(Received for publication, September 27, 1996, and in revised form, December 13, 1996)
From the Institute of Physiology, Medical Faculty,
RWTH Aachen, Pauwelsstrasse 30, Aachen D-52057, Federal Republic of Germany,
¶ Departament de Bioquímica i Biologia Molecular,
Facultat de Biologia, Universitat de Barcelona, Avda. Diagonal 645, 08028 Barcelona, Spain, and
Department of
Biochemistry, University of Bath, Claverton Down,
Bath BA2 7AY, United Kingdom
Using isolated rat cardiomyocytes we have examined: 1) the effect of insulin on the cellular distribution of glucose transporter 4 (GLUT4) and GLUT1, 2) the total amount of these transporters, and 3) the co-localization of GLUT4, GLUT1, and secretory carrier membrane proteins (SCAMPs) in intracellular membranes. Insulin induced 5.7- and 2.7-fold increases in GLUT4 and GLUT1 at the cell surface, respectively, as determined by the nonpermeant photoaffinity label [3H]2-N-[4(1-azi-2,2,2-trifluoroethyl)benzoyl]-1,3-bis-(D-mannos-4-yloxy)propyl-2-amine. The total amount of GLUT1, as determined by quantitative Western blot analysis of cell homogenates, was found to represent a substantial fraction (~30%) of the total glucose transporter content. Intracellular GLUT4-containing vesicles were immunoisolated from low density microsomes by using monoclonal anti-GLUT4 (1F8) or anti-SCAMP antibodies (3F8) coupled to either agarose or acrylamide. With these different immunoisolation conditions two GLUT4 membrane pools were found in nonstimulated cells: one pool with a high proportion of GLUT4 and a low content in GLUT1 and SCAMP 39 (pool 1) and a second GLUT4 pool with a high content of GLUT1 and SCAMP 39 (pool 2). The existence of pool 1 was confirmed by immunotitration of intracellular GLUT4 membranes with 1F8-acrylamide. Acute insulin treatment caused the depletion of GLUT4 in both pools and of GLUT1 and SCAMP 39 in pool 2. In conclusion: 1) GLUT4 is the major glucose transporter to be recruited to the surface of cardiomyocytes in response to insulin; 2) these cells express a high level of GLUT1; and 3) intracellular GLUT4-containing vesicles consist of at least two populations, which is compatible with recently proposed models of GLUT4 trafficking in adipocytes.
In mammalian cells, the facilitative uptake of glucose is mediated by a group of specialized glucose transporters (for reviews, see Refs. 1-4). Peripheral insulin-sensitive tissues, such as fat, skeletal muscles, and heart, express a unique transporter isoform (GLUT4),1 which is largely confined to an intracellular storage site in the basal, nonstimulated state and becomes recruited to the cell surface under the influence of insulin (5, 6) but also other stimuli, such as contraction (7-9) and hypoxia or anoxia (10, 11). This recruitment process is likely to account for a large part of the increase in the rate of glucose uptake observed on stimulation with these agents (12-16).
It has been recently reported that mice expressing a defective GLUT4 gene show cardiac hypertrophy (17), which supports the view that GLUT4 is important for normal function and properties of cardiac myocytes. This fact emphasizes the necessity of a thorough understanding of the mechanisms involved in the control and function of this protein in heart tissue. An important issue is the delineation of the GLUT4 trafficking pathway(s) in cardiomyocytes. In this respect, immunoelectron microscopy studies performed in the rat heart have observed that GLUT4 is localized in cardiac myocytes, under nonstimulated conditions, in small tubulovesicular elements adjacent to the sarcolemma and the transverse tubular system and in the trans-Golgi region (18), and that insulin stimulates the recruitment of intracellular GLUT4 carriers to the sarcolemma and to the T-tubular system. However, there is no information on biochemical grounds regarding the characteristics of the intracellular GLUT4 pool(s) in cardiomyocytes and the proteins essential for recruitment to the cell surface in response to insulin.
