Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.11.31 (AMP-activated protein kinase)
13,065 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Avian erythrocyte sugar transport is stimulated during anoxia and during exposure to inhibitors of oxidative phosphorylation. This stimulation results from catalytic desuppression of the cell surface glucose transporter GLUT1 [Diamond, D., & Carruthers, A. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 6437-6444]. The present study was undertaken to investigate the mechanisms of GLUT1 suppression/desuppression. Sugar uniport (sugar uptake or exit in the absence of sugar at the opposite side of the membrane) is absent in normoxic avian erythrocytes, but sugar antiport (sugar uptake coupled to sugar exit) is present. Exposure to cyanide and/or to FCCP (mitochondrial inhibitors) stimulates erythrocyte sugar uniport but not sugar antiport. K(m)(app) for 3-O-methylglucose uniport and antiport are unaffected by metabolic poisoning. Ki(app) for inhibitions of 3-O-methylglucose uniport by cytochalasin B and forskolin (sugar export site ligands) are unaffected by progressive stimulation of sugar uniport. Cyanide and FCCP stimulation of 3-O-methylglucose uniport are associated with increased AMP-activated protein kinase activity. Purified human GLUT1 is not phosphorylated by exposure to cytosol extracted from poisoned avian erythrocytes. FCCP does not stimulate GLUT1-mediated 3-O-methylglucose uptake in K562 cells but does increase K562 AMP-activated protein kinase activity. FCCP stimulation of 3-O-methylglucose uniport in resealed erythrocyte ghosts requires cytosolic ATP and/or glutathione. The nonmetabolizable ATP analog AMP-PNP cannot be substituted for ATP in this action. These results are contrasted with allosteric regulation of human erythrocyte sugar transport and suggest that avian erythrocyte sugar transport suppression results from inhibition of carrier uniport function. Uniport suppression is not mediated by interaction with cytosolic molecular species that bind to the sugar export site. The antiport to uniport switch mechanism requires ATP hydrolysis, is associated with elevated AMP-activated kinase function, and, if triggered by this kinase, is mediated by factors absent in K562 cells and downstream from the kinase.
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PMID:Regulation of GLUT1-mediated sugar transport by an antiport/uniport switch mechanism. 885 62

Glucose, that Claude Bernard has demonstrated in 1850 to be synthesized and secreted by the liver, is an important regulator of gene transcription in all types of organisms. In vertebrates, it especially regulates transcription of metabolic genes in the liver and fat tissue, activating genes encoding enzymes and regulators of the glycolytic and lipogenic pathways. Working with the L-type pyruvate kinase gene we have found that in hepatocytes glucose-dependent gene regulation requires: Presence of the GLUT2 glucose transporter, necessary to allow for an effective depletion in glucose 6-phosphate (G-6P) under gluconeogenic conditions. Phosphorylation of glucose to G-6P assured either by insulin-dependent glucokinase or by another hexokinase isoform. Most likely, entry of G-6P in the pentose phosphate pathway. Modulation of a kinase/phosphatase cascade, in particular inhibition of the 5'AMP-activated protein kinase. Signalling through a glucose response complex assembled onto a glucose-response element (GIRE) located in regulatory regions of glucose-responsive genes. The activators USF belong to the complex, and are required for a normal gene activation by glucose, as evidenced from the phenotype of knock-out mice deficient in USF. The study of USF-defective knock-out mice suggest that USF could be involved in nutritional activation of a whole class of genes regulated by glucose, and not by insulin itself. In particular, lipogenic genes and the ob gene, encoding the leptin satiety hormone, are abnormally responsive to diet in USF-/- mice. The transactivation potential of USF would be modulated by a glucose sensor system implying the COUP-TFII transcription inhibitor. The main role of insulin in the glucose response of genes like the L-PK gene is to induce the glucokinase gene. Glucagon, through cyclic AMP, inhibits L-PK gene transcription mainly through activation of PKA. The PKA catalytic subunit could act by phosphorylating member(s) of the glucose-response complex, or of contiguous transcription factor, e.g. HNF4. In conclusion, through a pluridisciplinary approach ranging from Claude Bernard-derived biology to modern molecular biology, important progress have been made during the last years on the mechanisms of the regulation of gene transcription by glucose in vertebrates.
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PMID:[From the glycogenic function of the liver to gene regulation by glucose]. 987 95

This study was designed to determine whether chronic chemical activation of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) would increase glucose transporter GLUT-4 and hexokinase in muscles similarly to periodic elevation of AMPK that accompanies endurance exercise training. The adenosine analog, 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleoside (AICAR), has previously been shown to be taken up by cells and phosphorylated to form a compound (5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleotide) that mimics the effect of AMP on AMPK. A single injection of AICAR resulted in a marked increase in AMPK in epitrochlearis and gastrocnemius/plantaris muscles 60 min later. When rats were injected with AICAR (1 mg/g body wt) for 5 days in succession and were killed 1 day after the last injection, GLUT-4 was increased by 100% in epitrochlearis muscle and by 60% in gastrocnemius muscle in response to AICAR. Hexokinase was also increased approximately 2. 5-fold in the gastrocnemius/plantaris. Gastrocnemius glycogen content was twofold higher in AICAR-treated rats than in controls. Chronic chemical activation of AMPK, therefore, results in increases in GLUT-4 protein, hexokinase activity, and glycogen, similarly to those induced by endurance training.
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PMID:Chronic activation of 5'-AMP-activated protein kinase increases GLUT-4, hexokinase, and glycogen in muscle. 1056 46

