Simple-sugar meals target GLUT2 at enterocyte apical membranes to improve sugar absorption: a study in GLUT2-null mice
The physiological significance of the presence of GLUT2 at the food-facing pole of intestinal cells is addressed by a study of fructose absorption in GLUT2-null and control mice submitted to different sugar diets. Confocal microscopy localization, protein and mRNA abundance, as well as tissue and me...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2003-11, Vol.552 (3), p.823-832 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The physiological significance of the presence of GLUT2 at the food-facing pole of intestinal cells is addressed by a study
of fructose absorption in GLUT2-null and control mice submitted to different sugar diets. Confocal microscopy localization,
protein and mRNA abundance, as well as tissue and membrane vesicle uptakes of fructose were assayed. GLUT2 was located in
the basolateral membrane of mice fed a meal devoid of sugar or containing complex carbohydrates. In addition, the ingestion
of a simple sugar meal promoted the massive recruitment of GLUT2 to the food-facing membrane. Fructose uptake in brush-border
membrane vesicles from GLUT2-null mice was half that of wild-type mice and was similar to the cytochalasin B-insensitive component,
i.e. GLUT5-mediated uptake. A 5 day consumption of sugar-rich diets increased fructose uptake fivefold in wild-type tissue
rings when it only doubled in GLUT2-null tissue. GLUT5 was estimated to contribute to 100 % of total uptake in wild-type mice
fed low-sugar diets, falling to 60 and 40 % with glucose and fructose diets respectively; the complement was ensured by GLUT2
activity. The results indicate that basal sugar uptake is mediated by the resident food-facing SGLT1 and GLUT5 transporters,
whose mRNA abundances double in long-term dietary adaptation. We also observe that a large improvement of intestinal absorption
is promoted by the transient recruitment of food-facing GLUT2, induced by the ingestion of a simple-sugar meal. Thus, GLUT2
and GLUT5 could exert complementary roles in adapting the absorption capacity of the intestine to occasional or repeated loads
of dietary sugars. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2003.049247 |