On the other hand, many cells types, such as endothelial cells and erythrocytes and also fat and muscle cells, contain another transporter isoform, GLUT1, which is thought to be at least in part responsible for the basal uptake of glucose (19, 20). In heart and skeletal muscle, the content of GLUT1 mRNA and protein was shown to largely decrease during postnatal development (21, 22), whereas the reverse is true for GLUT4 (21-23). However, the adult heart still appears to contain considerable amounts of GLUT1, in contrast to skeletal muscles (24, 25). Moreover, recent studies have shown that in heart muscle cells GLUT1 is recruited to the plasma membrane by several types of glucose transport stimuli, including insulin (26, 27), metformin (26), serotonin (27), and catecholamines (28). Thus, it is conceivable that GLUT1 plays an important role in the regulation of glucose uptake in the heart under certain physiological conditions.
In view of the importance of glucose carriers in cardiac function, we have used freshly isolated cardiac myocytes from adult rats: 1) to quantify the effect of insulin on the recruitment of GLUT4 and GLUT1 carriers to the cell surface; 2) to compare the amounts of these proteins expressed in intact cardiac myocytes; and 3) to explore the nature of the intracellular GLUT4 compartment.
125I-Protein A and
125I-sheep anti-mouse antibody were purchased from ICN
(Meckenheim, Germany). 125I-Goat anti-mouse antibody, ECL,
and 2-deoxy-D-[3H]glucose were from Amersham
Corp. The photoaffinity label (3H-ATB-BMPA) used to
quantify the glucose transporters was prepared as described elsewhere
(29). All chemicals for media used for cell isolation, glucose
transport assays, and labeling experiments were from Merck; antipain,
-hemolysin, protein A-Sepharose,
-globulin, goat-anti mouse IgG,
and goat anti-mouse IgM coupled to agarose were obtained from
Sigma; aprotinin, pepstatin, and leupeptin were from
ICN; ThesitTM and bovine serum albumin (fraction V, fatty
acid free) were purchased from Boehringer Mannheim); purified bovine
insulin was a kind gift from Prof. Axel Wollmer (Aachen, Germany). All
chemicals were the highest purity grade available. Concentrated stock
solutions of insulin (in medium A, see below) were stored at
20 °C
in appropriate aliquots and diluted just prior to addition to the
isolated cardiomyocytes. Immobilon polyvinylidene difluoride was
obtained from Millipore. All electrophoresis reagents and molecular
weight markers were obtained from Bio-Rad.
Antisera directed against the C-terminal
peptides of either GLUT1 or GLUT4 (and used to purify the
photoaffinity-labeled transporters) were raised in rabbits in the
laboratories of G. H. (GT1 and GT4), and A. Z. (OSCRX against GLUT4)
or were a kind gift from Dr. Samuel W. Cushman and Dina R. Yver
(Bethesda, MD; 9301 pA and 8105p G4). A polyclonal antibody
generated against the C terminus of GLUT1 obtained from Biogenesis Inc.
was used for immunoblotting assays. Monoclonal antibodies 1F8 (against
GLUT4) and 3F8 (against SCAMPs) were kindly provided by Dr. Paul F. Pilch (Boston University). A rabbit polyclonal antibody against rat
1-integrin was kindly given by Dr. Carles Enrich
(University of Barcelona) (30). Monoclonal antibody NCL-DYS 1 against
the midrod of dystrophin was obtained from NovoCastra. The polyclonal
antibody against the rat
1-subunit of the
Na+-K+-ATPase was from Upstate Biotechnology
Inc. (Lake Placid, NY). Polyclonal antibody 18B11, against TGN 38, was
kindly given by Dr. Ignacio Sandoval (Centro de Biologia Molecular,
Madrid, Spain).
Cardiomyocytes from adult female Sprague-Dawley rats (180-220 g, fed ad libitum) were obtained as described previously (31). Treatment of cardiomyocytes for all experiments was performed in medium A containing 6 mM KCl, 1 mM Na2HPO4, 0.2 mM NaH2PO4, 1.4 mM MgSO4, 128 mM NaCl, 10 mM HEPES, 1 mM CaCl2, and 2% bovine serum albumin (fatty acid free, pH 7.4) at 37 °C, equilibrated with oxygen. The rate of 2-deoxy-D-glucose uptake was determined as described elsewhere (31).
