Effects of diabetes on myocardial glucose transport system in rats: implications for diabetic cardiomyopathy

WT Garvey, D Hardin, M Juhaszova… - American Journal of …, 1993 - journals.physiology.org
WT Garvey, D Hardin, M Juhaszova, JH Dominguez
American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 1993journals.physiology.org
Biochemical mechanisms underlying impaired myocardial glucose utilization in diabetes
mellitus have not been elucidated. We studied sarcolemmal vesicles (SL) in control,
streptozotocin-induced diabetic (D), and insulin-treated diabetic (Tx) rats and found that 3-O-
methylglucose transport rates were decreased 53% in D rats and were normalized by insulin
therapy. Immunoblot analyses of SL revealed that GLUT4 glucose transporters were
decreased 56% in D and were normal in Tx rats. Thus diminished transport rates could be …
Biochemical mechanisms underlying impaired myocardial glucose utilization in diabetes mellitus have not been elucidated. We studied sarcolemmal vesicles (SL) in control, streptozotocin-induced diabetic (D), and insulin-treated diabetic (Tx) rats and found that 3-O-methylglucose transport rates were decreased 53% in D rats and were normalized by insulin therapy. Immunoblot analyses of SL revealed that GLUT4 glucose transporters were decreased 56% in D and were normal in Tx rats. Thus diminished transport rates could be fully explained by reduced numbers of SL GLUT4 with normal functional activity. To determine whether SL GLUT4 were decreased due to tissue depletion or abnormal subcellular distribution, we measured GLUT4 in total membranes (SL plus intracellular fractions). Total GLUT4 (per mg membrane protein or per DNA) was decreased 45–51% in D [half time = 3.5 days after streptozotocin], and these values were restored to normal in Tx rats. Also, diabetes decreased GLUT4 mRNA levels by 43%, and this effect was reversed by insulin therapy. We conclude that, in diabetes, 1) impaired myocardial glucose utilization is the result of a decrease in glucose transport activity, and 2) transport rates are reduced due to pretranslational suppression of GLUT4 gene expression and can be corrected by insulin therapy. GLUT4 depletion could limit glucose availability under conditions of increased workload and anoxia and could cause myocardial dysfunction.
American Physiological Society