Introduction
The glucokinase (GK) enzyme, also known as hexokinase (HK) IV (or D), is one of the four glucose-phosphorylating isoenzymes described initially in the vertebrate liver, characterised by a low affinity for glucose, sigmoidal kinetics and lack of inhibition by glucose-6-phosphate. The others, being called HK I (or A), II (or B) and III (or C), are more widely distributed and do not meet the characteristics cited above( Reference Cárdenas, Cornish-Bowden and Ureta 1 , Reference Wilson 2 ). This enzyme has been the object of numerous studies mainly because of its role in hepatic metabolism, but also in glucose homeostasis, given its involvement in metabolism-dependent insulin secretion. In the latter case, research has been focused on the role of GK in type 2 diabetes mellitus. Very good reviews about the biochemical and molecular regulation of GK can be found in the literature and the reader is encouraged to consult those of Printz et al. ( Reference Printz, Magnuson and Granner 3 ), Iynedjian( Reference Iynedjian 4 ), Cárdenas( Reference Cárdenas 5 ) and Matschinsky( Reference Matschinsky 6 , Reference Matschinsky 7 ).
Most of the reviews published so far have dealt with the role and regulation of GK in the rodent model applied to human pathophysiological issues( Reference Matschinsky 7 ). In the present review we will not concentrate on the pharmacological or molecular regulation of the mammalian GK, as this topic has been approached on numerous occasions (see above). Rather, we will focus our attention on the nutritional regulation of the enzyme. In this sense, comparative studies of glucose-phosphorylating activity in the liver have shown that in regular conditions (standard diet) the number of isoenzymes may vary as a function of the species and that GK appears to be absent in several of them( Reference Cárdenas, Matschinsky and Magnuson 8 ) (see Fig. 1). Moreover, other questions remain unresolved, including a different nutritional regulation of hepatic and pancreatic GK (due to different promoters) and the possibility that in some animal species GK has not been detected due to the lack of nutritional induction or evolutionary reasons (such as loss of the gene or conversion to a pseudogene). Beyond the well-known rodent model for the study of GK, in the present review we explore the knowledge accumulated concerning the nutritional regulation of GK in other animal species with different nutritional habits and then alternative mechanisms of glucose regulation.
Thus, our objective is twofold: on one hand, to offer a glance over the knowledge about GK in other vertebrate groups, such as fish and birds, but also in rarely explored mammalian species, such as cats and dogs. On the other hand, we aim to make a comparative analysis of the nutritional regulation of GK between the classical mammalian models and the other groups in which GK is differentially regulated based on different evolutionary pressures and nutritional habits. Finally, several outputs will be discussed from a perspective point of view, including: (i) other nutritional roles for GK (other than those related to hepatic glucose metabolism and insulin secretion); (ii) implications in human nutrition from data obtained in genome-wide association studies; and (iii) impact on the context of deleterious diets (rich in fat or carbohydrates) for some species and not for others.
Glucokinase in mammals
Among vertebrates, the mammals are without discussion the best-represented group concerning the study of GK. Actually, the enzyme was discovered in rats, which became very quickly the best model for studying human GK: 37 % of the papers published on GK are focused on the rat GK, while 42 % are studies in human subjects, a number importantly boosted by pharmacological and mutation studies. After mice (16 %), the rest of mammalian species (all of them below 2 %) seem not to have attracted the attention of scientists (see Fig. 2). This may be due to the fact that GK activity has been found in twenty-two mammalian species, twelve of them rodents (see Table 1). In contrast, at the protein level a similar number of species express GK, but most of them are primates (Fig. 3). In this sense, the biggest cluster includes the primates and rodents, while the rest of the species are classified in more or less diverse groups. It is worth mentioning that nutritional habits do not seem to have an impact on this classification.
* When possible, activities were expressed in both U/g liver and mU/mg protein. When available, different extraction procedures were included.
† Renamed Lithobates catesbeianus.
GK in mammals has been mainly studied in rodent species, such as the rat (Rattus norvegicus) and the mouse (Mus musculus), and, when possible, in human biopsy samples. More recently, some research teams have been also put some attention to the regulation of GK in other species of interest, such as domestic cats and dogs, although the level of knowledge remains quite limited.