Photoaffinity Labeling of Glucose Transporters with [3H]ATB-BMPAThe labeling of glucose transporters was performed according to a method developed previously (12, 29), which was adapted and extensively validated in cardiomyocytes (27, 28). In brief, the labeling of cell surface transporters was carried out as follows. Cardiomyocytes (~5 mg protein/sample in a total volume of 6 ml) were incubated for 30 min at 37 °C in the absence (control) or in the presence of insulin (10 nM). Parallel samples were used for the determination of glucose transport. The cells allotted to the photoaffinity labeling were then washed and resuspended in 500 µl of medium A (with or without insulin); 60 µl of the nonpermeant, photoreactive bismannose compound 3H-ATB-BMPA (300 µCi, 60 µM final concentration) were added immediately before the samples were irradiated for 3 min with UV light under continuous gentle shaking. Following irradiation the cells were washed with medium A and then solubilized at 4 °C with 2% ThesitTM (in a phosphate buffer containing the proteinase inhibitors antipain, aprotinin, pepstatin, and leupeptin, 1 µg/µl each).
Preliminary experiments were performed to ensure that amounts of
antibodies used to immunoprecipitate GLUT1 and GLUT4 from homogenized
or permeabilized cardiomyocytes were saturating with respect to glucose
transporter recovery. First, larger amounts of anti-GLUT1 antisera (up
to 300 µl of GT1 or 50 µl of 9301pA) or GLUT4 antisera (up to 300 µl of GT4 or 50 µl of p8105 G4) or longer incubation times (up
to 18 h) did not result in increased GLUT1 or GLUT4 signals.
Second, no detectable amount of glucose transporters could be recovered
from a second immunoprecipitation with the same antiserum. Third, the
total signals obtained were independent of the antiserum used (GT4 or
GT1, raised in the laboratory of G. H., versus p8105
G4
or 9301pA). Finally, as shown in a previous study, the order of
addition of antibodies has no influence on the results (13).
Nonstimulated cardiomyocytes (~30 mg protein/sample) were washed once with TES buffer (20 mM Tris, 1 mM EDTA, 250 mM sucrose, and 0.1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, pH 7.4) and then homogenized with a Potter (clearance, 0.2 mm) in a total volume of 4.7 ml. The samples were then spun down for 30 min at 50,000 g at 4 °C, and the pellet of this centrifugation was resuspended in 350 µl of TES buffer. This crude membrane fraction was used to perform immunoblot analysis, as described in a separate section below. The absolute amounts of GLUT4 and GLUT1 were quantified by comparing the signals obtained from several dilutions of crude membranes with those of known standards. These standards were purified intracellular membranes from isolated adipocytes (GLUT4) or from human erythrocytes (GLUT1) in which the amount of D-glucose-displaceable cytochalasin B binding sites had been determined as described elsewhere (32).
Preparation of Purified Membrane Fractions from CardiomyocytesCardiomyocytes were incubated for 30 min at 37 °C in the presence or absence of insulin (10 nM) and were washed once with TES buffer and then immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen in a ratio of 107 cells/2.7 ml of TES. Membrane fractionation was performed as described previously (26).
Protocols of Vesicle ImmunoisolationProtein A-purified
monoclonal anti-GLUT4 antibody (1F8) or a corresponding amount of
nonspecific antibodies (-globulins) was coupled to acrylamide beads
(Reacti-gel GF 2000, Pierce) at a concentration of 1 mg of antibody/ml
of resin according to the manufacturer's instructions. Before use, the
beads were saturated with 1% bovine serum albumin in PBS (134 mM NaCl, 2.6 mM KCl, 6.4 mM
Na2HPO4, and 1.46 KH2PO4, pH 7.4) for at least 30 min (at room
temperature) and washed with PBS. Intracellular membranes (low density
microsomes (LDMs)) were incubated with beads overnight at 4 °C (50 µg of LDMs, 20-µl beads). The beads were spun down; the supernatant
was taken for later analysis; the beads were washed five times with
PBS; and the adsorbed material was eluted with electrophoresis sample
buffer (0.1 M Tris-HCl, 20% glycerol, and 2% sodium
dodecyl sulfate, pH 6.8), incubated for 5 min at 95 °C, cooled, and
microcentrifuged. The supernatant fraction from the vesicle
immunoadsorption assay and the immunoadsorbed extract were subjected to
immunoblot analysis.
