Time-dependent physiological regulation of rodent and ovine placental glucose transporter (GLUT-1) protein

Author:

Das Utpala G.1,Sadiq H. Farouk2,Soares Michael J.3,Hay William W.4,Devaskar Sherin U.1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Neonatology and Developmental Biology, Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh, Magee-Womens Research Institute, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213;

2. Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, St. Louis University, Pediatric Research Institute, Cardinal Glennon Children’s Hospital, St. Louis, Missouri 63104;

3. Department of Physiology, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas 66103; and

4. Section of Neonatology and Division of Perinatal Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Denver, Colorado 80262

Abstract

To examine the in vivo and in vitro time-dependent effects of glucose on placental glucose transporter (GLUT-1) protein levels, we employed Western blot analysis using placenta from the short-term streptozotocin-induced diabetic pregnancy (STZ-D), uterine artery ligation-intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) rat models, pregnant sheep exposed to chronic maternal glucose and insulin infusions, and the HRP.1 rat trophoblastic cell line exposed to differing concentrations of glucose. In the rat, 6 days of STZ-D with maternal and fetal hyperglycemia caused no substantive change, whereas 72 h of IUGR with fetal hypoglycemia and ischemic hypoxia resulted in a 50% decline in placental GLUT-1 levels ( P < 0.05). In late-gestation ewes, maternal and fetal hyperglycemia caused an initial threefold increase at 48 h ( P< 0.05), with a persistent decline between 10 to 21 days, whereas maternal and fetal hypoglycemia led to a 30–50% decline in placental GLUT-1 levels ( P < 0.05). Studies in vitro demonstrated no effect of 0 mM, whereas 100 mM glucose caused a 60% decline ( P < 0.05; 48 h) in HRP.1 GLUT-1 levels compared with 5 mM of glucose. The added effect of hypoxia on 0 and 100 mM glucose concentrations appeared to increase GLUT-1 concentrations compared with normoxic cells ( P < 0.05; 100 mM at 18 h). We conclude that abnormal glucose concentrations alter rodent and ovine placental GLUT-1 levels in a time- and concentration-dependent manner; hypoxia may upregulate this effect. The changes in placental GLUT-1 concentrations may contribute toward the process of altered maternoplacentofetal transport of glucose, thereby regulating placental and fetal growth.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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