Physical exercise increases the rate of glucose transport into contracting skeletal muscles by a mechanism that involves translocation of the GLUT4 glucose transporter to the cell surface. This brief report will discuss an emerging hypothesis that suggests that the AMP-activated protein kinase is a key signaling intermediary leading to exercise-stimulated GLUT4 translocation in skeletal muscle.
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PMID:AMP-activated protein kinase: a critical signaling intermediary for exercise-stimulated glucose transport? 1091 2

In the rat liver epithelial cell line Clone 9, the V(max) for glucose uptake is acutely increased by inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation and by osmotic stress. By using a membrane-impermeant photoaffinity labelling reagent together with an isoform-specific antibody, we have, for the first time, provided direct evidence for the involvement of the GLUT1 glucose transporter isoform in this response. Transport stimulation was found to be associated with enhanced accessibility of GLUT1 to its substrate and with photolabelling of formerly 'cryptic' exofacial substrate binding sites in GLUT1 molecules. The total amount of cell surface GLUT1 remained constant. The precise mechanism for this binding site 'unmasking' is unclear but appears to involve AMP-activated protein kinase: in the current study, osmotic and metabolic stresses were found to result in activation of the alpha 1 isoform of AMP-activated protein kinase, and transport stimulation could be mimicked both by 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleoside and by infection of cells with a recombinant adenovirus encoding constitutively active AMP-activated protein kinase. The effect of 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleoside, as for metabolic stress, was on the V(max) rather than on the K(m) for transport and did not affect the cell-surface concentration of GLUT1. The relevant downstream target(s) of AMP-activated protein kinase have not yet been identified, but stimulation of transport by inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation or by 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleoside was not prevented by either inhibitors of conventional and novel protein kinase C isoforms or inhibitors of nitric oxide synthase. These enzymes, which have been implicated in stress-regulated pathways in other cell types, are therefore unlikely to play a role in transport regulation by stress in Clone 9 cells.
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PMID:Activation of GLUT1 by metabolic and osmotic stress: potential involvement of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK). 1200 27

Over the past 30 years, a considerable body of evidence has revealed that a prior bout of exercise can increase the ability of insulin to stimulate glucose transport and glycogen synthesis in skeletal muscle. Apart from its clinical implications, this work has led to a considerable effort to determine at a molecular level how exercise causes this effect and, in particular, whether it does so by enhancing specific events in the insulin-signaling cascade. The objective of this review is to discuss from a historical perspective how our current thinking in this area has evolved and the people responsible for it. Areas to be discussed include the effect or lack of effect of prior exercise on the insulin-signaling pathway, effects of exercise on the regulation by insulin of the GLUT-4 glucose transporter in muscle, and the emerging role of AMP-activated protein kinase as a mediator of exercise-induced signaling events. In addition, we will discuss briefly some of the avenues that research in this area is likely to follow.
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PMID:Exercise and insulin signaling: a historical perspective. 1213 90

The stimulation of heart glycolysis by insulin and ischemia involves the recruitment of the glucose transporter GLUT4 to the plasma membrane and the activation of 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase (PFK-2), which in turn increases the concentration of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate, a well-known stimulator of glycolysis. This review focuses on the mechanisms responsible for PFK-2 activation by insulin and ischemia in heart. Heart PFK-2 is phosphorylated by various protein kinases, including protein kinase B (PKB), thought to mediate most, if not all, short-term effects of insulin, and the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), known to be activated under anaerobic conditions. We found that PKB is not required for PFK-2 activation by insulin and we partially purified an insulin-sensitive PFK-2 kinase, that differs from PKB and from other insulin-stimulated protein kinases. We also demonstrated that AMPK mediates PFK-2 activation by ischemia. Finally, our study of the interaction between the signaling pathways of insulin and ischemia revealed opposite effects on signaling. Intracellular acidosis induced by ischemia inhibited insulin signaling, whereas insulin pretreatment antagonized AMPK activation by ischemia.
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PMID:Insulin and ischemia stimulate glycolysis by acting on the same targets through different and opposing signaling pathways. 1239 81

