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1 Pennsylvania State University
2 LSU Health Sciences Center
3 NHLBI/NIH
4 Washington University School of Medicine
5 Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine
6 Weill Cornell Medical College
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: ixs10{at}psu.edu.
Glucose metabolism is vital to most mammalian cells and the passage of glucose across cell membranes is facilitated by a family of integral membrane transporter proteins, the GLUTs. There are currently 14 members of the SLC2 family of GLUTs, several of which have been the focus of this series of reviews. The subject of the present review is GLUT3 which, as implied by its name, was the third glucose transporter to be cloned (Kayano et al. 1988) and was originally designated as the neuronal glucose transporter. The overriding question that drove the early work on GLUT3 was why would neurons need a separate glucose transporter isoform? What is it about GLUT3 that specifically suits the needs of the highly metabolic and oxidative neuron with its high glucose demand? More recently, GLUT3 has been studied in other cell types with quite specific requirements for glucose, including sperm, preimplantation embryos, circulating white blood cells, and an array of carcinoma cell lines. The latter are sufficiently varied and numerous to warrant a review of their own and will not be discussed here. However, for each of these cases, the same questions apply. Thus the objective of this review is to discuss the properties and tissue and cellular localization of GLUT3 as well as the features of expression, function, and regulation that distinguish it from the rest of its family, and make it uniquely suited as the mediator of glucose delivery to these specific cells.
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