Glucokinase function and regulation in mammals
The GK enzyme is a glucose-phosphorylating enzyme initially discovered in rat liver in the early 1960s. The rapid characterisation of its biochemical properties led to the idea that GK was actually the key regulator enzyme of hepatic glucose metabolism. As a matter of fact, GK does not work as any other HK found in eukaryotic cells, given that it is not inhibited by the product of the reaction that it catalyses (glucose-6-phosphate), has a low affinity for glucose (S0.5 about 7·5 mm) and a characteristic sigmoidal kinetics (Hill coefficient about 1·6). Thanks to these characteristics, GK is able to cope and handle the postprandial glucose increase observed after a meal. Given its importance in the postprandial regulation of glucose metabolism, it is not surprising that GK is tightly regulated by insulin.
Very soon GK was also reported to be present in laboratory animals( Reference Matschinsky and Ellerman 9 ) and human pancreatic tissue( Reference Bedoya, Wilson and Ghosh 10 ), and then its role in glucose homeostasis as a glucosensor was proposed( Reference Matschinsky 11 ). This was further supported by the fact that GK is encoded by a single gene, but controlled by two specific promoters: one hepatic and one pancreatic( Reference Magnuson 12 , Reference Magnuson and Shelton 13 ). More recently, the GK network has been largely enriched as GK has been found in several other cellular types, including neurons (glucose excited and glucose inhibited), enteroendocrine cells (K and L)( Reference Jetton, Liang and Pettepher 14 ), α-cells( Reference Heimberg, De Vos and Moens 15 ) and pituitary gonadotropes( Reference Zelent, Golson and Koeberlein 16 ).
The presence of GK in rodent pancreatic tissue was discovered more than 20 years ago( Reference Iynedjian, Pilot and Nouspikel 17 ), and given that the activity of pancreatic GK is glucose dependent, this enzyme is today inseparable from the glucose sensor concept( Reference Matschinsky, Liang and Kesavan 18 , Reference Matschinsky 19 ). The GK glucose sensor paradigm is integrated with the threshold concept for glucose-stimulated insulin release, given that GK constitutes the rate-limiting step in the generation of a trigger metabolite of a constellation of metabolic signals initiating the secretory process. Since its discovery, pancreatic GK has been extensively studied, given that more than 150 mutations have been discovered in the pancreatic GK gene that alters this glucosensing capacity. However, while most of the energy of the scientists has been directed to this aspect, very little has been done in the nutritional field, and the behaviour of GK in pancreatic tissue under different real nutritional conditions is still only partially known.
GK is known to be tightly regulated at numerous levels, including modifications of conformational status, physical interaction with other proteins, hormonal control and a tissue-dependent molecular expression.
The most rapid regulation of GK takes place at the conformational level given the cooperativity of its kinetics with regard to d-glucose. GK has two conformations, an active and an inactive form with high and low glucose affinity, respectively, which allow optimal substrate sensitivity at the fasting level of blood glucose in humans and many laboratory animals( Reference Cornish-Bowden, Cárdenas, Matschinsky and Magnuson 20 ). The second level of regulation in terms of rapidity would be its interaction with the bifunctional enzyme 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase/fructose-2,6-biphosphatase (6PF2K/F26P2ase)( Reference Baltrusch, Wu, Okar, Matschinsky and Magnuson 21 ) and the GK regulatory protein (GKRP). While in the first case very little is known, more information is available concerning the GKRP regulation of GK. The actual ligands for this protein are fructose-1-phosphate and fructose-6-phosphate, which have antagonist effects on the GK–GKRP binding tandem: while GKRP binds to GK and inhibits the enzyme activity competitively with respect to glucose, fructose-6-phosphate reinforces the inhibitory effect of GKRP and fructose-1-phosphate abolishes binding and subsequent inhibition( Reference van Schaftingen, Veiga-da-Cunha and Niculescu 22 , Reference Vandercammen and van Schaftingen 23 ). Later, other authors showed that this was only a partial description of the regulation mechanism and that the main feature of GKRP was that this protein sequesters GK in the nucleus in the absence of a high concentration of glucose or fructose( Reference Toyoda, Miwa and Kamiya 24 , Reference Brown, Kalinowski and Megill 25 ). In the opposite conditions (i.e. high glucose or fructose concentration), GK is released by GKRP and translocates into the cytoplasm where it exerts its action. Long-term GK control is mainly exerted by hormones and GK expression control. Hormonal stimulation is able to induce (insulin) or repress (glucagon) GK expression, protein and activity. Maybe the major feature of the regulation of GK expression is the dual control of this enzyme by insulin in the liver and by glucose in the pancreatic β-cells, which is based on the existence of a downstream and an upstream promoter within the GK gene – the ‘one gene, two promoters’ concept for control of GK expression( Reference Iynedjian 4 ). Finally, other levels of regulation include the epigenetic hypermethylation of the GK gene (age-related, in a way that increased methylation is negatively associated with hepatic GK expression( Reference Jiang, Fei and Lan 26 )), and GK nitration, that leads to pancreatic( Reference Kim, Song and Lee 27 ) and hepatic inactivation of the enzyme( Reference Li, Li and Lu 28 ).
Nutritional regulation of glucokinase in mammals
Very few studies have focused on the macro- and micronutrient interactions and regulation of this enzyme. Given that the micronutrient effects are only known in some mammalians species( Reference Fernandez-Mejia, German, Matschinsky and Magnuson 29 – Reference Borboni, Magnaterra and Rabini 31 ), in the present review we will focus on the nutritional impact of macronutrients and more in general the nutritional status of the animals on GK regulation.
Despite the lack of human data on GK we do know, thanks to studies developed in rodents, that nutrition plays a key role in GK regulation and that all the macronutrients seem to have an important impact on this enzyme. In rodents, high fat (HF) feeding results in reduced hepatic and pancreatic GK activity and impaired glucose tolerance. In contrast, short-term fructose feeding in human subjects seems to have a beneficial effect on glycaemia control, given that it would be able to release GK from the GKRP binding, allowing increased hepatic glucose uptake( Reference Petersen, Laurent and Yu 32 , Reference Moore, Davis and Mann 33 ). However, longer studies in human subjects do not confirm these results and chronic fructose feeding in animals clearly leads to hepatic steatosis and insulin resistance( Reference Dekker, Su and Baker 34 ). In this sense, it is worth mentioning that the hepatic metabolism of fructose is not completely equivalent to that of glucose. While glucose metabolism is regulated by insulin and controlled by GK and phosphofructokinase (regulated by the level of ATP), fructose conversion to triose phosphate is an insulin-independent process and very fast (given the low Michaelis constant (K m) of the fructokinase enzyme)( Reference Tappy and Lê 35 ). Moreover, this fructose metabolism is not regulated by ATP or citrate levels, leading to a transient depletion of free phosphate and a decrease in ATP in liver cells in response to fructose.
Given the increasing consumption of cafeteria-like diets (very rich in fat) and fructose syrup-based soft drinks in Western countries, the potential impact of fats and fructose feeding on human GK should not be ignored.
Studies on the nutritional regulation of GK in non-rodent animals are much less abundant. The interest in GK could be divided into two groups: on the one hand GK could be important to species of commercial interest such as livestock. However, most of them (ruminants) do not rely of glucose as primary fuel and then the role of GK remains to be elucidated. In single-stomached species (such as pigs, horse, rabbits) GK has been barely approached and then its importance is still unknown. On the other hand, in recent years the presence of GK in domestic species such as cats and dogs has been extensively studied, given that these species (with important protein requirements) are currently fed high-carbohydrate (HC)/HF diets with a low cost when comparing with protein. As a result, an important part of the canine and feline population is obese and diabetic and a possible role of GK in this new animal epidemic has been suggested.
Given the key role of GK on glucose metabolism and homeostasis, we will focus the present review on two groups of mammals depending on their metabolic and nutritional orientation: species relying mainly on glucose as a primary energy fuel (omnivorous and some herbivorous) and those that utilise other sources of nutrients, such as protein or fat (mainly carnivorous).
