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Title: Transport of glucose analogues in rat lung. Author: Kerr JS, Fisher AB, Kleinzeller A. Journal: Am J Physiol; 1981 Sep; 241(3):E191-5. PubMed ID: 7282921. Abstract: Uptake of nonmetabolizable glucose analogues was investigated in isolated rat lungs ventilated with 5% CO2 in air and perfused with Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate medium. In some experiments, [5-3H]glucose, methyl(alpha-D-[U-14C]gluco)pyranoside (alpha-MG), 3-O-methyl-D-[U-14C]glucose (3-O-MG), or various inhibitors were added to the initial perfusate to determine glucose utilization by the rate of 3H2O production or to characterize the uptake of glucose analogues. [1,2-3H]polyethylene glycol (PEG) was used as an indicator of the extracellular water space and gave a mean value of 0.35 ml/g tissue; calculated mean intracellular H2O space was 0.48 ml/g tissue. Glucose utilization was 56.4 +/- 6.6 (mean +/- SE, n = 6) mumol . g dry wt-1 . h-1 and decreased by 61% with 3 mM phlorizin. After 1-2 h perfusion, intracellular alpha-MG concentration was 1.4-1.9 times the extracellular concentration. The mean tissue-to-medium ratio (T/M) for alpha-MG decreased by more than 30% in the presence of glucose (5.0 mM), phlorizin (0.5 mM), ouabain (0.5 mM), or the absence of external Na+. Intracellular 3-O-MG concentration did not exceed extracellular concentration during 2 h of perfusion and the mean T/M did not change with any of the inhibitors studied. The results indicate that the nonmetabolizable glucose analogue alpha-MG is accumulated against a concentration gradient by an active Na+-dependent transport process, whereas 3-O-MG is apparently taken up by a different mechanism.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]