In some assays, antibodies 1F8 (5-7 µg) and 3F8 (3 µg) were incubated overnight at 4 °C with goat anti-mouse IgG or goat anti-mouse IgM coupled to agarose (75 µl of bead volume). Beads were collected by a 6-s spin in a Microfuge and washed in PBS. LDM preparations (15-25 µg of proteins) were incubated with 1F8- or 3F8-agarose overnight at 4 °C in the absence of detergents (0.1% bovine serum albumin and 1 mM EDTA in PBS; final volume, 200 µl). The agarose beads and vesicles bound to them were collected by a 6-s spin in a Microfuge. The vesicles that were bound to the immobilized antibody were washed in PBS. The adsorbed material was eluted with electrophoresis sample buffer.
The immunotitration experiments illustrated in Figs. 4 and 5 were
performed with antibodies bound to acrylamide beads prepared as
described above. LDM membranes (50 µg) were incubated overnight at
4 °C with different mixtures of two batches of beads (one batch with
1F8 and one with -globulin as nonspecific antibodies), corresponding to varying amounts of 1F8 (0-7 µg) in a constant total bead volume of 20 µl. The adsorbed and nonadsorbed membranes were then processed as described above.
Immunoblot Analysis
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was performed on a membrane protein following the method of Laemmli (33). Proteins were transferred to Immobilon as previously reported (34) in buffer consisting of 20% methanol, 200 mM glycine, and 25 mM Tris, pH 8.3. Following transfer, the filters were blocked with 5% nonfat dry milk and 0.02% sodium azide in PBS for 1 h at 37 °C and were incubated with antibodies in 1% nonfat dry milk and 0.02% sodium azide in PBS. Transfer was confirmed by Coomassie Blue staining of the gel after the electroblot. Detection of the immune complex with the rabbit polyclonal antibodies was accomplished using 125I-protein A for 4 h at room temperature. Detection of the immune complex with monoclonal antibodies was performed using sheep anti-mouse 125I-labeled antibody. Antibody 3F8 was detected using horseradish peroxidase linked to a goat anti-IgM mouse secondary antibody and visualized using an ECL system. The autoradiograms were quantified using scanning densitometry. Immunoblots were performed under conditions in which autoradiographic detection was in the linear response range.
To quantify the effect of insulin on cell surface GLUT4 and GLUT1 we used the selective, nonpermeant, photoreactive bismannose compound 3H-ATB-BMPA, which has proven to give a more accurate picture of cell surface changes than classical membrane fractionation methods combined with Western blot analysis (12, 14, 16). ATB-BMPA labeling was performed according to a protocol that has previously been successfully used in adipocytes (12, 13, 35) or skeletal muscles (14-16) and that we have recently adapted to isolated cardiac muscle cells (27, 28).
Fig. 1 summarizes the quantitative data on the effects
of insulin on the content of glucose transporters at the surface of cardiomyocytes. The hormone induced 5.7- and 2.7-fold increases in the
amounts of GLUT4 and GLUT1, respectively, in this compartment (Fig. 1,
left and middle panels). By comparison, insulin
caused a 12.0 ± 0.74-fold stimulation of glucose transport in the
same experiments (Fig. 1, right panel). It is worth
mentioning that in the basal, i.e. nonstimulated, state and
in terms of absolute signals, the level of GLUT4 labeling at the
surface of cardiomyocytes already exceeded that of GLUT1 labeling by a
factor of ~2.5 (not shown), so that with insulin treatment, there was
about four times more GLUT4 than GLUT1 at the cell surface. Thus, the
insulin-dependent increase in glucose transport is largely
explained by a recruitment of glucose transporters (mainly GLUT4). The
difference in the extent of GLUT translocation and glucose transport
stimulation might be due either to a change in intrinsic activity of
recruited transporters or to a slightly higher accuracy of the
transport assay in comparison with the labeling method.
