two- vs. fourfold in GLUT4 mice. Although the overexpression of HKII alone resulted in increased glucose utilization in several muscles, the overexpression of GLUT4 plus HKII did not augment basal or stimulated in vivo glucose utilization compared to GLUT4 overexpression. In conclusion, GLUT4 is rate limiting for muscle glucose utilization but HKII might be important under hyperglycemia. The addition of HKII to GLUT4 overexpression is not sufficient to further augment glucose tolerance or insulin action. In GLUT4/HKII double transgenic mice, glucose clearance is tempered by a low insulin stimulated level.
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PMID:Phenotype of transgenic mice overexpressing GLUT4 and hexokinase II in muscle. 936 48


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