| Literature DB >> 30239845 |
Yong Zhang1,2, Yuping Zhang1, Kun Sun1, Ziyi Meng1, Ligong Chen1.
Abstract
The prevalence of metabolic diseases is growing worldwide. Accumulating evidence suggests that solute carrier (SLC) transporters contribute to the etiology of various metabolic diseases. Consistent with metabolic characteristics, the top five organs in which SLC transporters are highly expressed are the kidney, brain, liver, gut, and heart. We aim to understand the molecular mechanisms of important SLC transporter-mediated physiological processes and their potentials as drug targets. SLC transporters serve as 'metabolic gate' of cells and mediate the transport of a wide range of essential nutrients and metabolites such as glucose, amino acids, vitamins, neurotransmitters, and inorganic/metal ions. Gene-modified animal models have demonstrated that SLC transporters participate in many important physiological functions including nutrient supply, metabolic transformation, energy homeostasis, tissue development, oxidative stress, host defense, and neurological regulation. Furthermore, the human genomic studies have identified that SLC transporters are susceptible or causative genes in various diseases like cancer, metabolic disease, cardiovascular disease, immunological disorders, and neurological dysfunction. Importantly, a number of SLC transporters have been successfully targeted for drug developments. This review will focus on the current understanding of SLCs in regulating physiology, nutrient sensing and uptake, and risk of diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30239845 PMCID: PMC6359923 DOI: 10.1093/jmcb/mjy052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Cell Biol ISSN: 1759-4685 Impact factor: 6.216
Figure 1The phylogenetic tree of SLC superfamily. Different colors represent different subfamilies (see Supplementary Methods section). The SLCs are mainly classified into six groups: (i) Group 1 includes the SLC8, SLC24, and SLC39 families; (ii) Group 2 includes the SLC6, SLC9, and SLC30 families; (iii) Group 3 includes the SLC2, SLC4, SLC22, SLC28, and SLC41 families; (iv) Group 4 includes the SLC16, SLC17, SLC18, SLC37, SLC43, SLC45, and SLC47 families; (v) Group 5 includes the SLC1, SLC25, SLC26, SLC27, SLC29, and SLC34 families; (vi) Group 6 includes the SLC5, SLC7, SLC10, SLC12, SLC13, SLC23, SLC35, SLC36, and SLC38 families. Subfamily similarities may imply common ancestry and suggest possible functional similarity.
Representative SLC transporter-relevant human diseases.
| SLC | Human diseases | Known substrates | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| SLC2A2 |
T2DM insulin resistance | Facilitated glucose transporter |
|
| SLC16A11 | T2DM | Transport of pyruvate across the plasma membrane |
|
| SLC30A8 |
T2DM Insulin resistance | Zinc transporter 8 |
|
| SLC6A1 | Anxiety disorders | GABA transporter |
|
| SLC6A12 | Schizophrenia in a Korean population | GABA transporter |
|
| SLC6A15 | Depression | Branched-chain amino acids, particularly leucine, valine, isoleucine, and methionine |
|
| SLC30A10 | Neurologic, hepatic, and hematologic disturbances | Manganese transport |
|
| SLC24A4 | Alzheimer’s disease | Calcium transport |
|
| SLC2A9 | Gout | Urate |
|
| SLC16A9 | Gout | Urate |
|
| SLC17A1 | Gout | Sodium-dependent phosphate transporter 1; a renal transporter of uric acid |
|
| SLC17A3 | Gout | Urate |
|
| SLC22A11 | Gout | Organic anion transporter 4 |
|
| SLC22A12 | Gout | Urate transporter 1 |
|
| SLC4A7 | Elevated blood pressure | Electroneutral Na+/HCO3− cotransporter NBCn1 |
|
| SLC6A13 |
Elevated blood pressure chronic kidney disease (CKD) | GABA transporter |
|
| SLC8A1 | Elevated blood pressure | Sodium(Na+)-calcium(Ca2+) exchanger 1 |
|
| SLC12A1 | Blood pressure variation | Kidney-specific sodium–potassium–chloride cotransporter; accounts for most of the NaCl resorption |
|
| SLC12A3 | Blood pressure variation | Renal thiazide-sensitive sodium-chloride cotransporter |
|
| SLC14A2 | Elevated blood pressure | Urea transporter |
|
| SLC22A4/5 | Elevated blood pressure | Gothioneine and carnitine |
|
| SLC24A3 | Elevated blood pressure | K+-dependent Na+/Ca2+ exchanger 3 |
|
| SLC35F1 | Elevated blood pressure | Unknown |
|
| SLC39A8 | Elevated blood pressure | Zinc transport |
|
| SLC39A13 | Elevated blood pressure | Zinc transport |
|
| SLC25A32 | Blood pressure | Unknown |
|
| SLC7A9 | CKD | Transport of cystine and neutral and dibasic amino acids |
|
| SLC34A1 | CKD | Sodium–phosphate cotransporter |
|
| SLC22A2 | CKD | Metformin, cisplatin, and lamivudine |
|
| SLC22A5 | Asthma | Carnitine transporter |
|
| SLC30A8 | Asthma | Zinc transporter 8 |
|
| SLC22A23 | Bronchodilator responsiveness in asthma | Unknown |
|
| SLC25A15 | Bronchodilator responsiveness in asthma | Unknown |
|
For the human SLC family members, Table 1 summarizes their types of predominant transport substrates and links to common diseases (T2DM, depression, Alzheimer’s disease, gout, elevated blood pressure, CKD, and asthma).
