The mammalian brain relies primarily on glucose for its energy needs. Delivery of this nutrient to the brain is mediated by the glucose transporter-1 (GLUT1) protein. Low GLUT1 thwarts glucose entry into the brain, causing an energy crisis and triggering, in one instance, the debilitating neurodevelopmental condition known as GLUT1 deficiency syndrome (GLUT1DS). Current treatments for GLUT1DS are suboptimal, as none address the root cause — low GLUT1 — of the condition. Levels of this transporter must respond rapidly to the brain’s changing energy requirements. This necessitates fine tuning its expression. Here, we describe a long-noncoding RNA (lncRNA) antisense to GLUT1 (SLC2A1) and show that it is involved in such regulation. Raising levels of the lncRNA had a concordant effect on GLUT1 in cultured human cells and transgenic mice; reducing levels elicited the opposite effect. Delivering the lncRNA to GLUT1DS model mice via viral vectors induced GLUT1 expression, enhancing brain glucose levels to mitigate disease. Direct delivery of such a lncRNA to combat disease has not been reported previously and constitutes, to our knowledge, a unique therapeutic paradigm. Moreover, considering the importance of maintaining homeostatic GLUT1 levels, calibrating transporter expression via the lncRNA could become broadly relevant to myriad conditions, including Alzheimer’s disease, wherein GLUT1 is perturbed.
Maoxue Tang, Sasa Teng, Yueqing Peng, Ashley Y. Kim, Yoon-Ra Her, Peter Canoll, Jeffrey N. Bruce, Phyllis L. Faust, Kailash Adhikari, Darryl C. De Vivo, Umrao R. Monani
This file is in Adobe Acrobat (PDF) format. If you have not installed and configured the Adobe Acrobat Reader on your system.
PDFs are designed to be printed out and read, but if you prefer to read them online, you may find it easier if you increase the view size to 125%.
Many versions of the free Acrobat Reader do not allow Save. You must instead save the PDF from the JCI Online page you downloaded it from. PC users: Right-click on the Download link and choose the option that says something like "Save Link As...". Mac users should hold the mouse button down on the link to get these same options.