| Literature DB >> 20706540 |
Moisés Blanco Calvo1, Angélica Figueroa, Enrique Grande Pulido, Rosario García Campelo, Luís Antón Aparicio.
Abstract
Sugars, primarily glucose and fructose, are the main energy source of cells. Because of their hydrophilic nature, cells use a number of transporter proteins to introduce sugars through their plasma membrane. Cancer cells are well known to display an enhanced sugar uptake and consumption. In fact, sugar transporters are deregulated in cancer cells so they incorporate higher amounts of sugar than normal cells. In this paper, we compile the most significant data available about biochemical and biological properties of sugar transporters in normal tissues and we review the available information about sugar carrier expression in different types of cancer. Moreover, we describe the possible pharmacological interactions between drugs currently used in anticancer therapy and the expression or function of facilitative sugar transporters. Finally, we also go into the insights about the future design of drugs targeted against sugar utilization in cancer cells.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20706540 PMCID: PMC2913528 DOI: 10.1155/2010/205357
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Endocrinol ISSN: 1687-8337 Impact factor: 3.257
Substrate specificity and tissue expression of sugar transporters.
| Transporter | Substrates | Tissues | ||||||||||
| Glucose | Fructose | Intestine | Kidney | Blood | Liver | Brain | Pancreas | Testis | Muscle | Heart | Fat | |
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| SGLT1 |
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| SGLT2 |
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| GLUT1 |
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| GLUT2 |
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| GLUT3 |
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| GLUT4 |
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| GLUT5 |
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| GLUT6 |
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| GLUT7 |
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| GLUT8 |
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| GLUT9 |
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| GLUT10 |
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| GLUT11 |
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| GLUT12 |
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| GLUT14 |
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Sugar transporters and their expression in cancer.
| Transporter | Tissues | Roles and properties |
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| SGLT1 | Small intestine, kidney. | Intestinal absorption of glucose from meal. Renal reabsorption of glucose. |
| SGLT2 | Kidney. | Renal absorption of glucose from glomerular filtrate. |
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| GLUT1 | Erythrocytes, brain (blood-brain barrier). | Basal glucose uptake. |
| GLUT2 | Liver, pancreatic islet cells, small intestine, kidney. | Glucose sensing in pancreatic |
| GLUT3 | Brain (neuronal), testis. | Glucose neural transporter. |
| GLUT4 | Muscle, heart, adipose tissue. | Expressed in tissues with insulin-stimulated acute glucose transport. In response to insulin, it is translocated to plasma membrane. |
| GLUT14 | Testis. | |
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| GLUT5 | Small intestine, testis, muscle. | Only fructose transporter. |
| GLUT7 | Intestine, testis, prostate. | |
| GLUT9 | Liver, kidney. | |
| GLUT11 | Heart, adipose tissue, kidney, placenta, muscle. | GLUT11 has three isoforms: GLUT11a, GLUT11b, and GLUT11c, with distinct tissue distribution. |
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| GLUT6 | Brain, spleen, leukocytes. | |
| GLUT8 | Brain, testis, adipocytes. | |
| GLUT10 | Heart, lung, brain, liver, skeletal muscle, pancreas, placenta, and kidney. | Mutations in GLUT10 were associated with arterial tortuosity syndrome. GLUT10 deficiency is associated with the upregulation of TGFB pathway in Loeys-Dietz syndrome. |
| GLUT12 | Placenta, adipose tissue, small intestine and skeletal muscle. | In skeletal muscle, it is translocated to plasma membrane in response to insulin, like GLUT4. |
| HMIT | Brain. | Myoinositol transporter. |