Glucose transporter isoform expression was studied in the skeletal muscle-like cell line, C2C12. Northern and Western blot analysis showed that the insulin-responsive muscle/fat glucose transporter isoform, GLUT 4, was expressed in these cells at very low levels, whereas the erythrocyte isoform, GLUT 1, was expressed at readily detectable levels. Insulin did not stimulate glucose transport in this cultured muscle cell line. The C2C12 cells were then transfected separately with either GLUT 1 or GLUT 4, and stable cell lines expressing high levels of mRNA and protein were isolated. GLUT 1-transfected cells exhibited a 3-fold increase in the amount of the GLUT 1 transporter protein which was accompanied by a 2- to 3-fold increase in the glucose uptake rate. However, despite at least a 10-fold increase in GLUT 4 mRNA and protein detected after GLUT 4 cDNA transfection, the glucose uptake of these cells was unchanged and remained insulin-insensitive. By laser confocal immunofluorescence imaging, it was established that the transfected GLUT 4 protein was localized almost entirely in cytoplasmic compartments. In contrast, the GLUT 1 isoform was detected both at the plasma membrane as well as in intracellular compartments. These results suggest that acute insulin stimulation of glucose transport is not solely dependent on the presence of the insulin receptor and the GLUT 4 protein, and that the presence of some additional protein(s) must be required.