GLUT8

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solute carrier family 2, (facilitated glucose transporter) member 8
Identifiers
Symbol SLC2A8
Alt. Symbols GLUTX1, GLUT8
Entrez 29988
HUGO 13812
OMIM 605245
RefSeq NM_014580
Other data
Locus Chr. 9 q33.3

GLUT8 is the eighth member of glucose transporter superfamily.

It is characterized by the presence of a dileucine in its N-terminal intracellular domain, which is involved in its retention in still to characterize intracellular compartments.

[edit] Molecular cloning

GLUT8, originally named GLUTX1, was cloned almost simultaneously by two different groups.[1][2]

Contrary to GLUT4, GLUT8 (previously known as GLUTX1) is not insulin-sensitive. In other words, insulin does not promote GLUT8 translocation to the cell surface in neurons as well as in transfected cell lines.

GLUT8 is expressed mostly in neurons and testis, although expression in most other tissues has also been shown at lower levels.

GLUT8, when expressed in Xenopus oocytes, mediates glucose uptake with high affinity. Other hexoses are not good substrates of the transporter. Whether the transporter actually mediates glucose uptake in vivo in the brain has not been evaluated yet.

Mice devoid of both copies of the SLC2A8 gene are viable and do not show any obvious phenotype.[3]

[edit] Subcellular localization

Where in the cell GLUT8 is localized in not yet clear. Most GLUT8 is not present at the cell surface. Some co-localization with both the endoplasmic reticulum and late endosomes/lysosomes has been published.[4]

When the N-terminal di-leucine motif is mutated into a di-alanine motif, GLUT8 is located mostly at the cell surface in Xenopus oocytes and mammalian cells such as HEK293 cells and differentiated PC12 cells.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Ibberson M, Uldry M, Thorens B (2000). "GLUTX1, a novel mammalian glucose transporter expressed in the central nervous system and insulin-sensitive tissues". J. Biol. Chem. 275 (7): 4607–12. doi:10.1074/jbc.275.7.4607. PMID 10671487. 
  2. ^ Doege H, Schürmann A, Bahrenberg G, Brauers A, Joost HG (2000). "GLUT8, a novel member of the sugar transport facilitator family with glucose transport activity". J. Biol. Chem. 275 (21): 16275–80. doi:10.1074/jbc.275.21.16275. PMID 10821868. 
  3. ^ Membrez M, Hummler E, Beermann F, Haefliger JA, Savioz R, Pedrazzini T, Thorens B (2006). "GLUT8 is dispensable for embryonic development but influences hippocampal neurogenesis and heart function". Mol. Cell. Biol. 26 (11): 4268–76. doi:10.1128/MCB.00081-06. PMID 16705176. 
  4. ^ Widmer M, Uldry M, Thorens B (2005). "GLUT8 subcellular localization and absence of translocation to the plasma membrane in PC12 cells and hippocampal neurons". Endocrinology 146 (11): 4727–36. doi:10.1210/en.2005-0668. PMID 16109784.