Literature DB >> 9462754

GLUT-1 deficiency syndrome caused by haploinsufficiency of the blood-brain barrier hexose carrier.

G Seidner1, M G Alvarez, J I Yeh, K R O'Driscoll, J Klepper, T S Stump, D Wang, N B Spinner, M J Birnbaum, D C De Vivo.   

Abstract

The high metabolic requirements of the mammalian central nervous system require specialized structures for the facilitated transport of nutrients across the blood-brain barrier. Stereospecific high-capacity carriers, including those that recognize glucose, are key components of this barrier, which also protects the brain against noxious substances. Facilitated glucose transport in vertebrates is catalyzed by a family of carriers consisting of at least five functional isoforms with distinct tissue distributions, subcellular localizations and transport kinetics. Several of these transporters are expressed in the mammalian brain. GLUT-1, whose sequence was originally deduced from cDNAs cloned from human hepatoma and rat brain, is present at high levels in primate erythrocytes and brain endothelial cells. GLUT1 has been cloned and positionally mapped to the short arm of chromosome 1 (1p35-p31.3; refs 6-8). Despite substantial metabolic requirements of the central nervous system, no genetic disease caused by dysfunctional blood-brain barrier transport has been identified. Several years ago, we described two patients with infantile seizures, delayed development and acquired microcephaly who have normal circulating blood glucose, low-to-normal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) lactate, but persistent hypoglycorrachia (low CSF glucose) and diminished transport of hexose into isolated red blood cells (RBC). These symptoms suggested the existence of a defect in glucose transport across the blood brain barrier. We now report two distinct classes of mutations as the molecular basis for the functional defect of glucose transport: hemizygosity of GLUT1 and nonsense mutations resulting in truncation of the GLUT-1 protein.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9462754     DOI: 10.1038/ng0298-188

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Genet        ISSN: 1061-4036            Impact factor:   38.330


  84 in total

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2.  SLC2A2 mutations can cause neonatal diabetes, suggesting GLUT2 may have a role in human insulin secretion.

Authors:  F H Sansbury; S E Flanagan; J A L Houghton; F L Shuixian Shen; A M S Al-Senani; A M Habeb; M Abdullah; A Kariminejad; S Ellard; A T Hattersley
Journal:  Diabetologia       Date:  2012-06-02       Impact factor: 10.122

3.  Defective glucose transport across brain tissue barriers: a newly recognized neurological syndrome.

Authors:  J Klepper; D Wang; J Fischbarg; J C Vera; I T Jarjour; K R O'Driscoll; D C De Vivo
Journal:  Neurochem Res       Date:  1999-04       Impact factor: 3.996

Review 4.  "Electro-clinical syndromes" with onset in paediatric age: the highlights of the clinical-EEG, genetic and therapeutic advances.

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5.  Genetic testing in epilepsy: what should you be doing?

Authors:  Ingrid E Scheffer
Journal:  Epilepsy Curr       Date:  2011-07       Impact factor: 7.500

6.  Paroxysmal ocular movements - an early sign in Glut1 deficiency Syndrome.

Authors:  Sofia Reis; Joana Matias; Raquel Machado; José Paulo Monteiro
Journal:  Metab Brain Dis       Date:  2018-05-05       Impact factor: 3.584

7.  Dysfunction of the Cerebral Glucose Transporter SLC45A1 in Individuals with Intellectual Disability and Epilepsy.

Authors:  Myriam Srour; Noriaki Shimokawa; Fadi F Hamdan; Christina Nassif; Chantal Poulin; Lihadh Al Gazali; Jill A Rosenfeld; Noriyuki Koibuchi; Guy A Rouleau; Aisha Al Shamsi; Jacques L Michaud
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2017-04-20       Impact factor: 11.025

8.  Adolescents with clinical type 1 diabetes display reduced red blood cell glucose transporter isoform 1 (GLUT1).

Authors:  Meena Garg; Manikkavasagar Thamotharan; Dorothy J Becker; Sherin U Devaskar
Journal:  Pediatr Diabetes       Date:  2014-02-19       Impact factor: 4.866

9.  GLUT1 mutations are a cause of paroxysmal exertion-induced dyskinesias and induce hemolytic anemia by a cation leak.

Authors:  Yvonne G Weber; Alexander Storch; Thomas V Wuttke; Knut Brockmann; Judith Kempfle; Snezana Maljevic; Lucia Margari; Christoph Kamm; Susanne A Schneider; Stephan M Huber; Arnulf Pekrun; Robert Roebling; Guiscard Seebohm; Saisudha Koka; Camelia Lang; Eduard Kraft; Dragica Blazevic; Alberto Salvo-Vargas; Michael Fauler; Felix M Mottaghy; Alexander Münchau; Mark J Edwards; Anna Presicci; Francesco Margari; Thomas Gasser; Florian Lang; Kailash P Bhatia; Frank Lehmann-Horn; Holger Lerche
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2008-06       Impact factor: 14.808

10.  Structural signatures and membrane helix 4 in GLUT1: inferences from human blood-brain glucose transport mutants.

Authors:  Juan M Pascual; Dong Wang; Ru Yang; Lei Shi; Hong Yang; Darryl C De Vivo
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2008-04-03       Impact factor: 5.157

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