It should be noted that the quantitative evaluation of the effects of
insulin and the comparison of GLUT1 and GLUT4 relies on the assumption
that the hormone does not modify the reactivity of the cell surface
transporters, and that both isoforms display the same labeling
efficiency. In this context, it was previously shown that the
Kd of ATB-BMPA binding is similar for both carrier
isoforms and is not altered by insulin (36). Importantly, the
Ki value found for the inhibition of glucose
transport by ATB-BMPA in cardiomyocytes (~180 µM; not
shown) was similar to that determined in erythrocytes (29), rat
adipocytes (13), and 3T3-L1-adipocytes (36). The Ki
was unchanged with insulin treatment (13, 36). Moreover, incorporation
efficiency of ATB-BMPA into GLUT1 and GLUT4 was consistently found to
be the same in different cell types, including rat adipocytes (13, 37),
3T3-L1-adipocytes (36), and Xenopus oocytes (37), and to be
very high under the conditions used (which were the same as in this
study; Refs. 13, 29, and 36). Finally, insulin had no effect on the
total level of ATB-BMPA incorporation as determined in cardiomyocytes
permeabilized with the pore-forming agent -hemolysin or by
sonication (data not shown). This finding is in line with previous
investigations, which have shown that the total amount of labeled GLUT1
and GLUT4 is the same in basal or insulin-stimulated 3T3-L1 adipocytes
(38) or muscle (14). Overall, these observations indicate that the
labeling of ATB-BMPA to cell surface glucose transporters is
independent of the cell type and is not affected by insulin.
Although the results presented above point to GLUT4 as the major
transporter responsible for insulin-dependent glucose
uptake, reports indicating a relatively high expression of GLUT1 in
cardiac tissue (24, 25) prompted us to directly compare the total amounts of GLUT4 and GLUT1 in isolated cardiomyocytes by Western blot
analysis. For this purpose, nonstimulated cardiomyocytes were
homogenized as described under "Materials and Methods," and their
content in GLUT4 and GLUT1 was estimated by comparing the cell samples
with known standards obtained from intracellular adipocyte membranes
(GLUT4 standard) or erythrocyte membranes (GLUT1 standard). Using this
method, we found contents of 1.2 pmol of GLUT4 and 0.47 pmol of
GLUT1/mg of protein (n = 2). In other words, GLUT1
makes up nearly 30% of the total glucose transporter content in these
cells. This substantial level of GLUT1 expression was essentially
confirmed by experiments in which we have attempted to determine the
total amounts of GLUT1 and GLUT4 by using ATB-BMPA in cardiomyocytes
permeabilized with either -toxin or by sonication. These experiments
even yielded a higher proportion of GLUT1 (up to 50%; data not shown),
although we cannot rule out that the labeling efficiency of
intracellular GLUT4 might be lower than that of GLUT1.
In view of the fact that GLUT4 and GLUT1 showed differential recruitment to the cardiomyocyte surface in response to insulin, and regarding the high level of GLUT1 expression in these cells, we decided to characterize the intracellular insulin-sensitive GLUT4 pool and the degree of co-localization of GLUT4 and GLUT1 in this compartment. In addition, the distribution of SCAMPs has also been examined, because these proteins have been reported to co-localize with GLUT4 in isolated rat adipocytes (39, 40).
To this end, subcellular fractionation of isolated rat cardiomyocytes
was performed as previously reported (26). This procedure results in
the isolation of several membrane fractions. One of these fractions
(PM, see "Materials and Methods") was enriched in the plasma
membrane marker enzyme ouabain-sensitive
p-nitrophenylphosphatase (41) by a factor of 13.5 (2.40 versus 0.17 nmol/h/µg of protein), whereas the specific
activity of the sarcoplasmic reticulum marker, the EGTA-sensitive
Ca++-ATPase (42), was decreased by a factor of 3.6 (0.41 versus 1.88 nmol/h/µg of protein) when compared with crude
cell homogenates. PM was also highly enriched in cell surface markers
such as 1-integrin (Fig. 2), the
1-subunit of the Na+-K+-ATPase,
and dystrophin, as determined by immunoblot analysis (not shown).
Another fraction (LDMs) contained substantial amounts of GLUT4, GLUT1,
and TGN 38 (a trans-Golgi marker) and was nominally free from plasma
membrane markers or EGTA-sensitive Ca++-ATPase activity
(data not shown).
In keeping with prior observations (26) and with the data shown in Fig.
