Insights into the mechanism of human erythrocyte hexose transport : a transferred NOE study of glucose binding to GLUT1

This study examines binding of α- and β-D-glucose in their equilibrium mixture to the glucose transporter (GLUT1) in human erythrocyte membrane preparations by an ^1H NMR method, the transferred NOE (TRNOE). This method is shown theoretically and experimentally to be a sensitive probe of weak ligand...

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Main Author: Ross, Scott Alan
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 1994
Online Access:https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/7722/1/Ross%201994.pdf
Ross, Scott Alan (1994) Insights into the mechanism of human erythrocyte hexose transport : a transferred NOE study of glucose binding to GLUT1. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/nb45-1b79. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05172013-114618257 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05172013-114618257>
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spelling ndltd-CALTECH-oai-thesis.library.caltech.edu-77222021-04-17T05:02:04Z https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/7722/ Insights into the mechanism of human erythrocyte hexose transport : a transferred NOE study of glucose binding to GLUT1 Ross, Scott Alan This study examines binding of α- and β-D-glucose in their equilibrium mixture to the glucose transporter (GLUT1) in human erythrocyte membrane preparations by an ^1H NMR method, the transferred NOE (TRNOE). This method is shown theoretically and experimentally to be a sensitive probe of weak ligand-macromolecule interactions. The TRNOEs observed are shown to arise solely from glucose binding to GLUT1. Sites at both membrane faces contribute to the TRNOEs. Binding curves obtained are consistent with a homogeneous class of sugar sites, with an apparent K<sub>D</sub> which varies (from ~30 mM to ~70 mM for both anomers) depending on the membrane preparation examined. Preparations with a higher proportion of the cytoplasmic membrane face exposed to bulk solution yield higher apparent KK<sub>D</sub>s. The glucose transport inhibitor cytochalasin B essentially eliminates the TRNOE. Nonlinearity was found in the dependence on sugar concentration of the apparent inhibition constant for cytochalasin B reversal of the TRNOE observed in the α anomer (and probably the β anomer); such nonlinearity implies the existence of ternary complexes of sugar, inhibitor and transporter. The inhibition results furthermore imply the presence of a class of relatively high-affinity (K<sub>D</sub> &lt; 2mM) sugar sites specific for the α anomer which do not contribute to NMR-observable binding. The presence of two classes of sugar-sensitive cytochalasin B sites is also indicated. These results are compared with predictions of the alternating conformer model of glucose transport. Variation of apparent K<sub>D</sub> in the NMR-observable sites, the formation of ternary complexes and the presence of an anomer-specific site are shown to be inconsistent with this model. An alternate model is developed which reconciles these results with the known transport behavior of GLUT1. In this model, the transporter possesses (at minimum) three classes of sugar sites: (i) transport sites, which are alternately exposed to the cytoplasmic or the extracellular compartment, but never to both simultaneously, (ii) a class of sites (probably relatively low-affinity) which are confined to one compartment, and (iii) the high-affinity α anomer-specific sites, which are confined to the cytoplasmic compartment. 1994 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en other https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/7722/1/Ross%201994.pdf Ross, Scott Alan (1994) Insights into the mechanism of human erythrocyte hexose transport : a transferred NOE study of glucose binding to GLUT1. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/nb45-1b79. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05172013-114618257 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05172013-114618257> https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05172013-114618257 CaltechTHESIS:05172013-114618257 10.7907/nb45-1b79
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description This study examines binding of α- and β-D-glucose in their equilibrium mixture to the glucose transporter (GLUT1) in human erythrocyte membrane preparations by an ^1H NMR method, the transferred NOE (TRNOE). This method is shown theoretically and experimentally to be a sensitive probe of weak ligand-macromolecule interactions. The TRNOEs observed are shown to arise solely from glucose binding to GLUT1. Sites at both membrane faces contribute to the TRNOEs. Binding curves obtained are consistent with a homogeneous class of sugar sites, with an apparent K<sub>D</sub> which varies (from ~30 mM to ~70 mM for both anomers) depending on the membrane preparation examined. Preparations with a higher proportion of the cytoplasmic membrane face exposed to bulk solution yield higher apparent KK<sub>D</sub>s. The glucose transport inhibitor cytochalasin B essentially eliminates the TRNOE. Nonlinearity was found in the dependence on sugar concentration of the apparent inhibition constant for cytochalasin B reversal of the TRNOE observed in the α anomer (and probably the β anomer); such nonlinearity implies the existence of ternary complexes of sugar, inhibitor and transporter. The inhibition results furthermore imply the presence of a class of relatively high-affinity (K<sub>D</sub> &lt; 2mM) sugar sites specific for the α anomer which do not contribute to NMR-observable binding. The presence of two classes of sugar-sensitive cytochalasin B sites is also indicated. These results are compared with predictions of the alternating conformer model of glucose transport. Variation of apparent K<sub>D</sub> in the NMR-observable sites, the formation of ternary complexes and the presence of an anomer-specific site are shown to be inconsistent with this model. An alternate model is developed which reconciles these results with the known transport behavior of GLUT1. In this model, the transporter possesses (at minimum) three classes of sugar sites: (i) transport sites, which are alternately exposed to the cytoplasmic or the extracellular compartment, but never to both simultaneously, (ii) a class of sites (probably relatively low-affinity) which are confined to one compartment, and (iii) the high-affinity α anomer-specific sites, which are confined to the cytoplasmic compartment.
author Ross, Scott Alan
spellingShingle Ross, Scott Alan
Insights into the mechanism of human erythrocyte hexose transport : a transferred NOE study of glucose binding to GLUT1
author_facet Ross, Scott Alan
author_sort Ross, Scott Alan
title Insights into the mechanism of human erythrocyte hexose transport : a transferred NOE study of glucose binding to GLUT1
title_short Insights into the mechanism of human erythrocyte hexose transport : a transferred NOE study of glucose binding to GLUT1
title_full Insights into the mechanism of human erythrocyte hexose transport : a transferred NOE study of glucose binding to GLUT1
title_fullStr Insights into the mechanism of human erythrocyte hexose transport : a transferred NOE study of glucose binding to GLUT1
title_full_unstemmed Insights into the mechanism of human erythrocyte hexose transport : a transferred NOE study of glucose binding to GLUT1
title_sort insights into the mechanism of human erythrocyte hexose transport : a transferred noe study of glucose binding to glut1
publishDate 1994
url https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/7722/1/Ross%201994.pdf
Ross, Scott Alan (1994) Insights into the mechanism of human erythrocyte hexose transport : a transferred NOE study of glucose binding to GLUT1. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/nb45-1b79. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05172013-114618257 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05172013-114618257>
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