Evidence for defects in the trafficking and translocation of GLUT4 glucose transporters in skeletal muscle as a cause of human insulin resistance

Author(s): Garvey W, Malanu L, Zhu J, Brechtel-Hook G, Wallace P, et al.

Abstract

Insulin resistance is instrumental in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes mellitus and the Insulin Resistance Syndrome. While insulin resistance involves decreased glucose transport activity in skeletal muscle, its molecular basis is unknown. Since muscle GLUT4 glucose transporter levels are normal in type 2 diabetes, we have tested the hypothesis that insulin resistance is due to impaired translocation of intracellular GLUT4 to sarcolemma. Both insulin-sensitive and insulin-resistant nondiabetic subgroups were studied, in addition to type 2 diabetic patients. Biopsies were obtained from basal and insulin-stimulated muscle, and membranes were subfractionated on discontinuous sucrose density gradients to equilibrium or under nonequilibrium conditions after a shortened centrifugation time. In equilibrium fractions from basal muscle, GLUT4 was decreased by 25-29% in both 25 and 28% sucrose density fractions and increased twofold in both the 32% sucrose fraction and bottom pellet in diabetics compared with insulin-sensitive controls, without any differences in membrane markers (phospholemman, phosphalamban, dihydropyridine-binding complex alpha-1 subunit). Thus, insulin resistance was associated with redistribution of GLUT4 to denser membrane vesicles. No effects of insulin stimulation on GLUT4 localization were observed. In non-equilibrium fractions, insulin led to small GLUT4 decrements in the 25 and 28% sucrose fractions and increased GLUT4 in the 32% sucrose fraction by 2.8-fold over basal in insulin-sensitive but only by 1.5-fold in both insulin-resistant and diabetic subgroups. The GLUT4 increments in the 32% sucrose fraction were correlated with maximal in vivo glucose disposal rates (r = +0.51, P = 0.026), and, therefore, represented GLUT4 recruitment to sarcolemma or a quantitative marker for this process. Similar to GLUT4, the insulin-regulated aminopeptidase (vp165) was redistributed to a dense membrane compartment and did not translocate in response to insulin in insulin-resistant subgroups. In conclusion, insulin alters the subcellular localization of GLUT4 vesicles in human muscle, and this effect is impaired equally in insulin-resistant subjects with and without diabetes. This translocation defect is associated with abnormal accumulation of GLUT4 in a dense membrane compartment demonstrable in basal muscle. We have previously observed a similar pattern of defects causing insulin resistance in human adipocytes. Based on these data, we propose that human insulin resistance involves a defect in GLUT4 traffic and targeting leading to accumulation in a dense membrane compartment from which insulin is unable to recruit GLUT4 to the cell surface.

Similar Articles

Physical activity and diabetes prevention

Author(s): LaMonte MJ, Blair SN, Church TS

5'AMP-activated protein kinase activation causes GLUT4 translocation in skeletal muscle

Author(s): Kurth-Kraczek EJ, Hirshman MF, Goodyear LJ, Winder WW

Muscle glucose metabolism following exercise in the rat

Author(s): Richter EA, Garetto LP, Goodman MN, Ruderman NB

Resistance training increases glucose uptake and transport in rat skeletal muscle

Author(s): Yaspelkis BB 3rd, Singh MK, Trevino B, Krisan AD, Collins DE

Exercise training improves arterial baro- and chemoreflex in control and diabetic rats

Author(s): Harthmann AD, De Angelis K, Costa LP, Senador D, Schaan BD, et al.

Regulation of glucose transporter 4 traffic by energy deprivation from mitochondrial compromise

Author(s): Klip A, Schertzer JD, Bilan PJ, Thong F, Antonescu C

Nomenclature of the GLUT/SLC2A family of sugar/polyol transport facilitators

Author(s): Joost HG, Bell GI, Best JD, Birnbaum MJ, Charron MJ, et al.

Insulin-stimulated GLUT4 translocation requires the CAP-dependent activation of TC10

Author(s): Chiang SH, Baumann CA, Kanzaki M, Thurmond DC, Watson RT, et al.

Abdominal obesity: role in the pathophysiology of metabolic disease and cardiovascular risk

Author(s): Bergman R, Kim S, Hsu I, Catalano K, Chiu J, et al.

Consumption of a high-fat diet induces central insulin resistance independent of adiposity

Author(s): Clegg DJ, Gotoh K, Kemp C, Wortman MD, Benoit SC, et al.