Figure 2Representative modes of SLC transport. SLCs constitute a dynamic work coordination for living cells. Different modes of SLC transport, including cotransporters, exchangers, facilitated and orphan transporters, are marked by different shapes and colors. The representative SLC transporters include SLC3A2/SLC7A5 (amino acids), SLC5A1 (glucose and Na+), SLC9A3 (Na+/H+ exchanger), SLC16A1 (lactate), SLC19A3 (thiamine), SLC25A1(citrate/malate exchanger), SLC25A8 (protons), SLC29A2 (nucleobases), SLC30A4 (Zn2+ to ER), SLC30A8 (Zn2+ to granules), SLC35A3 (UDP-GlcNAc to Golgi), SLC35A3 (UDP-galactose to ER), SLC38A9 (leucine), and SLC39A1 (Zn2+ to intracellular fluid). SLCs participate in important biological functions for glycolysis, acidification, TCA cycle, and nutrient supply. Among these, SLC3A2 and SLC7A5, considered as heteromeric amino acid transporters, are collaborative for amino acid transport. The activities of SLCs cover all organelles from nucleus to cell membrane.
Figure 3(A) Tissues and diseases associated with SLCs. Major advances in understanding of the relationship between disease susceptibility and SLCs have been made. Accumulation of gene mutations and GWAS studies have demonstrated that SLCs play a crucial role in human diseases. SLCs are specifically expressed in different organs and involved in the pathogenesis of various human diseases. SLC members in the same family have been described that differ in the organ expression with different functions. The brain and kidney are two target organs for most high expression of SLCs-mediated diseases. Thus, SLCs are promising for neurologic and metabolic target. (B) SLC inhibitors for drug targets. The current SLC drug development is promising. Previous approved drugs were widely used for treatment of hyperglycemia, diuresis, movement disorders, uricosuresis, gout, and so on. Newly testing SLC drugs have the potential to exert antineoplastic effects, ameliorate Type 1 diabetes, resist constipation, protect from hypertension and schizophrenia. Data were cited from Rask-Andersen et al. (2013) and Cesar-Razquin et al. (2015).
Animal model phenotypes relative to representative Slc transporters.
| Slc | Diseases/defects | Animal models | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Slc2a4 | Fasting hyperglycemia and glucose intolerance | Global Slc2a4-deficient mice | |
| Slc2a4 | Glucose uptake reduced by 75% | Muscle-specific Glut4 knockout (KO) mice | |
| Slc2a4 | Insulin resistance secondarily in muscle and liver | Adipose-specific Glut4 KO mice | |
| Slc2a4 | Impaired ability in mouse under stress | Cardiac-specific Glut4 KO mice | |
| Slc2a4 | Protection from albuminuria and diabetic nephropathy | Podocyte-specific Glut4 KO mice | |
| Slc2a9 | Hyperuricaemia, hyperuricosuria, spontaneous hypertension, dyslipidemia, and elevated body fat | Glut9 KO mice | |
| Slc3a1 | Cystinuria | Slc3a1 KO Feline | |
| Slc5a2 | Prevention from HFD-induced hyperglycemia and glucose intolerance; reduced plasma insulin concentrations | Slc5a2 KO mice | |
| Slc6a15 | Less anxiety- and depressive-like behavior | Slc6a15 KO mice | |
| Slc6a15 | Increased anxiety-like behavior | Slc6a15 overexpression mice | |
| Slc11a1 | Sensitive to | Slc11a1 KO mice | |
| Slc12a1 | Decreased neuronal layer thickness and cell number; more immature interneurons | Slc12a1 KO mice | |
| Slc13a1 | Hyposulfatemia | NaS1-null (Nas1−/−) mice | |
| Slc15a1 | Higher plasma amino acid levels | Slc15a1 KO mice | |
| Slc15a2 | Lower body weight and lower relative heart weight in male PEPT2-null mice; lower relative kidney weight in female mice | PEPT2-null mice | |
| Slc16a1 | Hyperinsulinism | RIP7-rtTA/Mct1-Luc mice | |
| Slc17a1 | Normal plasma Pi and calcium levels; reduced Pi excretion | NPT1−/− mice | |
| Slc19a3 | Neurodegenerative disorder | Slc19a3-deficient mice | |
| Slc20a2 | Dysregulated phosphate homeostasis basal ganglia calcification | Heterzygous (Het) Slc20a2 mice | |
| Slc23a1 | Lower plasma ascorbate concentrations; brain hemorrhage | Slc23a1 KO mice | |
| Slc24a4 | A deficit in olfactory neurons | Slc24a4 KO mice | |
| Slc26a1 | Hyposulfatemia, hyperoxalemia; transport anions including sulfate, bicarbonate, chloride, and oxalate | Sat1-null (Sat1−/−)/Sat1 KO mice | |
| Slc27a1 | Reduced insulin resistance; decreased electroretinogram response | Slc27a1 KO mice | |
| Slc30a8 | Islets with markedly fewer dense cores but more rod-like crystals | ZnT8-null (Slc30a8−/−) mice | |
| Slc38a3 | Stunted growth, altered amino acid levels, hypoglycemia, and 20-day life; higher glutamine but reduced glutamate and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) levels in brain; reduced renal ammonium excretion | Snat3 mutant mice; Snat3-deficient mice | |
| Slc39a14 | Impairs hepatic Mn uptake and biliary excretion, resulting in the accumulation of Mn in the circulation and brain | Global Slc39a14 KO mice; hepatocyte-specific Slc39a14 KO mice |
Slc functions were identified in genetically modified animal models. Slc deficiency has the potential to cause direct metabolic disorders or increase the susceptibility to diseases.