Nicotinamide is not a substrate of the facilitative hexose transporter GLUT1.

Reyes AM, Bustamante F, Rivas CI, Ortega M, Donnet C, Rossi JP, Fischbarg J, Vera JC.

Abstract

It has been proposed that GLUT1, a membrane protein that transports hexoses and the oxidized form of vitamin C, dehydroascorbic acid, is also a transporter of nicotinamide (Sofue, M., Yoshimura, Y., Nishida, M., and Kawada, J. (1992) Biochem. J. 288, 669-674). To ascertain this, we studied the transport of 2-deoxy-D-glucose, 3-O-methyl-D-glucose, and nicotinamide in human erythrocytes and right-side-out and inside-out erythrocyte membrane vesicles. The transport of nicotinamide was saturable, with a K(M) for influx and efflux of 6.1 and 6.2 mM, respectively. We found that transport of the hexoses was not competed by nicotinamide in both the erythrocytes and the erythrocyte vesicles. Likewise, the transport of nicotinamide was not affected by hexoses or by inhibitors of glucose transport such as cytochalasin B, genistein, and myricetin. On the other hand, nicotinamide blocked the binding of cytochalasin B to human erythrocyte membranes but did so in a noncompetitive manner. Using GLUT1-transfected CHO cells, we demonstrated that increased expression of GLUT1 was paralleled by a corresponding increase in hexose transport but that there were no changes in nicotinamide transport. Moreover, nicotinamide failed to affect the transport of hexoses in both control and GLUT1-transfected CHO cells. Therefore, our results indicates that GLUT1 does not transport nicotinamide, and we propose instead the existence of other systems for the translocation of nicotinamide across cell membranes.

Más información

Título de la Revista: BIOCHEMISTRY
Volumen: 41
Número: 25
Editorial: AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Fecha de publicación: 2001
Página de inicio: 8075
Página final: 8081
Idioma: English
DOI:

DOI: 10.1021/bi0256328

Notas: ISI