| Literature DB >> 34093108 |
Natalia Kyrtata1,2, Hedley C A Emsley3,4, Oli Sparasci1,5, Laura M Parkes1,6, Ben R Dickie1,6.
Abstract
Introduction: Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by cerebral glucose hypometabolism. Hypometabolism may be partly due to reduced glucose transport at the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and across astrocytic and neuronal cell membranes. Glucose transporters (GLUTs) are integral membrane proteins responsible for moving glucose from the bloodstream to parenchymal cells where it is metabolized, and evidence indicates vascular and non-vascular GLUTs are altered in AD brains, a process which could starve the brain of glucose and accelerate cognitive decline. Here we review the literature on glucose transport alterations in AD from human and rodent studies.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; GLUT 1; GLUT 3; blood-brain barrier; glucose transporters
Year: 2021 PMID: 34093108 PMCID: PMC8173065 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2021.626636
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
GLUTs expressed in the central nervous system.
| GLUT1 ( | Kumari and Heese, | No | Endothelial cells (55 kDa isoforms), astrocytes (45 kDa isoforms) |
| GLUT2 ( | Kumari and Heese, | No | Astrocytes |
| GLUT3 ( | Kumari and Heese, | No | Endothelial cells, astrocytes, hippocampal neurons |
| GLUT4 ( | Leloup et al., | Yes | Hypothalamic neurons, hippocampal neurons, cerebellar neurons, sensorimotor cortex, pituitary |
| GLUT8 ( | Kumari and Heese, | Yes | Hypothalamic neurons, hippocampal neurons |
| GLUT12 ( | Zhang et al., | Yes | Cortical astrocytes |
Figure 1A schematic diagram representing the expression of glucose transporters within CNS cells. Red: GLUT1 55 kDa isoform, pink: GLUT1 45 kDa isoform. GLUT1 (Kumari and Heese, 2010), GLUT2 (Kumari and Heese, 2010), GLUT3 (Kumari and Heese, 2010), GLUT4 (Leloup et al., 1996; Vannucci et al., 1998; Reagan, 2002; Kumari and Heese, 2010), GLUT8 (Kumari and Heese, 2010), GLUT12 (Zhang et al., 2014) (details extracted from https://www.brainrnaseq.org on 19/04/2021).
A summary of results from human post-mortem and tracer studies.
| Kalaria and Harik, | Immunohistochemistry study of brain tissue obtained from the frontal and temporal neocortex, hippocampus, putamen, cerebellum, and cerebral microvessels in AD subjects and controls to determine levels of hexose transporter (likely GLUT1, although not specified). | Significant reduction in hexose expression (likely GLUT1) transporter in brain microvessels, cerebral neocortex and hippocampus of AD brain. |
| Kawai et al., | Immunohistochemistry study of the relationship between Aβ plaques, capillary density (collagen-4), and glucose transporters (GLUT1). | Collagen-4 and GLUT1 expression was reduced within Aβ plaques and increased in the immediate surroundings of Aβ plaques relative to gray matter. |
| Harik and Kalaria, | Immunohistochemistry study of GLUT1 in cerebral microvessels of subjects with AD and age matched controls using irreversible binding to the ligand [3H] cytochalasin B. | GLUT1 expression was decreased by ~50% in cerebral microvessels of patients with AD compared to age-matched controls. |
| Harik, | Immunohistochemistry study of GLUT1 in AD brain tissue and controls. | Reduction in the expression of GLUT1 in the cerebral microvessels in AD brain compared to age-matched controls, with no change in the density of GLUT1 in the erythrocyte membranes. |
| Horwood and Davies, | Immunohistochemistry study of AD brain tissue obtained from the central part of the hippocampal formations (dentate gyrus, cornu ammonis, and subicular complex) to determine levels of microvascular GLUT1. | GLUT1 expression was significantly reduced in the microvessel endothelium in hippocampi of AD subjects compared to controls. |
| Simpson et al., | Immunoblotting study of brain tissue obtained from AD subjects and controls. | Reduced glucose metabolism in the temporal and parietal regions of AD subjects. Reduced expression of GLUT1 and GLUT3 in the cerebral cortex of AD brains compared to controls, with greater and more significant reductions in GLUT3. |
| Harr et al., | Immunohistochemistry study of brain tissue obtained from the dentate gyrus of AD subjects' to determine levels of GLUT3. | Significant reduction (49.5%) in GLUT3 expression in the outer portion of the molecular layer of the dentate gyrus in AD brains. |