Carbohydrate-dependent mammalian species
Most of the available information on GK nutritional regulation came from fasting–refeeding cycle experiments, and the role of GK under different feeding regimens and diets is almost unknown. In the next sections of the review we will use as reference the data published on rodent species, stressing the data coming from other species when they do exist.
Glucokinase regulation by nutritional status: focus on fed–fasted–refeeding cycles and postprandial changes – liver
The early studies that focused on GK showed that, in the liver, GK activity is highly affected by nutritional status, being inhibited by a classical 48 h food-deprivation protocol( Reference DiPietro and Weinhouse 36 – Reference Abraham, Borrebaek and Chaikoff 38 ), and practically undetectable after 72 h of fasting( Reference Salas, Vinuela and Sols 39 , Reference Sharma, Manjeshwar and Weinhouse 40 ) (Table 2 and Fig. 4). Given the key role of insulin in controlling GK activity, the reduction in GK activity during fasting has been traditionally related to the very low insulin levels during the food deprivation periods. Interestingly, GK activity in the liver of fasted human subjects (overnight) is quite low (1–3·5 mU/mg)( Reference Stanley, Dohm and McManus 41 ) when compared with 3-d fasted rodents (10 mU/mg), suggesting that the capacity of the human liver to handle dietary glucose is not as high as in rodents. This is in line with the fact that GK is detected in human liver biopsies but only when patients are well nourished, while in poorly nourished individuals the activity is undetectable( Reference Brown, Miller and Holloway 42 ).
CHO, carbohydrate; ND, no data available in the literature; IP, intraperitoneally.
* Data are expressed as fold-induction when compared with a nutritional condition considered as stable for the enzyme activity (value 100) from a nutritional point of view and depending on the species. For the omnivorous species data are compared with the fed status on a regular diet (14, 37 and 60 % of carbohydrates for carp, chicken and rat, respectively). For the carnivorous species, the diet used as reference was in general high in protein (57, 55 and 90 % of protein for trout, owl and dog, respectively). Other comparisons are explained in the table. No data have been found concerning herbivorous species.
† Compared with HC (about 38 % CHO).
‡ Compared with low fat (11 % fat/16 % CHO).
§ Compared with fasted.
The molecular studies on GK showed that messenger RNA (mRNA) levels are strongly reduced in the fasted liver, while GK expression increases quickly when glucose is administrated( Reference Sibrowski and Seitz 43 ) (Table 2 and Fig. 4). The concentration of the GK protein in liver increases during the transition from the fasted to the refed state, similarly to the mRNA levels, which are undetectable in the liver of fasted rats, but which are strongly induced by a glucose load( Reference Iynedjian, Pilot and Nouspikel 17 ). A very complete study by Iritani et al. ( Reference Iritani, Fukuda and Tada 44 ) showed in detail how GK activity and expression are regulated by feeding in the rat liver. Only 2 h after feeding a control diet (67 % carbohydrate) the mRNA levels of GK increased dramatically up to 20-fold when compared with the fasted state. At 8 h after feeding, this level of expression was already reduced 50 %, and 16 h after the meal the fasting level was achieved. In contrast, activity levels increased differentially, given that the first significant changes are observed 8 h after the meal, increasing the levels even 24 h after feeding.
The information available concerning the nutritional regulation of the GK–GKRP tandem is very scarce. GKRP quantity decreases with fasting and increases with refeeding( Reference Vandercammen and van Schaftingen 45 ). Thus, disruption of the GK–GKRP complex and translocation of active GK to the cytosol has been reported during transition from the fasting (24 h) to refed (1 and 2 h refeeding) conditions in rats( Reference Fernández-Novell, Castel and Bellido 46 , Reference Polakof, Miguez and Soengas 47 ).