1, the incubation of cardiomyocytes with insulin caused a significant
increase in GLUT4 and GLUT1 in plasma membranes by 138 ± 35% and
61 ± 18%, respectively (Fig. 2). The results indicate, in
agreement with data illustrated in Fig. 1, that insulin causes a
greater recruitment to the cell surface of GLUT4 than GLUT1. Under the
same conditions, no alterations in the abundance of
1-integrin (Fig. 2), the
1-subunit of the
Na+-K+-ATPase, or dystrophin were detected
(data not shown). Concomitantly, there was a significant drop in the
abundance of GLUT4 and GLUT1 in LDMs after insulin treatment (levels
after insulin accounted for 40 ± 8% and 48 ± 6% of
control values, respectively; n = 6-8 observations).
Western blot analysis of plasma and LDM membranes with anti-SCAMP antibodies revealed two distinct bands showing apparent molecular masses of 37 and 39 kDa (Fig. 2), as previously shown in adipocytes and skeletal muscle (39, 40). Acute insulin treatment resulted in a redistribution of SCAMP 39 from LDMs to the plasma membranes (Fig. 2). Thus, insulin caused a significant increase in the abundance of SCAMP 39 in plasma membranes (94 ± 5% increase) and a concomitant significant decrease in LDMs (levels in the insulin-treated group accounted for 55 ± 8% of the unstimulated control group) (Fig. 2). A similar tendency was found with regard to SCAMP 37, which did not reach significance in PM (37 ± 34% increase in PM and 26 ± 7% decrease in LDMs after insulin treatment) (Fig. 2).
We next characterized the degree of co-localization of GLUT4, GLUT1,
and SCAMPs in LDMs. To this end, we performed two different types of
vesicle immunoadsorption assays with LDMs obtained from unstimulated
cardiomyocytes: 1) immunoadsorption of GLUT4-containing vesicles with
1F8 antibody (monoclonal antibody against GLUT4) noncovalently bound to
agarose beads, and 2) immunoisolation of GLUT4 vesicles with 1F8
covalently linked to acrylamide beads. Immunoadsorption of GLUT4
vesicles with 1F8-agarose resulted in the specific recovery of near
60% of total GLUT4 present in LDMs (Fig. 3 and Table
I); however, on adsorption with 1F8-acrylamide, approximately 80% of all GLUT4 was specifically recovered in the immunoprecipitates (Fig. 3 and Table I). Based on this, we reasoned that this different efficiency of the two protocols to immunoisolate GLUT4 vesicles may be used to characterize the extent of
co-localization of GLUT4 with other proteins such as GLUT1 and SCAMPs
in LDMs. As shown in Fig. 3 and Table I, after immunoadsorption with
1F8-agarose, only 15% of GLUT1 originally contained in LDMs was
immunoadsorbed. Similarly, only 24% of SCAMP 39 was adsorbed to
1F8-agarose (Table I). When using 1F8 coupled to acrylic beads, four
times as much GLUT1 and more than twice as much SCAMP 39 were
specifically immunoprecipitated when compared with 1F8-agarose
(i.e. 64% of all GLUT1 contained in LDMs and 55% SCAMP 39;
Fig. 3 and Table I). Thus, this contrasts with the relatively small
increase of 20% in GLUT4 recovery (i.e. 80% of total GLUT4
with 1F8-acrylamide versus 60% with 1F8-agarose; Fig. 3 and
Table I).
|
Taken together, these results might be interpreted in terms of the existence of two distinct intracellular GLUT4 membrane populations in LDMs from unstimulated cardiomyocytes: GLUT4 vesicles showing a low GLUT1 and SCAMP 39 content and GLUT4 vesicles showing a high GLUT1 and SCAMP 39 content.
Immunoadsorption of LDMs was also carried out with antibodies directed against SCAMPs (antibody 3F8 linked to agarose beads). With this approach, nearly 63% of SCAMP 39 but only 37% of GLUT4 and 25% of GLUT1 were recovered (Table I). This finding suggests the existence of a subpopulation of LDMs that is enriched in SCAMP 39 compared with GLUT4. This type of analysis could not be extended to GLUT1 vesicles, since the anti-GLUT1 antibodies used showed little efficiency in immunoadsorbing GLUT1 vesicles (data not shown).
