Mechanism of glucose transport across the human and rat placental barrier: A review
β Scribed by Takata, Kuniaki; Hirano, Hiroshi
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 551 KB
- Volume
- 38
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1059-910X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Glucose is one of the most important substances transferred from the maternal blood to the fetal circulation in the placenta, and its transport across the cellular membranes is mediated by glucose transporters. Facilitated-diffusion glucose transporter GLUT1 is abundant in the placental barrier, as is the case in other blood-tissue barriers, where GLUT1 is present at the critical plasma membranes of the barrier cells. In the human placenta, the microvillous apical and the basal plasma membranes of the syncytiotrophoblast are rich in GLUT1, which molecule seems to be responsible for the transcellular transport of glucose across the placental barrier. In the rat placental labyrinth, two layers of syncytiotrophoblasts (termed syncytiotrophoblasts I and II from the maternal side) serve as a barrier. GLUT1 is abundant at the plasma membrane of syncytiotrophoblast I facing the maternal side, and the plasma membrane of syncytiotrophoblast II facing the fetal side. Numerous gap junctions, made of connexin 26, connect syncytiotrophoblasts I and II, comprising a channel for the transfer of glucose between them. GLUT1 in combination with the gap junction, therefore, seems to serve as the structural basis for the transport of glucose across the rat placental barrier.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
To characterize pentazocine (PTZ) transport across the blood-brain barrier (BBB), the cerebrovascular permeability-surface area product (PS(inf)) of PTZ was determined by a well-established in situ rat brain perfusion technique. The uptake kinetics of PTZ by the rat brain exhibited saturability, whi
A brain to blood carrier-mediated transport system observation that many of the central effects observed with for arginine vasopressin (AVP) was investigated in the intraventricular administration of AVP can also be mice after intraventricular injection of iodinated AVP achieved by injection of subs
## Abstract Evidence is presented demonstrating that in the dogfish, __Squalus acanthias__, Dβglucose is transported from the blood to the ocular fluid compartments by a mechanism that is consistent with carrierβfacilitated transport. Across the dogfish aqueous barrier Dβglucose is transported 8.4