Regulation of insulin binding and stimulation of sugar transport in cultured human fibroblasts by sugar levels in the culture medium |
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Authors: | Ralph J. Germinario Shiro Ozaki Norman Kalant |
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Affiliation: | Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research, Sir Mortimer B. Davis—Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, Quebec HST 1E2, Canada |
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Abstract: | Studies were carried out on cultures of human skin fibroblasts to explore the effects of culture medium glucose levels on insulin binding and action. Cell cultures in 5.55 mm glucose-containing medium depleted their medium glucose within 3 days, and at that time exhibited elevated deoxy-d-glucose (2-DG) transport (84% greater than control cultures fed 22.2 mm glucose) and failure of insulin to stimulate 2-DG transport (an insulin:control transport ratio of 1.02). There was also a significant negative correlation between basal 2-DG transport and insulin binding (r = ?0.621; n = 29; P < 0.01), while insulin binding exhibited a significant positive correlation with insulin action (r = 0.816; n = 12; P < 0.01). Glucose starvation of cultures for 18 h resulted in several changes: (i) a 49% decrease in specific 125I-insulin binding due to a reduction in binding capacity; (ii) elevated basal 2-DG transport; and (iii) an absence of insulin stimulation of 2-DG transport. Exposure to increasing concentrations of glucose for 18 h led to a glucose concentration-dependent increase in specific insulin binding. Additionally, the various changes in the glucose-starved group were reversed after as little as 6 h of glucose refeeding. The results indicate that basal sugar transport, and insulin binding and action can be regulated by the amount of glucose in the medium. |
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Keywords: | To whom correspondence should be addressed. |
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