1. Academic Validation
  2. Effect of dietary fructose on portal and systemic serum fructose levels in rats and in KHK-/- and GLUT5-/- mice

Effect of dietary fructose on portal and systemic serum fructose levels in rats and in KHK-/- and GLUT5-/- mice

  • Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol. 2015 Nov 1;309(9):G779-90. doi: 10.1152/ajpgi.00188.2015.
Chirag Patel 1 Keiichiro Sugimoto 2 Veronique Douard 1 Ami Shah 1 Hiroshi Inui 3 Toshikazu Yamanouchi 4 Ronaldo P Ferraris 5
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, New Jersey Medical School, Rutgers University, Newark, New Jersey;
  • 2 Research and Development Center, Nagaoka Perfumery Co., Ltd., Ibaraki, Osaka, Japan; Center for Research and Development of Bioresources, Osaka Prefecture University, Sakai, Osaka, Japan;
  • 3 Center for Research and Development of Bioresources, Osaka Prefecture University, Sakai, Osaka, Japan; Department of Clinical Nutrition, College of Health and Human Sciences, Osaka Prefecture University, Habikino, Osaka, Japan; and.
  • 4 Department of Internal Medicine, Teikyo University, Tokyo, Japan.
  • 5 Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, New Jersey Medical School, Rutgers University, Newark, New Jersey; [email protected].
Abstract

Elevated blood fructose concentrations constitute the basis for organ dysfunction in fructose-induced metabolic syndrome. We hypothesized that diet-induced changes in blood fructose concentrations are regulated by ketohexokinase (KHK) and the fructose transporter GLUT5. Portal and systemic fructose concentrations determined by HPLC in wild-type mice fed for 7 days 0% free fructose were <0.07 mM, were independent of time after feeding, were similar to those of GLUT5(-/-), and did not lead to hyperglycemia. Postprandial fructose levels, however, increased markedly in those fed isocaloric 20% fructose, causing significant hyperglycemia. Deletion of KHK prevented fructose-induced hyperglycemia, but caused dramatic hyperfructosemia (>1 mM) with reversed portal to systemic gradients. Systemic fructose in wild-type and KHK(-/-) mice changed by 0.34 and 1.8 mM, respectively, for every millimolar increase in portal fructose concentration. Systemic glucose varied strongly with systemic, but not portal, fructose levels in wild-type, and was independent of systemic and portal fructose in KHK(-/-), mice. With ad libitum feeding for 12 wk, fructose-induced hyperglycemia in wild-type, but not hyperfructosemia in KHK(-/-) mice, increased HbA1c concentrations. Increasing dietary fructose to 40% intensified the hyperfructosemia of KHK(-/-) and the fructose-induced hyperglycemia of wild-type mice. Fructose perfusion or feeding in rats also caused duration- and dose-dependent hyperfructosemia and hyperglycemia. Significant levels of blood fructose are maintained independent of dietary fructose, KHK, and GLUT5, probably by endogenous synthesis of fructose. KHK prevents hyperfructosemia and fructose-induced hyperglycemia that would markedly increase HbA1c levels. These findings explain the hyperfructosemia of human hereditary fructosuria as well as the hyperglycemia of fructose-induced metabolic syndrome.

Keywords

diabetes; fructosuria; glucose transporter 5; ketohexokinase; metabolic syndrome.

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