Glucokinase regulation by nutritional status: focus on fed–fasted–refeeding cycles and postprandial changes – pancreas
The earliest studies reported that the mRNA levels of pancreatic GK remained unaltered during the fed–fasting–refeeding cycle( Reference Iynedjian, Pilot and Nouspikel 17 ). However, more recent papers showed that there exists a dependence on the nutritional state given that after 2 d of fasting the mRNA levels of GK were reduced by 50 % when comparing with the fed control, while after 4 h of refeeding the expression was normalised( Reference Tiedge and Lenzen 48 ). Results obtained at the protein level are contradictory, given that in vivo studies did not detect any nutrient-dependent increase in freshly isolated islets from starved and refed rats( Reference Iynedjian, Pilot and Nouspikel 17 ) or after infusion of glucose( Reference Chen, Bumbalo and Leahy 49 ). However, GK protein did increase in vitro when pancreatic islets were incubated in the presence of high glucose concentrations, but for a long period (3–7 d)( Reference Liang, Najafi and Smith 50 ). Contrary to the data obtained at the mRNA and protein levels, but consistent with the induction of pancreatic GK by insulin, GK activity in cytoplasmic fractions of pancreatic islets decreases with the duration of fasting and is increased by refeeding( Reference Lenzen, Tiedge and Flatt 51 – Reference Meglasson and Matschinsky 53 ). GK activity contributed about 75 % to the total glucose phosphorylation capacity in cytoplasmic fractions of normal pancreatic islets. This has been later confirmed at the histological level, showing that the spatial pattern of intracellular GK distribution, rather than major changes in the absolute amounts of the enzyme protein( Reference Chen, Hosokawa and Bumbalo 54 ), parallels changes in the nutrient status of the animals( Reference Jörns, Tiedge and Lenzen 55 ). The importance of pancreatic GK in human glucose homeostasis came from evidence obtained in GK mutants( Reference Hussain 56 – Reference Polonsky 58 ). Here again, very little is known about how these mutants handle glucose homeostasis under a nutritional challenge. A very interesting study has been carried out by Klupa et al. ( Reference Klupa, Solecka and Nowak 59 ) in which patients having ten different GK-inactivating mutations were fed either a low-carbohydrate diet (25 % of daily energy intake as carbohydrates) or a HC diet (60 % of daily energy intake as carbohydrates) for 2 d. In all the cases, glycaemia was lower when feeding the low-carbohydrate diet, which seems to compensate for the non-functional GK and then promises a potential clinical impact when handling glucose homeostasis in these patients.
Regulation of glucokinase by dietary carbohydrates: liver
Data concerning the regulation of GK activity under different diets are essential in order to understand the nutritional role of this key enzyme. Unfortunately, studies focused in this topic are not abundant and only a few reports explored the combination of macronutrients as GK regulators. The early studies combining diets showed that GK worked properly only when rats were fed with a diet containing enough carbohydrates (Table 2). GK activity increased rapidly in rats in response to the feeding of both the high-glucose and high-fructose diets( Reference Blumenthal, Abraham and Chaikoff 60 ). The response to glucose is consistently greater than that to fructose. No change from fasting levels was observed in the groups fed diets containing no utilisable carbohydrate. In rats fed the high-glucose diet (60 % glucose), GK activity increased only 4 h after the start of feeding, while in the fructose-fed rats, the first change was noted at 12 h. GK levels continued to increase over a 24 h period in the glucose-fed rats but not in the fructose-fed rats. Similarly, the expression of GK increased up to 6 h after feeding a HC diet (57 % of energy supplied by carbohydrates), with basal levels 18 h after the intake( Reference Iynedjian, Ucla and Mach 61 ). In another similar approach, Perez et al. ( Reference Pérez, Clark-Turri and Rabajille 62 ) fasted rats for 48 h, obtaining a 50 % reduction in GK activity. At 6 h after being refed with a 100 %-carbohydrate diet, rats recovered their normal GK levels. Activity remained stable up to 72 h after the last meal. After 2 d on a HF diet (80 %), activity was reduced by more than 50 %. In human subjects hepatic GK has been shown to be inducible by dietary carbohydrates (400 g/d)( Reference Borrebaek, Hultman and Nilsson 63 ). Thus, the feeding of normal voluntary subjects with a carbohydrate-poor diet (5 g/d) for 8 d caused a considerable decrease in GK activity measured in hepatic biopsy samples, while a 2 d feeding with a HC diet was enough to restore the normal values. After fasting, both glucose infusion (either intragastric or intraperitoneal) and HC feeding (refeeding) were able to restore the normal hepatic GK activities in rats( Reference Abraham, Borrebaek and Chaikoff 38 , Reference Salas, Vinuela and Sols 39 ). Thus, intragastric glucose infusion is able to restore basal GK activities in only 4 h( Reference Sharma, Manjeshwar and Weinhouse 40 ).
