Literature DB >> 6367491

Red blood cell as glucose carrier: significance for placental and cerebral glucose transfer.

J A Jacquez.   

Abstract

At plasma glucose values of 5 mM (90 mg/100 ml) the maximum glucose transport capacity of the human red cell membrane is 12,000 times the rate of glucose utilization by the red blood cell. Mammals, other than primates, that have been tested have a comparable high-capacity system during fetal life, which is lost soon after birth. It has been suggested that the availability of the water space of the red blood cell for distribution of glucose facilitates transfer across the placenta during fetal life in all mammals and across the blood-brain barrier in adult primates. Though plausible, more comparative studies of glucose transport in red blood cells of other species and direct experimental evaluations of the contribution of the red blood cell to glucose transfer across the placenta and the blood-brain barrier are needed.

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Year:  1984        PMID: 6367491     DOI: 10.1152/ajpregu.1984.246.3.R289

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol        ISSN: 0002-9513


  15 in total

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8.  Blood-brain barrier glucose transporter is asymmetrically distributed on brain capillary endothelial lumenal and ablumenal membranes: an electron microscopic immunogold study.

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9.  Real and artefactual erythrocyte swelling in hyperglycaemia.

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10.  Anomeric preference of glucose utilization in rat erythrocytes.

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