Literature DB >> 18614966

Functional studies of the T295M mutation causing Glut1 deficiency: glucose efflux preferentially affected by T295M.

Dong Wang1, Hong Yang, Lei Shi, Li Ma, Tatsuya Fujii, Kristin Engelstad, Juan M Pascual, Darryl C De Vivo.   

Abstract

Glucose transporter type 1 (Glut1) deficiency syndrome (Glut1 DS, OMIM: #606777) is characterized by infantile seizures, acquired microcephaly, developmental delay, hypoglycorrhachia (CSF glucose <40 mg/dL), and decreased erythrocyte glucose uptake (56.1 +/- 17% of control). Previously, we reported two patients with a mild Glut1 deficiency phenotype associated with a heterozygous GLUT1 T295M mutation and normal erythrocyte glucose uptake. We assessed the pathogenicity of T295M in the Xenopus laevis oocyte expression system. Under zero-trans influx conditions, the T295M Vmax (590 pmol/min/oocyte) was 79% of the WT value and the Km (14.3 mM) was increased compared with WT (9.6 mM). Under zero-trans efflux conditions, both the Vmax (1216 pmol/min/oocyte) and Km (8.8 mM) in T295M mutant Glut1 were markedly decreased in comparison to the WT values (7443 pmol/min/oocyte and 90.8 mM). Western blot analysis and confocal studies confirmed incorporation of the T295M mutant protein into the plasma membrane. The side chain of M295 is predicted to block the extracellular "gate" for glucose efflux in our Glut-1 molecular model. We conclude that the T295M mutation specifically alters Glut1 conformation and asymmetrically affects glucose flux across the cell by perturbing efflux more than influx. These findings explain the seemingly paradoxical findings of Glut1 DS with hypoglycorrhachia and "normal" erythrocyte glucose uptake.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18614966     DOI: 10.1203/PDR.0b013e318184d2b5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Res        ISSN: 0031-3998            Impact factor:   3.756


  7 in total

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2.  Implications of aberrant temperature-sensitive glucose transport via the glucose transporter deficiency mutant (GLUT1DS) T295M for the alternate-access and fixed-site transport models.

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3.  A Protein Kinase C Phosphorylation Motif in GLUT1 Affects Glucose Transport and is Mutated in GLUT1 Deficiency Syndrome.

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6.  Reptation-induced coalescence of tunnels and cavities in Escherichia Coli XylE transporter conformers accounts for facilitated diffusion.

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Review 7.  Chemical biology probes of mammalian GLUT structure and function.

Authors:  Geoffrey D Holman
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  7 in total

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