• Cell · Dec 2005

    Dietary and genetic control of glucose transporter 2 glycosylation promotes insulin secretion in suppressing diabetes.

    • Kazuaki Ohtsubo, Shinji Takamatsu, Mari T Minowa, Aruto Yoshida, Makoto Takeuchi, and Jamey D Marth.
    • Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, 9500 Gilman Drive, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA.
    • Cell. 2005 Dec 29; 123 (7): 1307-21.

    AbstractPancreatic beta cell-surface expression of glucose transporter 2 (Glut-2) is essential for glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, thereby controlling blood glucose homeostasis in response to dietary intake. We show that the murine GlcNAcT-IVa glycosyltransferase is required for Glut-2 residency on the beta cell surface by constructing a cell-type- and glycoprotein-specific N-glycan ligand for pancreatic lectin receptors. Loss of GlcNAcT-IVa, or the addition of glycan-ligand mimetics, attenuates Glut-2 cell-surface half-life, provoking endocytosis with redistribution into endosomes and lysosomes. The ensuing impairment of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion leads to metabolic dysfunction diagnostic of type 2 diabetes. Remarkably, the induction of diabetes by chronic ingestion of a high-fat diet is associated with reduced GlcNAcT-IV expression and attenuated Glut-2 glycosylation coincident with Glut-2 endocytosis. We infer that beta cell glucose-transporter glycosylation mediates a link between diet and insulin production that typically suppresses the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes.

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