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Article has an altmetric score of 7

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Posted by 1 X users
Referenced in 3 patents
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Research Article Free access | 10.1172/JCI118308

Human and rat beta cells differ in glucose transporter but not in glucokinase gene expression.

A De Vos, H Heimberg, E Quartier, P Huypens, L Bouwens, D Pipeleers, and F Schuit

Diabetes Research Center, Faculty of Medicine, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium.

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Diabetes Research Center, Faculty of Medicine, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium.

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Diabetes Research Center, Faculty of Medicine, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium.

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Diabetes Research Center, Faculty of Medicine, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium.

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Diabetes Research Center, Faculty of Medicine, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium.

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Diabetes Research Center, Faculty of Medicine, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium.

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Diabetes Research Center, Faculty of Medicine, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium.

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Published November 1, 1995 - More info

Published in Volume 96, Issue 5 on November 1, 1995
J Clin Invest. 1995;96(5):2489–2495. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI118308.
© 1995 The American Society for Clinical Investigation
Published November 1, 1995 - Version history
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Abstract

Glucose homeostasis is controlled by a glucose sensor in pancreatic beta-cells. Studies on rodent beta-cells have suggested a role for GLUT2 and glucokinase in this control function and in mechanisms leading to diabetes. Little direct evidence exists so far to implicate these two proteins in glucose recognition by human beta-cells. The present in vitro study investigates the role of glucose transport and phosphorylation in beta-cell preparations from nondiabetic human pancreata. Human beta-cells differ from rodent beta-cells in glucose transporter gene expression (predominantly GLUT1 instead of GLUT2), explaining their low Km (3 mmol/liter) and low VMAX (3 mmol/min per liter) for 3-O-methyl glucose transport. The 100-fold lower GLUT2 abundance in human versus rat beta-cells is associated with a 10-fold slower uptake of alloxan, explaining their resistance to this rodent diabetogenic agent. Human and rat beta-cells exhibit comparable glucokinase expression with similar flux-generating influence on total glucose utilization. These data underline the importance of glucokinase but not of GLUT2 in the glucose sensor of human beta-cells.

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Posted by 1 X users
Referenced in 3 patents
Referenced in 6 Wikipedia pages
283 readers on Mendeley
1 readers on CiteULike
See more details