4.6 Article

The Insulin-Like Growth Factor I Receptor Regulates Glucose Transport by Astrocytes

Journal

GLIA
Volume 64, Issue 11, Pages 1962-1971

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/glia.23035

Keywords

astrocytes; insulin like growth factor I receptor; glucose metabolism; glucose transporter 1

Categories

Funding

  1. Fellowship from ColFuturo
  2. MINECO
  3. CIBERNED [SAF2013-40710-R]

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Previous findings indicate that reducing brain insulin-like growth factor I receptor (IGF-IR) activity promotes ample neuroprotection. We now examined a possible action of IGF-IR on brain glucose transport to explain its wide protective activity, as energy availability is crucial for healthy tissue function. Using (18)FGlucose PET we found that shRNA interference of IGF-IR in mouse somatosensory cortex significantly increased glucose uptake upon sensory stimulation. In vivo microscopy using astrocyte specific staining showed that after IGF-IR shRNA injection in somatosensory cortex, astrocytes displayed greater increases in glucose uptake as compared to astrocytes in the scramble-injected side. Further, mice with the IGF-IR knock down in astrocytes showed increased glucose uptake in somatosensory cortex upon sensory stimulation. Analysis of underlying mechanisms indicated that IGF-IR interacts with glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1), the main facilitative glucose transporter in astrocytes, through a mechanism involving interactions with the scaffolding protein GIPC and the multicargo transporter LRP1 to retain GLUT1 inside the cell. These findings identify IGF-IR as a key modulator of brain glucose metabolism through its inhibitory action on astrocytic GLUT1 activity.

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