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Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 262: E721-E727, 1992;
0193-1849/92 $5.00
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AJP - Endocrinology and Metabolism, Vol 262, Issue 5 E721-E727, Copyright © 1992 by American Physiological Society


ARTICLES

A substantial part of GLUT-1 in crude membranes from muscle originates from perineurial sheaths

A. Handberg, L. Kayser, P. E. Hoyer and J. Vinten
Institute of Medical Physiology B, Panum Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

The distribution of GLUT-1 and GLUT-4 in cryosections of rat skeletal muscles was investigated immunocytochemically. Intense labeling of GLUT-1 was found in the perineurial sheaths of intramuscular nerves, whereas only a very faint signal was associated with the sarcolemma, and labeling of extraneural vessels was not detectable. The majority of the GLUT-4 reactivity was located at the periphery of muscle cells in nonuniform patches, and GLUT-4 was absent in vessels and nerves. In sections of femoral nerve GLUT-1 was confined to the perineurial sheath and endoneurial vessels. The contribution of GLUT-1 from intramuscular perineurial sheaths to total GLUT-1 in a muscle was determined from immunoblots of crude membranes isolated from mixtures of homogenates of excised nerves and muscles. The recovery of GLUT-1 increased linearly with the amount of nerve added, and it was calculated that GLUT-1 from intramuscular perineurial sheaths accounted for approximately 60% of the GLUT-1 content in a membrane fraction from soleus muscle or red gastrocnemius. The remaining 40% of GLUT-1 is likely to originate from the sarcolemma.


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