Effects of chronic Akt activation on glucose uptake in the heart.
Journal
  American journal of physiology. Endocrinology and metabolism.
Citation
  Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 290(5):E789-97
Publication date
  2006 May
Authors
  Matsui T
Nagoshi T
Hong EG
Luptak I
Hartil K
Li L
Gorovits N
Charron MJ
Kim JK
Tian R
Rosenzweig A
Investigators
  Jason K. Kim
Grant agencies
  National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
Grants
  NIDDK DK-47425
NHLBI HL-04250
NHLBI HL-58119
NHLBI HL-59246
NHLBI HL-59521
NHLBI HL-61557
NHLBI HL-67970
NIDDK U24 DK-59635
MeSH headings
  Glucose
Myocardium
Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt
MeSH qualifiers
  pharmacokinetics
metabolism
Abstract
  Acute activation of the serine-threonine kinase Akt is cardioprotective and increases glucose uptake, at least in part, through enhanced expression of GLUT4 on the sarcolemma. The effects of chronic Akt activation on glucose uptake in the heart remain unclear. To address this issue, we examined the effects of chronic Akt activation on glucose uptake, glycogen storage, and relevant glucose transporters in the hearts of transgenic mice. We found that chronic cardiac activation of Akt led to a substantial increase in the rate of basal glucose uptake (P < 0.05) but blunted the response to insulin (1.9 vs. 18.1-fold increase compared with baseline) using NMR in ex vivo perfused heart. Basal glucose uptake was also increased in Akt transgenic mice in vivo (P < 0.005). These changes were associated with an increase on glycogen deposition, examined with histochemical staining, biochemical (>6-fold, P < 0.001) and in vivo radioactive (5-fold, P < 0.01) assays. Studies in chimeric hearts of female X-linked transgenic Akt mice suggested that increased glycogen deposition occurred as a cell autonomous effect of transgene expression. Interestingly, although sarcolemmal GLUT1 was not significantly altered, chronic Akt activation actually decreased plasma membrane GLUT4. Moreover, intracellular pools of GLUT1 were modestly reduced, whereas intracellular GLUT4 was substantially reduced. It seems likely that neither GLUT1 nor GLUT4 explains the increase in basal glucose uptake but that these reductions contribute to the loss of insulin responsiveness that we observed. These data demonstrate that chronic Akt activation increases basal glucose uptake and glycogen deposition while inhibiting the response to insulin.