Abstract
The glucose transport activity of rat fat cells was assayed in a cell-free system. The activity was solubilized and incorporated into egg-lecithin liposomes. The carrier-mediated glucose transport activity was estimated by subtracting the cytochalasin B-insensitive component from the total glucose uptake activity of the modified liposomes. When a crude microsomal preparation from fat cells was fractionated by sucrose density gradient centrifugation, 2 transport activities (peaks A and B) were separated. Peak A coincided with the peak of 5''-nucleotidase, a marker of the plasma membrane. Peak B appeared to coincide with the peak of UDPGal:N-acetylglucosamine galactosyltransferase, a marker of the Golgi apparatus. Peak A was considerably smaller than peak B under basal conditions. When cells were exposed to 1 nM insulin for 5 min before homogenization, the height of peak A increased whereas that of peak B decreased. Insulin had no significant effect on the galactosyltransferase activity. The Km values of glucose transport facilitated by the activities in peaks A and B were both .apprx. 10-15 mM. Insulin evidently facilitates translocation of the transport activity from an intracellular storage site to the plasma membrane.