| Mooradian et al., | Western-blot study of GLUT1 in brain tissue from AD subjects and controls. | GLUT1 expression was reduced in AD but GLUT1 mRNA concentrations were not significantly different. |
| Liu et al., | Western-blots and immune-dot-blot study of GLUT1-4 levels in the frontal cortex of frozen human brain tissue in subjects with AD and controls. | Decreased expression of GLUT1 and GLUT3 in AD brain tissue which correlated to hyperphosphorylation of tau and neurofibrillary tangle density. Downregulation of hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1) in AD brain. |
| Liu et al., | Western-blots and immune-dot-blot study of brain tissue obtained by autopsy from AD patients, subjects who had T2DM and subjects who had both AD and T2DM. | GLUT1 expression was significantly lower in AD brains. |
| Wang et al., | A case-control study was performed in a Chinese population of 597 patients with AD and 605 healthy controls examining the role of | The rs10845990 polymorphism within the gene coding for GLUT14 was significantly associated with late onset AD in non-ApoEε4 allele carriers ( |
| Pujol-Gimenez et al., | Western blot study of brain tissue obtained from the frontal cortex of AD subjects and age-matched controls measuring the expression of GLUT12. | GLUT12 expression was significantly increased in AD compared to age-matched controls. |
| Burke et al., | Immunohistochemistry study of GLUT1 in patients with AD, vascular dementia and patients who had suffered from stroke. The cumulative vessel length and diameter of hippocampal microvessels was measured using stereological spherical probe software. | Increases in percentage per area were found in GLUT1 density in AD cases in the: |
| Post-stroke demented cases had significantly lower vascular length than AD ( | ||
| Mullins et al., | Immunohistochemistry study into the relationship between brain insulin resistance and glucose transporter expression and the propensity to develop plaques and NFT. | Regional expression of GLUT1 showed a negative correlation with NFT density. |
| An et al., | LC-MS/MS study to measure GLUT1 and GLUT3 levels in brain tissue obtained from the middle frontal gyrus of 14 participants with AD, 14 controls, and 15 with asymptomatic AD (ASYMAD). | GLUT3 levels were lower in both AD and ASYMAD groups compared to controls, before and after adjusting sex, age at death and neuronal nuclear protein levels. Lower levels of GLUT3 correlated with the severity of both Aβ and NFT pathology. |
| Hase et al., | Immunohistochemistry study of endothelial GLUT1. Microvascular pathology, capillary width and densities were measured using histopathological methods in the frontal lobe white matter across several dementia types including 18 participants with AD. | Collapsed string microvessels along with loss of GLUT1 immunoreactivity was detected in AD frontal lobe white matter compared to overlying cortex. |
| Friedland et al., | Dynamic FDG-PET study in patients with probable Alzheimer's disease (AD) and healthy age-matched controls. | There was no significant difference in rate constants for glucose transport ( |
| Jagust et al., | Dynamic FDG-PET study in six subjects with clinical criteria for probable AD and normal controls. | Decrease in |
| Kimura and Naganawa, | Dynamic FDG-PET study in three subjects; a 45-year-old normal subject, a 65-year-old subject with mild AD, and a 70-year-old subject with severe AD. | Glucose transport was globally reduced in both AD cases compared to the normal subject. Glucose phosphorylation was diminished in gray matter of the severe case of AD, excluding the sensory, motor, and visual cortices. In the mild case, phosphorylation was reduced in the right parieto-temporal area. |
| Piert et al., | Dynamic FDG-PET study in AD subjects and normal controls. | Significant reductions in glucose transport ( |
| Mosconi et al., | Dynamic FDG-PET study with arterial blood sampling in 7 AD patients and 6 age matched controls and CMRglc was calculated. | AD patients showed significant CMRglc reductions in the hippocampus and posterior cingulate cortex. |
| Gejl et al., | FDG-PET study as part of a randomized control trial using 6 month treatment of GLP-1 analog or placebo in AD subjects, measuring blood-brain glucose transfer capacity ( | CMRglc estimates were positively correlated with cognition while |
A summary of results from rodent post-mortem and tracer studies.
