Hexokinase II partial knockout impairs exercise-stimulated glucose uptake in oxidative muscles of mice

Author:

Fueger Patrick T.,Heikkinen Sami,Bracy Deanna P.,Malabanan Carlo M.,Pencek R. Richard,Laakso Markku,Wasserman David H.

Abstract

Muscle glucose uptake (MGU) is distributively controlled by three serial steps: delivery of glucose to the muscle membrane, transport across the muscle membrane, and intracellular phosphorylation to glucose 6-phosphate by hexokinase (HK). During states of high glucose fluxes such as moderate exercise, the HK activity is of increased importance, since augmented muscle perfusion increases glucose delivery, and increased GLUT4 at the cell membrane increases glucose transport. Because HK II overexpression augments exercise-stimulated MGU, it was hypothesized that a reduction in HK II activity would impair exercise-stimulated MGU and that the magnitude of this impairment would be greatest in tissues with the largest glucose requirement. To this end, mice with a HK II partial knockout ( HK+/) were compared with their wild-type control (WT) littermates during either sedentary or moderate exercise periods. Rg, an index of glucose metabolism, was measured using 2-deoxy-[3H]glucose. No differences in glucose metabolism were detected between sedentary groups. The increase in Rgdue to exercise was impaired in the highly oxidative heart and soleus muscles of HK+/compared with WT mice (7 ± 10 vs. 29 ± 9 and 8 ± 3 vs. 25 ± 7 μmol · 100 g–1· min–1, respectively). However, the increase in Rgdue to exercise was not altered in gastrocnemius and superficial vastus lateralis muscles in HK+/and WT mice (8 ± 2 vs. 12 ± 3 and 5 ± 2 vs. 8 ± 2 μmol · 100 g–1· min–1, respectively). In conclusion, MGU is impaired by reductions in HK activity during exercise, a physiological condition characterized by high glucose flux. This impairment is critically dependent on the tissue's glucose metabolic rate and correlates with tissue oxidative capacity.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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