In the absence of specific nutritional studies, maybe the most interesting article published so far concerning the nutritional regulation of GKRP is that of Chu et al. ( Reference Chu, Fujimoto and Igawa 64 ). In this study, rats were intraduodenally infused with glucose (initial bolus of 500 mg/kg and then 28 mg/kg per min). The authors showed that the translocation of GK from the nucleus to the cytoplasm is quite fast (20–30 min), explaining the switch in net hepatic glucose balance from output to uptake in response to glucose ingestion. Similarly, GK translocation in the liver in response to hyperglycaemia and hyperinsulinaemia was impaired in Zucker rats( Reference Fujimoto, Donahue and Shiota 65 ). Interestingly and unlike GK, GKRP mRNA is induced by high glucose concentrations but not by insulin( Reference Agius 66 ). Toyoda et al. ( Reference Toyoda, Tsuchida and Iwami 67 ) also showed that the GK–GKRP complex was disrupted after the oral administration of either glucose (solution 20 %), fructose (solution 2·5 %) or glucose plus fructose to 24 h fasted rats, with a concomitant increase in glucose phosphorylation. This is in accordance with the data of Watford( Reference Watford 68 ) showing that small amounts of fructose-1-phosphate, in the presence of relatively high glucose levels, markedly stimulate GK through a novel mechanism of regulation involving dissociation from a regulatory protein and translocation from the nucleus into the cytosol. Nevertheless, this beneficial effect of fructose on liver glucose uptake does not persist during chronic nutrition (as in total parenteral nutrition)( Reference McGuinness and Cherrington 69 ).
However, this effect is not common to all mammalian species. For example, pigs fed a high-fructose diet (40 % sucrose) exhibited lower GK activities than in the control group (1.23 v. 2·3 μmol hexose phosphorylated/g tissue) 4 h after the last meal, suggesting that GK would be less induced in the presence of fructose, showing in that case a high specificity for dietary glucose( Reference Ly and Torres 70 ).
A few studies dealt with the developmental regulation of hepatic GK. In general, evidence shows that activity in newborns is lower than in adults( Reference Walker 71 ). In the rat, GK activity is detected for the first time 16 d after birth, with activities equivalent to those of the adult 10 d later( Reference Walker and Holland 72 ). Although both insulin and glucose are needed for the normal development of GK, their infusion before the sixteenth day has no effect. In contrast, if a HC diet is given only 2 d after the detection of GK, then the activity is inducible( Reference Haney, Estrin and Caliendo 73 ), demonstrating that the neonatal rat liver is sensitive to nutrients present in the HC diet. In a more complete approach, Walker & Eaton( Reference Walker and Eaton 74 ) showed that normal GK development results from the nutritional transition between a HF diet (rat milk) and a HC solid diet (regular laboratory chow). In this set of experiments, GK activity was only inducible with a high-glucose (60 %) or high-dextrin (60 %) diet at day 18, only 2 d after the appearance of the enzyme activity in the liver. However, this ability to be induced can be abolished or severely retarded by diets without carbohydrates. The mRNA levels of the hepatic GK are not detected before the tenth day after birth, being detected from the fourteenth day, with an activity increasing up to 30-fold in the next 2 weeks( Reference Iynedjian, Ucla and Mach 61 ). Moreover, if fasting–refeeding cycles are applied during development, then GK is resynthesised more rapidly than in normal pups. However, GK appearance can also be delayed if a carbohydrate-free diet is given at that stage of development.
