Insulin-stimulated translocation of GLUT4 glucose transporters requires SNARE-complex proteins

  1. Bentley Cheatham*,,
  2. Allen Volchuk,
  3. C. Ronald Kahn*,
  4. Lois Wang*,
  5. Christopher J. Rhodes*, and
  6. Amira Klip
  1. *Research Division, Joslin Diabetes Center and the Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02215; and the Division of Cell Biology, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON Canada M5G 1X8

Abstract

A major physiological role of insulin is the regulation of glucose uptake into skeletal and cardiac muscle and adipose tissue, mediated by an insulin-stimulated translocation of GLUT4 glucose transporters from an intracellular vesicular pool to the plasma membrane. This process is similar to the regulated docking and fusion of vesicles in neuroendocrine cells, a process that involves SNARE-complex proteins. Recently, several SNARE proteins were found in adipocytes: vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP-2), its related homologue cellubrevin, and syntaxin-4. In this report we show that treatment of permeabilized 3T3-L1 adipocytes with botulinum neurotoxin D, which selectively cleaves VAMP-2 and cellubrevin, inhibited the ability of insulin to stimulate translocation of GLUT4 vesicles to the plasma membrane. Furthermore, treatment of the permeabilized adipocytes with glutathione S-transferase fusion proteins encoding soluble forms of VAMP-2 or syntaxin-4 also effectively blocked insulin-regulated GLUT4 translocation. These results provide evidence of a functional role for SNARE-complex proteins in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake and suggest that adipocytes utilize a mechanism of regulating vesicle docking and fusion analogous to that found in neuroendocrine tissues.

Footnotes

  • To whom reprint requests should be addressed at: Joslin Diabetes Center, One Joslin Place, Boston, MA 02215. e-mail: cheathab{at}joslab.harvard.edu.

  • Harvey F. Lodish, Whitehead Institute, Cambridge, MA

  • Abbreviations: VAMP-2, vesicle-associated membrane protein; SCAMPs, secretory carrier-associated membrane proteins; BoNT, Clostridial botulinum neurotoxin; SLO, streptolysin O; GST, glutathione S-transferase; LDM, low density microsomal; PMSF, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride.

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