A comprehensive view of muscle glucose uptake: regulation by insulin, contractile activity, and exercise
- PMID: 40173020
- DOI: 10.1152/physrev.00033.2024
A comprehensive view of muscle glucose uptake: regulation by insulin, contractile activity, and exercise
Abstract
Skeletal muscle is the main site of glucose deposition in the body during meals and the major glucose utilizer during physical activity. Although in both instances the supply of glucose from the circulation to the muscle is of paramount importance, in most conditions the rate-limiting step in glucose uptake, storage, and utilization is the transport of glucose across the muscle cell membrane. This step is dependent upon the translocation of the insulin- and contraction-responsive glucose transporter GLUT4 from intracellular storage sites to the sarcolemma and T tubules. Here, we first analyze how glucose can traverse the capillary wall into the muscle interstitial space. We then review the molecular processes that regulate GLUT4 translocation in response to insulin and muscle contractions and the methodologies utilized to unravel them. We further discuss how physical activity and inactivity, respectively, lead to increased and decreased insulin action in muscle and touch upon sex differences in glucose metabolism. Although many key processes regulating glucose uptake in muscle are known, the advent of newer and bioinformatics tools has revealed further molecular signaling processes reaching a staggering level of complexity. Much of this molecular mapping has emerged from cellular and animal studies and more recently from application of a variety of -omics in human tissues. In the future, it will be imperative to validate the translatability of results drawn from experimental systems to human physiology.
Keywords: GLUT4; glucose metabolism; glucose transport; insulin sensitization; transendothelial transport.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