| Ding et al., | Longitudinal immunohistochemical and imaging study investigating hippocampal GLUT1, GLUT3, and GLUT4, glucose transport into the brain in female 3xTgAD mice (aged between 3 and 15 months). | Both 3xTgAD and wild-types underwent significant age-related reductions in glucose transport as detected using FDG-microPET, beginning at 6-9 months of age, but mechanisms were different. Reductions in GLUT1 (55 kDa isoform), increases in GLUT1 (45 kDa) and reductions in GLUT3 were observed in 3xTgAD mice, and non-monotonic changes in GLUT1 (55 kDa), decreases in GLUT3, and increases in membrane GLUT4 were observed in wild-types. |
| Do et al., | Immunohistochemistry study investigating hippocampal GLUT1 expression in 3xTgAD mice aged between 3 and 18 months and APP/PS1 mice aged 8 months. Vascular volume fraction and uptake of D-glucose were measured using radionuclide-based brain perfusion tracers. | GLUT1 expression and D-glucose uptake were reduced in 18 month old 3xTgAD mice, but no differences were found in glucose transport or GLUT1 in either strain at 8 months. Reduced vascular volume fractions were observed at 6 months in 3xTg mice and in 8 month old APP/PS1 mice. |
| Griffith et al., | Longitudinal analysis of 3xTg mice studied at ages 1–3, 6–8, and 16–18 months. Glucose tolerance was assessed alongside Western blot analysis of hippocampal insulin pathways PI3K/AKT and MAPK/ERK, and glucose transporters GLUT3 and GLUT4. GLUT1 was not studied. | Glucose tolerance and plasma insulin levels were found to be reduced as early as 1 month, well before detection of plaques (14 months). GLUT3 reductions but not GLUT4 were observed later at 18–20 months. |
| Hooijmans et al., | Immunohistochemistry study into the causal relationship between GLUT1 reductions in the hippocampus and cortex and Aβ. Computer-assisted analysis of capillary density, and Aβ in young (8 months) and old (18 months) APP/PS1 mice. GLUT1 expression was normalized to capillary density to correct for potential loss of vascular volume. | At 8 months, GLUT1, capillary density or GLUT1 amount per capillary density were not different between APP/PS1 and wild-types. At 18 months, GLUT1 was reduced in the hippocampus of 18 month APP/PS1 mice relative to wild-types, while capillary density was not significantly different. The ratio of GLUT1 amount per capillary density was decreased in the dendate gyrus only. Aging produced significant reductions in GLUT1 and capillary density, but the ratio of GLUT1 amount per density was unchanged with age. No cortical changes were observed. |
| Kouznetsova et al., | Immunohistochemistry study of Tg2576 mice aged 4–18 months to stain cortical GLUT1 and Aβ plaques and to assess impact of size and load of Aβ plaques on GLUT1 expression. | GLUT1 was reduced in cortical regions with high plaque load was associated with greater reductions compared to areas with low plaque load. Around large plaques, the capillary density was lower than around diffuse smaller plaques. |
| Kuznetsova and Schliebs, | Immunohistochemistry study investigating GLUT1 and Aβ in somatosensory cortex of Tg2576 mice aged between 4 and 18 months. | No changes in GLUT1 at 10 months, when plaque deposition is beginning, but reductions found in 18 month mice when plaque load is considerable indicating Aβ may contribute to reductions in GLUT1. |
| Gil-Iturbe et al., | Western blot study investigating GLUT1, GLUT3, GLUT4, and GLUT12 in the frontal cortex of two amyloidogenic mouse models Tg2576 (16 months old) and APP/PS1 (16 months old). Age effects assessed in C57/6/SJL wild-type mice aged 2–3 and 18 months old. To assess effects of Aβ directly, Aβ1–42 was injected intra-cerebroventricularly in 3 month old C47BL/6J mice. | Tg2576 and APP/PS1 mice exhibited decreased GLUT1 and GLUT3 and increased GLUT12. No changes were found in GLUT4. No age-dependent effects were found in GLUT1 and GLUT3 in C57/6/SJL mice. In Aβ1–42 injected mice, the same patterns in up- and downregulation of GLUTs were observed indicating a direct link between GLUTs and amyloid toxicity. |
