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Liver glucose transporter: a basolateral protein in hepatocytes and intestine and kidney cells
286
Citations
41
References
1990
Year
GlycobiologyCholangiopathiesCellular PhysiologyInsulin SignalingMembrane ProteinsMembrane TransportHepatotoxicityEpithelial CellsKidney CellsMolecular PhysiologyBiochemistryLiver PhysiologyProtein TransportCell BiologyLiverHepatologyBiliary TractMetabolic FunctionsNatural SciencesPhysiologyDiabetesLiver Glucose TransporterLiver DiseaseMetabolismMedicineBasolateral Protein
The liver isoform of the glucose transporter is mainly expressed in liver, intestine, kidney, and pancreatic β‑cells. Western blot, Northern blot, and immunofluorescence reveal tissue‑specific post‑translational modifications and basolateral localization of this transporter in hepatocytes, intestinal absorptive cells, and proximal tubule cells, underscoring its role in glucose uptake, release, absorption, and reabsorption.
The "liver" isoform of the facilitated diffusion glucose transporter is expressed predominantly in liver, intestine, kidney, and pancreatic islet beta-cells. The apparent molecular mass of the transporter in liver, kidney, and intestine is different, as detected by Western blot analysis of membrane proteins using antipeptide antibodies. However, as assessed by Northern blot analysis and molecular cloning, the same mRNA is expressed in these tissues, indicating that there are tissue-specific posttranslational modifications of the same transporter polypeptide. As determined by immunofluorescence analysis on frozen tissue sections, the liver glucose transporter is present on the sinusoidal membrane of hepatocytes, on the basolateral membrane of fully differentiated absorptive intestine epithelial cells, and on the basolateral membrane of proximal tubule cells of the kidney nephron. This localization is consistent with the involvement of the liver glucose transporter in several key steps of glucose metabolism: glucose uptake and release by the liver and absorption or reabsorption by epithelial cells of the intestine and kidney, respectively.
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