Evidence for functionally distinct glucose transporters in basal and insulin-stimulated adipocytes

Abstract
The activity and Km of glucose transport of rat adipocytes are quite variable in the basal state. This could be due to differing levels of highly saturable transport against a background of less saturable transport. Such heterogeneity could lead to differing conclusions as to the Km of basal cells compared to insulin-stimulated cells depending on the choice of substrate, the range of concentrations tested, and the rigor of data analysis. In the present work, we used a cell preparation which was stable and partially activated by constant agitation. We used a two-component model to fit the concentration dependence of D-glucose uptake. We defined two parallel pathways of glucose entry, a high-affinity/low-capacity pathway and a low-affinity/high-capacity pathway. Both pathways were stereospecific and were inhibited by cytochalasin B. The low-affinity pathway in basal cells had 97% of the total capacity (Vmax) with a high Km (> 50 mM). A second pathway had a very low Km (< 1 mM) and only 3% of the total capacity, but contributed to 30-60% of glucose uptake at 8 mM glucose. In insulin-stimulated cells, a pathway with a Km of 4-5 mM dominated and contributed 85% of glucose transport. The low-affinity but not the very high affinity pathway persisted in stimulated cells, but its contribution was only 10-15% of transport at 8 mM glucose. These results suggest the presence of at least two functionally distinct transporters whose respective contributions can be characterized by nonlinear aggression of data over a wide range of glucose concentrations. From the data, we conclude that an increase of the apparent affinity of glucose transport is important to insulin action and that this observation is consistent with the hypothesis that insulin recruits a functionally distinct type of transporter into the plasma membrane. These results are discussed in relation to recent immunological findings that several species of glucose transporters may coexist in the adipocyte membrane.