| Merlini et al., | Immunohistochemistry study into the morphology, biochemistry and functionality of cortical and hippocampal blood vessels in arcAβ mice at 6, 9–12, and 16–22 months. GLUT1 and GLUT3 measured by immunoblot, corrected for vascular volume using CD31. Brain glucose levels dynamically measured following i.v. administration of glucose using microdialysis. | Reductions in BBB and astrocytic GLUT1, but not GLUT3, reduced from mid-stage pathology onwards. Glucose uptake as measured using microdialysis confirmed reduced glucose transport. IgG extravasation observed at late-stages. |
| Ahn et al., | Immunohistochemistry study investigating GLUT1 and tight junction protein ZO-1 expression in 4.5 and 9 month old 5xFAD mice. | Reductions in GLUT1 and ZO-1 observed in the hippocampus and cortex at both ages, which got worse with age and correlated with worsening of astrocyte activation (GFAP) and amyloid deposition. |
| Shang et al., | Immunohistochemistry study assessing the impact of chronic cerebral hypo-perfusion (CCH) and AD pathology on cortical GLUT1 expression in 12 month old APP23 mice. | GLUT1 was reduced in cortex of APP23 mice compared to wild-types, which was further reduced in APP23 mice subject to CCH, indicating that AD and cerebrovascular pathologies may interact to exacerbate GLUT1 changes. |
| Lee et al., | Western blot study of whole-brain expression of GLUT1, GLUT3, and GLUT4 and insulin markers in 12 month old NSE/hPS2m mice. | Reductions in GLUT1 and GLUT3, but not GLUT4 observed. Blood glucose found to be higher in AD mice. |
| Chua et al., | Longitudinal western blot study of GLUT3 and GLUT4 AβPPsw/PS1ΔE9 mice | Reduced brain glucose and insulin content in 12 and 15 month old brains accompanied by increased GLUT3 and GLUT4, which preceded significant upregulation of Aβ42 in brain. GLUT1 not measured. |
| Deng et al., | Western blotting study of insulin signaling and glucose transporters in intracerebroventricular streptozotocin (STZ) rat model of AD (6 months old, 21 days after STZ injections). | Reduced GLUT1 and GLUT3 in the cerebrum, and reduced GLUT3 in the cerebellum. Reduced pERK1 and pPI3K, pGSK-3β(S9) markers, and increased phosphorylation of tau. |
| Salkovic-Petrisic et al., | Study investigating effect of long-term galactose administration on brain metabolism and glucose transporters via Western blot in intra-cerebroventricular streptozotocin (STZ) rat model of AD. Adult rats were used, and galactose administered for 1 month. | STZ rat exhibited significantly reduced GLUT3 expression in the hippocampus, which was normalized with galactose administration. |
| Knezovic et al., | Western blot study investigating expression of GLUT2, insulin receptor, and neuroinflammatory marker GFAP in the hippocampus and cortex in intra-cerebroventricular streptozotocin (STZ) rat model of AD (adult males). Measurements were taken 1 h after STZ administration. | GLUT2 increased in the hippocampus, but unchanged in cortical regions. Insulin receptor decreased in parietal and temporal cortex, but not the hippocampus. |
| Biswas et al., | Western blot and immunohistochemistry study investigating the expression of cortical and hippocampal GLUT1 and GLUT3, and brain glucose levels in intra-cerebroventricular streptozotocin (STZ) rat model of AD (adult males), and correlation with markers of endoplasmic reticulum stress, and astrocyte/microglia activation (Cd11b). | Glucose transporters GLUT1 and GLUT3 and brain glucose concentration were reduced in STZ rats. These changes were accompanied by reduced mitochondrial activity, increased endoplasmic reticulum stress, and increased microglial activation. |
Figure 2PRISMA diagram.