نتایج جستجو برای: glut2

تعداد نتایج: 632  

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Endocrinology and metabolism 2009
Armelle Leturque Edith Brot-Laroche Maude Le Gall

Cloned 20 years ago, GLUT2 is a facilitative glucose transporter in the liver, pancreas, intestine, kidney, and brain. It ensures large bidirectional fluxes of glucose in and out the cell due to its low affinity and high capacity. It also transports other dietary sugars, such as fructose and galactose, within the range of physiological concentrations. Sugars and hormones regulate its gene expre...

Journal: :The Journal of clinical investigation 2005
Nell Marty Michel Dallaporta Marc Foretz Martine Emery David Tarussio Isabelle Bady Christophe Binnert Friedrich Beermann Bernard Thorens

Ripglut1;glut2-/- mice have no endogenous glucose transporter type 2 (glut2) gene expression but rescue glucose-regulated insulin secretion. Control of glucagon plasma levels is, however, abnormal, with fed hyperglucagonemia and insensitivity to physiological hypo- or hyperglycemia, indicating that GLUT2-dependent sensors control glucagon secretion. Here, we evaluated whether these sensors were...

Journal: :Diabetes 2000
R Burcelin W Dolci B Thorens

In the preceding article, we demonstrated that activation of the hepatoportal glucose sensor led to a paradoxical development of hypoglycemia that was associated with increased glucose utilization by a subset of tissues. In this study, we tested whether GLUT2 plays a role in the portal glucose-sensing system that is similar to its involvement in pancreatic beta-cells. Awake RIPGLUT1 x GLUT2-/- ...

2015
Rubén Marín-Juez Mireia Rovira Diego Crespo Michiel van der Vaart Herman P Spaink Josep V Planas

Glucose transporter 2 (GLUT2; gene name SLC2A2) has a key role in the regulation of glucose dynamics in organs central to metabolism. Although GLUT2 has been studied in the context of its participation in peripheral and central glucose sensing, its role in the brain is not well understood. To decipher the role of GLUT2 in brain development, we knocked down slc2a2 (glut2), the functional ortholo...

Journal: :The Biochemical journal 1996
F Rencurel G Waeber B Antoine F Rocchiccioli P Maulard J Girard A Leturque

Previous studies have shown that glucose increases the glucose transporter (GLUT2) mRNA expression in the liver in vivo and in vitro. Here we report an analysis of the effects of glucose metabolism on GLUT2 gene expression. GLUT2 mRNA accumulation by glucose was not due to stabilization of its transcript but rather was a direct effect on gene transcription. A proximal fragment of the 5' regulat...

Journal: :The Biochemical journal 1997
F Rencurel G Waeber C Bonny B Antoine P Maulard J Girard A Leturque

Glucose homoeostasis necessitates the presence in the liver of the high Km glucose transporter GLUT2. In hepatocytes, we and others have demonstrated that glucose stimulates GLUT2 gene expression in vivo and in vitro. This effect is transcriptionally regulated and requires glucose metabolism within the hepatocytes. In this report, we further characterized the cis-elements of the murine GLUT2 pr...

Journal: :The Biochemical journal 1992
N J Jordan G D Holman

The bis-D-mannose photolabel ATB-BMPA (2-N-[4-(1-azi-2,2,2- trifluoroethyl)benzoyl]-1,3-bis-(D-mannos-4-yloxy) propyl-2-amine) has been used to radiolabel the glucose transporter present in liver plasma membranes. The labelling was inhibited by 4,6-O-ethylidene-D-glucose. Approx. 7% of the liver plasma-membrane protein that was photolabelled in a 4,6-O-ethylidene-D-glucose-inhibitable manner wa...

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Endocrinology and metabolism 2010
Emilie Stolarczyk Christophe Guissard Aurélien Michau Patrick C Even Alexandra Grosfeld Patricia Serradas Anne Lorsignol Luc Pénicaud Edith Brot-Laroche Armelle Leturque Maude Le Gall

The sugar transporter GLUT2, present in several tissues of the gut-brain axis, has been reported to be involved in the control of food intake. GLUT2 is a sugar transporter sustaining energy production in the cell, but it can also function as a receptor for extracellular glucose. A glucose-signaling pathway is indeed triggered, independently of glucose metabolism, through its large cytoplasmic l...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2001
F Stümpel R Burcelin K Jungermann B Thorens

Glucose is absorbed through the intestine by a transepithelial transport system initiated at the apical membrane by the cotransporter SGLT-1; intracellular glucose is then assumed to diffuse across the basolateral membrane through GLUT2. Here, we evaluated the impact of GLUT2 gene inactivation on this transepithelial transport process. We report that the kinetics of transepithelial glucose tran...

2012
Hermann Koepsell Valentin Gorboulev

The elegant paper from Koepsell and colleagues (1) demonstrates the apical GLUT2 mechanism, but appears at first sight to question its significance. However, when set in a physiological context, the results are those expected from the three roles of SGLT1 and the differences between fed rat and starved mouse. SGLT1 acts as 1) a transporter and 2) a powerful scavenger. In 2000, my laboratory pro...

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