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- Title
Transport, metabolism, and endosomal trafficking-dependent regulation of intestinal fructose absorption.
- Authors
Patel, Chirag; Douard, Veronique; Shiyan Yu; Nan Gao; Ferraris, Ronaldo P.
- Abstract
Dietary fructose that is linked to metabolic abnormalities can up-regulate its own absorption, but the underlying regulatory mechanisms are not known. We hypothesized that glucose transporter (GLUT) protein, member 5 (GLUT5) is the primary fructose transporter and that fructose absorption via GLUT5, metabolismvia ketohexokinase (KHK), as well as GLUT5 trafficking to the apical membrane viathe Ras-related protein-in-brain 11 (Rab11)a-dependent endosomes are each required for regulation. Introducing fructose but not lysine and glucose solutions into the lumen increased by 2- to 10-fold the heterogeneous nuclear RNA, mRNA, protein, and activity levels of GLUT5 in adult wild-type mice consuming chow. Levels of GLUT5 were >100-fold that of candidate apical fructose transporters GLUTs 7, 8, and 12 whose expression, and that of GLUT 2 and the sodium-dependent glucose transporter protein 1 (SGLT1), was not regulated by luminal fructose. GLUT5-knockout (KO) mice exhibited no facilitative fructose transport and no compensatory increases in activity and expression of SGLT1 and other GLUTs. Fructose could not up-regulate GLUT5 in GLUT5-KO, KHK-KO, and intestinal epithelial cell-specific Rab11a-KO mice. The fructose-specific metabolite glyceraldehyde did not increase GLUT5 expression. GLUT5 is the primary transporter responsible for facilitative absorption of fructose, and its regulation specifically requires fructose uptake and metabolism and normal GLUT5 trafficking to the apical membrane.
- Subjects
GLUCOSE transporters; RAP1 proteins; SUGAR; METABOLISM; FRUCTOSE
- Publication
FASEB Journal, 2015, Vol 29, Issue 9, p4046
- ISSN
0892-6638
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1096/fj.15-272195