An acute increase in the Vmax for glucose uptake occurs in many mammalian cell types after exposure to osmotic or metabolic stress. In the rat epithelial Clone 9 cell line, the glucose transporter isoform GLUT1 is responsible for this enhanced uptake. Although stimulation of transport in these cells is known to result from the unmasking of 'cryptic' exofacial permeant-binding sites in GLUT1 molecules resident in the plasma membrane, the mechanism of such unmasking remains unclear. One possibility involves changes in the lipid environment of the transporter: reconstitution experiments have shown that transport activity in vitro is acutely sensitive to the phospholipid and cholesterol composition of the membrane. In the current study we found that treatment of Clone 9 cells with methyl-beta-cyclodextrin, which removed >80% of the cell cholesterol, led to a 3.5-fold increase in the Vmax for 3-O-methyl-D-glucose transport while having little effect on the Km. In contrast to the metabolic stress induced by inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation, cholesterol depletion led neither to depletion of cellular ATP nor stimulation of AMP-activated protein kinase. Similarly, it did not result in stimulation of members of the stress- and mitogen-activated protein kinase families. In unstressed, cholesterol-replete cells, a substantial proportion of GLUT1 in detergent lysates co-fractionated with the lipid-raft proteins caveolin and stomatin on density-gradient centrifugation. Immunocytochemistry also revealed the presence of GLUT1-enriched domains, some of which co-localized with stomatin, in the plasma membrane. Both techniques revealed that the abundance of such putative GLUT1-containing domains was decreased not only by cholesterol depletion but also in cells subjected to metabolic stress. Taken together, these data suggest that a change in the lipid environment of GLUT1, possibly associated with its re-distribution between different microdomains of the plasma membrane, could play a role in its activation in response to stress.
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PMID:Methyl-beta-cyclodextrin stimulates glucose uptake in Clone 9 cells: a possible role for lipid rafts. 1461 90

The biguanide drug metformin stimulates AMP-activated protein kinase, a master regulator of cellular energy metabolism, and has antihyperglycemic activity due to attenuation of gluconeogenesis in hepatocytes and 2-fold stimulation of glucose transport by skeletal muscle. Here we identify a metformin-stimulated d-mannose transport (MSMT) activity in dermal fibroblasts. MSMT increased mannose uptake 1.8-fold and had greater affinity for mannose than basal mannose transport activity. It was attributed to robust stimulation of a transporter expressed weakly in untreated cells. MSMT was not explained by greater glucose transporter activity because metformin unexpectedly decreased transport of 2-deoxy-d-glucose and 3-O-methyl-d-glucose by fibroblasts. Effective inhibitors of MSMT retained specificity for the 3-, 4-, and 6-OH groups of the mannose ring but not the 2-OH group. Thus, MSMT could be strongly inhibited by glucose and 2-deoxy-d-glucose even though the latter was not a good transport substrate. MSMT was significant because in the presence of 2.5 microm mannose, metformin corrected experimentally induced deficiencies in the synthesis of glucose(3)mannose(9)GlcNAc(2)-P-P-dolichol and N-linked glycosylation. MSMT was also identified in congenital disorder of glycosylation types Ia and Ib fibroblasts, and metformin acted synergistically with 100 microm mannose to correct lipid-linked oligosaccharide synthesis and N-glycosylation in the Ia cells. In conclusion, metformin activates a novel fibroblast mannose-selective transport system. This suggests that AMP-activated protein kinase may be a regulator of mannose metabolism and implies a therapy for congenital disorders of glycosylation-Ia.
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PMID:Metformin-stimulated mannose transport in dermal fibroblasts. 1468 Dec 28

Accumulation of intracellular lipid by pancreatic islet beta-cells has been proposed to inhibit normal glucose-regulated insulin secretion ('glucolipotoxicity'). In the present study, we determine whether over-expression in rat islets of the lipogenic transcription factor SREBP1c (sterol-regulatory-element-binding protein-1c) affects insulin release, and whether changes in islet lipid content may be reversed by activation of AMPK (AMP-activated protein kinase). Infection with an adenovirus encoding the constitutively active nuclear fragment of SREBP1c resulted in expression of the protein in approx. 20% of islet cell nuclei, with a preference for beta-cells at the islet periphery. Real-time PCR (TaqMan) analysis showed that SREBP1c up-regulated the expression of FAS (fatty acid synthase; 6-fold), acetyl-CoA carboxylase-1 (2-fold), as well as peroxisomal-proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (7-fold), uncoupling protein-2 (1.4-fold) and Bcl2 (B-cell lymphocytic-leukaemia proto-oncogene 2; 1.3-fold). By contrast, levels of pre-proinsulin, pancreatic duodenal homeobox-1, glucokinase and GLUT2 (glucose transporter isoform-2) mRNAs were unaltered. SREBP1c-transduced islets displayed a 3-fold increase in triacylglycerol content, decreased glucose oxidation and ATP levels, and a profound inhibition of glucose-, but not depolarisation-, induced insulin secretion. Culture of islets with the AMPK activator 5-amino-4-imidazolecarboxamide riboside decreased the expression of the endogenous SREBP1c and FAS genes, and reversed the effect of over-expressing active SREBP1c on FAS mRNA levels and cellular triacylglycerol content. We conclude that SREBP1c over-expression, even when confined to a subset of beta-cells, leads to defective insulin secretion from islets and may contribute to some forms of Type II diabetes.
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PMID:Over-expression of sterol-regulatory-element-binding protein-1c (SREBP1c) in rat pancreatic islets induces lipogenesis and decreases glucose-stimulated insulin release: modulation by 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleoside (AICAR). 1469 Apr 55


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