Hyperglycemia and underlying insulin resistance are associated with an increase in cytokines and counter-regulatory hormones, which in turn lead to insulin resistance (7). GLUT4 is an insulin-sensitive transporter that uptakes blood glucose into muscles and adipose tissue, but its relationship with the critical conditions is unknown. This study aimed to investigate serum GLUT4 levels in critically ill children and to examine the potential relationship between serum GLUT4 levels and illness severity. The results strongly suggest the GLUT4 serum levels might be significantly increased in critically ill children compared with healthy children, particularly those in septic shock. Serum GLUT4 could predict disease severity in critically ill children.
The molecular weight of the GLUT4 protein is about 55 kDa (25), and we detected a 55-kDa serum protein by western blot using two different GLUT4 monoclonal antibodies from two companies, suggesting that GLUT4 can be released into the serum. Generally, GLUT4 remains within the cells, but as glucose levels rise, the subsequent increase in circulating insulin activates intracellular signaling cascades that result in the translocation of the GLUT4 storage compartments to the plasma membrane (14–19). When circulating insulin levels decline, GLUT4 transporters are removed from the plasma membrane by endocytosis and are recycled back to their intracellular storage compartments (16–19). Unfortunately, the complexity of these regulatory processes provides numerous potential targets that might be defective and eventually result in peripheral tissue insulin resistance and possibly, diabetes. Whether serum GLUT4 is like ferritin, which is a cytosolic protein in most tissues but functions as an iron carrier in the serum where small amounts are secreted, remains unclear. Indeed, plasma ferritin is not only an indirect marker of the total amount of iron stored in the body (26) but also an inflammatory acute-phase protein (27) because of increased levels in response to stresses such as anoxia (28). To the best of our knowledge, the presence of the GLUT4 protein in the serum has not been described in the literature, and the mechanisms leading to GLUT4 secretion in the serum are unknown.
The present study showed that GLUT4 serum levels were significantly elevated in critically ill patients compared with healthy children, especially those in septic shock, and with SIRS and/or hyperglycemia with high HOMA-IR. Those results suggest a possible association between elevated serum GLUT4 levels and blood glucose and insulin resistance. Furthermore, we observed a discrepancy in glucose levels at different serum GLUT4 levels and found that the low (median < 53 µg/L) level group had lower glucose levels than the moderate or high-level group, suggesting that there might be an association between glucose and GLUT4 levels at a certain range. Analysis of the correlation between GLUT4 serum levels and glucose levels in different groups of the study population showed similar findings, possibly indicating that hyperglycemia in critically ill children with insulin resistance is associated with elevated serum levels of GLUT4. Nevertheless, whether a definite association exists between them is unclear, and the results require validation through further studies.
Indeed, unlike in tissues or cells, in which GLUT4 mRNA and protein levels (29) are reduced during sepsis (10, 13), the serum GLUT4 protein levels were increased in this study. Previous findings suggest that the GLUT4 protein has a short half-life in the range of 8–10 h (30). The underlying mechanism of maintaining the levels of intracellular GLUT4, membrane GLUT4, and serum GLUT4 remains unclear. A hypothesis could be that when serum GLUT4 increases, intracellular plasma, and plasma membrane GLUT4 levels are reduced, resulting in decreased glucose transport and hyperglycemia with insulin resistance. This hypothesis needs to be investigated in the future.
The present study demonstrated that the GLUT4 serum levels in the subgroups were consistent with TNF-α and IL-6 levels, but no significant correlations were observed. As serum GLUT4 levels are elevated in critical illness, serum GLUT4 could be a component of the systemic inflammatory response. Accordingly, GLUT4 serum levels might possibly be related to inflammatory responsive mediators (TNF-α and IL-6) since severe stress in critically ill children with or without infection leads to an alteration in cellular membrane permeability, possibly resulting in small amounts of GLUT4 being released from the cytoplasm (14, 15) or plasma membrane (16–18) into the serum, just like ferritin (26), aspartate transaminase, and alanine transaminase (31). Nevertheless, two healthy children had elevated serum GLUT4 levels. The reason for this is unknown. GLUT4 is involved in normal glucose metabolism, and those children might have an undiagnosed ort asymptomatic condition associated with glucose metabolism.
Higher GLUT4 serum levels were found in sepsis and patients who died from sepsis. In this study, the ROC curve for the value of GLUT4 for the diagnosis of sepsis showed 74.6% sensitivity and 80% specificity, with an area under the curve of 0.70. This warrants exploration and validation in larger populations.
In this study, serum GLUT4 concentrations had a positive linear correlation with the neutrophil counts and with the CK levels in all critical patients. As the GLUT4 protein is expressed most abundantly in the adipose tissue and cardiac and skeletal muscle, many researchers are investigating the effect of GLUT4 expression on the plasma membrane of peripheral blood cells in vivo and in vitro (32–34). As such, peripheral blood lymphocytes might become an interesting model system to study the effects of insulin on cellular glucose transport using a flow cytometer. The quantification of GLUT4 expression on the surface of peripheral blood lymphocytes might be a potentially useful method for the early detection of individuals at a high risk of diabetes (35, 36). GLUT4 levels in peripheral blood mononuclear cells have been investigated using indirect immunofluorescence in sled dogs (37), and inflammatory monocyte populations in humans (38–40), which could be used as a method to estimate the influence of insulin on GLUT protein translocation and the dynamics of glucose uptake. GLUT4 was also detected in granulocytes and could be used to assess the immune response in diabetes (41) or the response of the plasma membrane to insulin during infection (33, 42). In addition, GLUT4 levels were studied during perinatal and postnatal erythropoiesis, and is up-regulated under anemic conditions (43).
We also observed a positive correlation between serum GLUT4 and CK concentrations. Clinically, CK is assayed in blood tests as a marker of damage to CK-rich tissue (44), as in myocardial infarction and rhabdomyolysis. In this study, CK levels were high in patients with septic shock patients or SIRS and could be a biomarker of the severity of disease (45). CK levels are observed in metabolic dysfunction associated with influenza H1N1 infection (46). Since high CK levels were consistent with the high levels of serum GLUT4, we suggest that both probably have a similar mechanism of release into the serum, and can act as clinical indicators or biomarkers predicting the severity of the disease. This will have to be examined in future studies.
This study has limitations. The sample size was small, and no formal validation of the value of GLUT4 for critical illness could be performed. In addition, the panel of biomarkers was limited, probably masking important associations and correlations.