Direct inhibition of the hexose transporter GLUT1 by tyrosine kinase inhibitors Journal Article


Authors: Vera, J. C.; Reyes, A. M.; Velasquez, F. V.; Rivas, C. I.; Zhang, R. H.; Ströbel, P.; Slebe, J. C.; Núñez-Alarcón, J.; Golde, D. W.
Article Title: Direct inhibition of the hexose transporter GLUT1 by tyrosine kinase inhibitors
Abstract: The facilitative hexose transporter GLUT1 is a multifunctional protein that transports hexoses and dehydroascorbic acid, the oxidized form of vitamin C, and interacts with several molecules structurally unrelated to the transported substrates. Here we analyzed in detail the interaction of GLUT1 with a group of tyrosine kinase inhibitors that include natural products of the family of flavones and isoflavones and synthetic compounds such as the tyrphostins. These compounds inhibited, in a dose-dependent manner, the transport of hexoses and dehydroascorbic acid in human myeloid HL-60 cells, in transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells overexpressing GLUT1, and in normal human erythrocytes, and blocked the glucose-displaceable binding of cytochalasin B to GLUT1 in erythrocyte ghosts. Kinetic analysis of transport data indicated that only tyrosine kinase inhibitors with specificity for ATP binding sites inhibited the transport activity of GLUT1 in a competitive manner. In contrast, those inhibitors that are competitive with tyrosine but not with ATP failed to inhibit hexose uptake or did so in a noncompetitive manner. These results, together with recent evidence demonstrating that GLUT1 is a nucleotide binding protein, support the concept that the inhibitory effect on transport is related to the direct interaction of the inhibitors with GLUT1. We conclude that predicted nucleotide-binding motifs present in GLUT1 are important for the interaction of the tyrosine kinase inhibitors with the transporter and may participate directly in the binding transport of substrates by GLUT1.
Keywords: human cell; animals; protein binding; tyrosine; protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor; isoflavones; quercetin; enzyme inhibitors; substrate specificity; flavonoids; phenols; protein-tyrosine kinases; molecular interaction; adenosine triphosphate; enzyme substrate complex; glucose transporter type 1; cinnamates; cho cells; cricetinae; cricetulus griseus; transport kinetics; tyrphostins; binding, competitive; genistein; hl-60 cells; hexoses; isoflavone; monosaccharide transport proteins; humans; human; priority journal; article; flavone derivative; tyrphostin; hexose transport; salicylic acids
Journal Title: Biochemistry
Volume: 40
Issue: 3
ISSN: 0006-2960
Publisher: American Chemical Society  
Date Published: 2001-01-23
Start Page: 777
End Page: 790
Language: English
DOI: 10.1021/bi001660j
PUBMED: 11170395
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 21 May 2015 -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Juan C Vera
    64 Vera
  2. Coralia I Rivas
    16 Rivas
  3. David Golde
    127 Golde
  4. Rong Hua Zhang
    18 Zhang