Increased insulin sensitivity and obesity resistance in mice lacking the protein tyrosine phosphatase-1B gene

Author(s): Elchebly M, Payette P, Michaliszyn E, Cromlish W, Collins S, et al.

JNK and tumor necrosis factor-alpha mediate free fatty acid-induced insulin resistance in 3T3-L1 adipocytes

Author(s): Nguyen MT, Satoh H, Favelyukis S, Babendure JL, Imamura T, Sbodio JI, et al

Adiposity elevates plasma MCP-1 levels leading to the increased CD11b-positive monocytes in mice

Author(s): Takahashi K, Mizuarai S, Araki H, Mashiko S, Ishihara A, et al.

A central role for JNK in obesity and insulin resistance

Author(s): Hirosumi J, Tuncman G, Chang L, Gorgun CZ, Uysal KT, et al.

Vagus nerve stimulation attenuates the systemic inflammatory response to endotoxin

Author(s): Borovikova LV, Ivanova S, Zhang M, Yang H, Botchkina GI, et al.

Mechanisms linking obesity with cardiovascular disease

Author(s): Van Gaal LF, Mertens IL, De Block CE

Parasympathetic dysfunction is associated with insulin resistance in fructose-fed female rats

Author(s): Brito JO, Ponciano K, Figueroa D, Bernardes N, Sanches IC, et al.

Sympathetic Overactivity Precedes Metabolic Dysfunction in a Fructose Model of Glucose Intolerance in Mice

Author(s): De Angelis K, Senador DD, Mostarda CT, Irigoyen MC, Morris M

Reduced insulin-stimulated GLUT4 bioavailability in stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats

Author(s): Collison M, James DJ, Grahan D, Homan GD, Connell JM, et al.

Nitric oxide increases GLUT4 expression and regulates AMPK signaling in skeletal muscle

Author(s): Lira VA, Soltow QA, Long JH, Betters JL, Sellman JE, et al.

Exercise induces recruitment of the "insulin-responsive glucose transporter"

Author(s): Douen AG, Ramlal T, Rastogi S, Bilan PJ, Cartee GD, et al.

Exercise modulates postreceptor insulin signaling and glucose transport in muscle-specific insulin receptor knockout mice

Author(s): Wojtaszewski JF, Higaki Y, Hirshman MF, Michael MD, Dufresne SD, et al.

Exercise increases TBC1D1 phosphorylation in human skeletal muscle

Author(s): Jessen N, An D, Lihn AS, Nygren J, Hirshman MF, et al.

Caffeine-induced Ca(2+) release increases AMPK-dependent glucose uptake in rodent soleus muscle

Author(s): Jensen TE, Rose AJ, Hellsten Y, Wojtaszewski JF, Richter EA

CaMKII regulates contraction- but not insulin-induced glucose uptake in mouse skeletal muscle

Author(s): Witczak CA, Jessen N, Warro DM, Toyoda T, Fujii N, et al.

Exercise-stimulated glucose transport in skeletal muscle is nitric oxide dependent

Author(s): Roberts CK, Barnard RJ, Scheck SH, Balon TW

AMP kinase-induced skeletal muscle glucose but not long-chain fatty acid uptake is dependent on nitric oxide

Author(s): Shearer J, Fueger PT, Vorndick B, Bracy DP, Rottman JN, et al.

S-nitrosylation-dependent inactivation of Akt/protein kinase B in insulin resistance

Author(s): Yasukawa T, Tokunaga E, Ota H, Sugita H, Martyn JA, et al.

Exercise-stimulated GLUT4 Expression is Similar in Normotensive and Hypertensive Rats

Author(s): Lehnen AM, Leguisamo NM, Pinto GH, Markoski M, De Angelis K, et al.

Exercise reverses peripheral insulin resistance in trained L-NAME-hypertensive rats

Author(s): De Angelis K, Gadonski G, Fang J, Dall'Ago P, Albuquerque VL, et al.

Exercise increases MEF2- and GEF DNA binding activity in human skeletal muscle

Author(s): McGee S, Spasling D, Olson A, Hargreaves M

The beneficial effects of exercise in rodents are preserved after detraining: a phenomenon unrelated to GLUT4 expression

Author(s): Lehnen AM, Leguisamo NM, Pinto GH, Markoski MM, De Angelis K, et al.

Muscle fiber type composition of the rat hindlimb

Author(s): Armstrong R, Phelps R

Benefits of exercise training in diabetic rats persist after three weeks of detraining

Author(s): Mostarda C, Rogow A, Silva I, De La Fuente R, Jorge L, et al.