The conclusion that LDMs may contain at least two populations of GLUT4-containing vesicles, on the grounds of the immunoprecipitation experiments described above, is limited by the fact that it is based on the comparison of data obtained from two different protocols (adsorption with 1F8-agarose versus adsorption with 1F8-acrylamide; Table I). To directly examine the hypothesis of different vesicle populations, we performed immunotitration experiments using varying amounts of 1F8 (bound to acrylamide) to adsorb GLUT4 vesicles in LDMs from nonstimulated cells and determined the amount of recovered GLUT4, GLUT1, and SCAMPs by Western blot analysis. We found that about 10 times less 1F8 antibody (~0.7 µg) was required to reach a saturating degree of GLUT4 adsorption than was the case for either GLUT1 (7 µg of 1F8; Fig. 4) or SCAMPs (Fig. 5). These observations thus confirm the existence of an intracellular vesicle pool that is enriched in GLUT4 but poor in GLUT1 and SCAMPs.
Finally, it was verified that the GLUT4-containing vesicles
immunoadsorbed with 1F8-acrylamide, as described above, represents an
insulin-sensitive pool. Therefore, the action of insulin on the
abundance of GLUT4, GLUT1, and SCAMP 39 was studied in GLUT4 vesicles
immunoadsorbed with a saturating amount of 1F8-acrylamide (to obtain
GLUT4 vesicles with a high content in GLUT1 and SCAMP 39; see above).
In this fraction, there was an insulin-dependent reduction
in the amount of GLUT4 (46%), GLUT1 (
45%), and SCAMP 39 (
59%)
(Fig. 6A). Similarly, insulin reduced the
GLUT4 content in GLUT4 vesicles obtained with 1F8-agarose (55%
decrease; Fig. 6B).
A first issue addressed in this study is the direct comparison of the contents of GLUT4 and GLUT1 in isolated rat cardiomyocytes and of the relative contribution of these isoforms to the effect of insulin on glucose uptake. As shown in Fig. 1, GLUT4 is recruited to the plasma membrane to a larger extent than GLUT1 in response to insulin, as quantified by ATB-BMPA labeling. This is confirmed by experiments such as that illustrated in Fig. 2, in which the relative effects of insulin on the level of GLUT4 and GLUT1 were evaluated in purified plasma membranes by Western blot analysis. It is also worth mentioning that the absolute level of ATB-BMPA labeling of GLUT4 at the surface of nonstimulated cardiomyocytes already exceeded that of GLUT1 labeling by a factor of ~2.5 (not shown), and the preferential recruitment of GLUT4 by insulin will accentuate the importance of GLUT4 as the predominant transporter in the plasma membrane. Thus, these results clearly indicate that GLUT4 is responsible for a large part of insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in these cells. This is in line with prior observations in adipocytes and skeletal muscles (12-14, 16).
On the other hand, we found a high degree of GLUT1 expression in cardiomyocytes, as determined by quantitative Western blot analysis, which confirms qualitative and semiquantitative data obtained by others in heart tissue (24, 25). This high level of GLUT1 expression appears to be a unique property of the heart among insulin-sensitive tissues. Thus, GLUT1 accounts for only a very small percentage of total glucose carriers (~5-10%) in adipocytes (19, 43) and skeletal muscles (20, 25) (versus ~30% in cardiomyocytes). This large amount of GLUT1 in cardiomyocytes, along with the observation that it is recruited by a variety of agents in these cells (26-28), suggests that this transporter may play a specific role in the regulation of cardiac glucose transport. Several pathophysiological situations illustrate the possible importance of GLUT1 for cardiac glucose uptake. For instance, it was recently reported that the basal and insulin-dependent glucose transport in isolated perfused rat hearts is decreased following in vivo treatment with triiodothyronine (mimicking hyperthyroidism) (44), an intervention known to selectively reduce the myocardial level of GLUT1 but not GLUT4 (45). Similarly, fasting over 24-48 h was shown to dramatically diminish the basal rate as well as the insulin sensitivity of myocardial glucose uptake in vivo, with a concomitant reduction in the amount of cardiac GLUT1 (25). It is also worth mentioning that streptozotocin-induced diabetes also causes a decrease in GLUT1 protein in the rat heart (46).
The fact that insulin induces a more modest translocation of GLUT1 than GLUT4 suggests that the specific function of GLUT1 in these cells lies in the mediation of other effects than that of insulin. One possibility worth being explored is that the intracellular GLUT1 pool of heart cells is more responsive to stimuli such as contraction or anoxia than to insulin. In this context, one may speculate that GLUT1 becomes redistributed to this pool after cardiomyocyte isolation (e.g. as a consequence of the arrest of contractile activity).
Characterization of Intracellular GLUT4-containing MembranesWe have further explored the intracellular
insulin-sensitive GLUT4 pool by performing vesicle immunoisolation
analysis in LDMs from rat cardiomyocytes. Immunoadsorption assays with
1F8-agarose resulted in a high recovery of GLUT4 but in a low recovery
of GLUT1 and SCAMP 39; in contrast, immunoadsorption with
1F8-acrylamide led to a large increase in the amount of GLUT1 and SCAMP
39 recovered, with a relatively modest increase in the degree of GLUT4
recovery (Table I). In other words, immunoadsorption with 1F8-agarose yields GLUT4 vesicles with a low GLUT1 and low SCAMP 39 content (GLUT4
pool 1), whereas immunoadsorption with 1F8-acrylamide yields, in
addition, GLUT4 vesicles with a high GLUT1 and high SCAMP 39 content
(GLUT4 pool 2). Furthermore, immunotitration experiments with LDM
membranes show that a much smaller amount of 1F8 is required to reach a
saturating degree of GLUT4 recovery than was the case for GLUT1 (Fig.
4) or SCAMPs (Fig. 5). Thus, our data are compatible with the existence
of at least two different intracellular GLUT4 populations (see Fig.
7).
Immunocytochemical studies have localized GLUT4 in several distinct intracellular sites in adipocytes (47) and cardiomyocytes (18). Furthermore, kinetic studies are indicative of the existence of two intracellular GLUT4 pools in adipocytes. First, mathematical analysis of kinetic data of GLUT4 endocytosis and exocytosis obtained with the photoaffinity reagent ATB-BMPA (6, 35) predicts that GLUT4 localizes to at least two distinct intracellular compartments in fat cells (48). Second, data of subcellular trafficking of both GLUT4 and GLUT1 and chimeric transporters in adipocytes (49) are best explained by a model postulating two intracellular pools (50). According to the predictions of this model, GLUT4 is internalized into an endosomal compartment and then sorted into an insulin-recruitable compartment; in contrast, GLUT1 is endocytosed into the endosomal compartment and recycles from this compartment to the cell surface (50). Further support to the idea that GLUT4 is present in separate intracellular compartments comes from very recent compartment ablation analysis; thus, ablation of the endosomal compartment in 3T3-L1 adipocytes reduces by 40% the amount of cellular GLUT4 (51).
In view of all this and considering that SCAMPs are known markers of the endosomal compartment (52), we propose that GLUT4 pool 2 is of endosomal nature and might be similar to the endosomal GLUT4 pool predicted in adipocytes (48, 50) (see Fig. 7). Our finding that insulin depletes GLUT1 and SCAMP 39 from GLUT4 pool 2 is consistent with the model proposed by Yeh et al. (50), according to which GLUT1 would recycle from the endosomal compartment to the cell surface in adipocytes. Furthermore, GLUT4 pool 1 might be analogous to the insulin-recruitable compartment proposed by others on the basis of kinetic (48, 50) and immunoadsorption (53) experiments. In keeping with this, we found that GLUT4 was markedly depleted from the 1F8-agarose immunoprecipitates after insulin treatment (Fig. 6).
In this context, other experiments further support the notion of a different intracellular location of GLUT4 and GLUT1. Thus, quantitative Western blot analysis showed that the molar ratio of GLUT1:GLUT4 is much smaller in LDMs from nonstimulated cardiomyocytes (0.1:1; not shown) than that found in crude homogenates of these cells (0.4:1; see "Results"). This suggests the existence of an additional GLUT1 pool that is not part of LDMs (and is therefore distinct from pools 1 and 2).
The expert and devoted technical assistance of Christiane Löken and Ilinca Ionescu is gratefully acknowledged. We also thank Dr. Samuel W. Cushman and Dina R. Yver for providing some of the antibodies used in the labeling experiments.