Regulation of glucokinase by dietary carbohydrates: pancreas
GK activity in the pancreas is mainly controlled by glucose( Reference Liang, Najafi and Smith 50 , Reference Liang, Najafi and Matschinsky 75 ), at least when cells are isolated in vitro or the organ maintained in culture, even if other studies did not detect any changes in GK activity after infusion of glucose and isolation of fresh islets( Reference Chen, Bumbalo and Leahy 49 ). However, GK protein levels did increase in vitro when pancreatic islets were incubated in the presence of high glucose concentrations (30 mm), but for a long period (3–7 d)( Reference Liang, Najafi and Smith 50 ). At the molecular level, GK mRNA levels increased 3-fold in rats receiving an oral glucose load (4 g/kg) only 1 h after the treatment( Reference Tiedge and Lenzen 76 ). It is worth mentioning that in the context of glucose regulation the role of GK interaction with the enzyme 6-phosphofructokinase-2-kinase/fructose-2,6-biphosphatase seems to be major in pancreatic tissue, given that such interaction increases in parallel with the glucose concentration in the culture medium( Reference Langer, Kaminski and Lenzen 77 ).
Concerning HC feeding, most of the information comes from the rodent model fed with simple sugars, like the high-fructose diet. Thus, quantities of dietary fructose between 10 and 60 % for 3 weeks are able to enhance pancreatic GK activity and protein levels in rodents as part of the adaptative process of the islet glucose metabolism and glucose-induced insulin secretion( Reference Maiztegui, Borelli and Raschia 78 ). In contrast, longer periods of feeding resulted in a blunted response due to the lipoglucotoxicity associated with the insulin resistance and dyslipidaemia in this nutritional model( Reference Ferreira Mdel, Lombardo and Chicco 79 ). Finally, while GKRP is also expressed in the pancreas, no nutritional information is available( Reference Álvarez, Roncero and Chowen 80 ). GK has been also detected in pig islets at the protein level( Reference Mohanasundaram, Drogemuller and Brealey 81 ), but unfortunately no information about its nutritional regulation is available.
Regulation of glucokinase by dietary proteins: liver
Consistent with their natural requirements, GK activity is maximal in rats fed a 65 % dextrin diet. However, if carbohydrates are artificially substituted by protein (90 % protein instead of 20 %), GK activity is abnormally reduced( Reference Vaughan, Hannon and Vaughan 82 ) (Table 2 and Fig. 4). This reduction is not visible after 4 d of feeding, but significant after 40 d of feeding( Reference Niemeyer, Clark-Turri and Garcés 83 ). Consistently, GK gene expression is also lower in HP-fed rats (50 % milk protein)( Reference Stepien, Gaudichon and Fromentin 84 ). GK activity is lower in HP-fed rats than in HC-fed ones( Reference Abraham, Borrebaek and Chaikoff 38 ).
The effects of individual amino acids have also been tested in a few studies. In rodents, branched-chain amino acids dose-dependently enhanced the mRNA levels of GK in rat liver and strongly increased GK mRNA expression and protein levels in HepG2 cells in a glucose-dependent manner( Reference Higuchi, Kato and Miyazaki 85 ), suggesting an improved hepatic glucose metabolism through an enhanced glucosensing system. In growing piglets fed with a carnitine-supplemented diet (0·5 %) GK expression was induced 27-fold as compared with controls. This indicates that carnitine has a dramatic effect on glucose metabolism underlying one of the mechanisms involved in the health-related effects of carnitine, such as protection against neurodegeneration, mitochondrial decay, and oxidative stress as well as improvement in glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity( Reference Keller, Ringseis and Priebe 86 ). Weanling rats from dams maintained on a low-protein/HC diet displayed impaired insulin secretion associated with a lower K m and protein levels for GK( Reference Heywood, Mian and Milla 87 ). Similarly, the ability of hepatic GK to be induced during development (about 18 d after birth) can be abolished or severely retarded by diets high in protein (75 %)( Reference Walker and Eaton 74 ).
Regulation of glucokinase by dietary proteins: pancreas
Animal models of protein malnutrition have provided important insights into the adaptive mechanisms involved in insulin secretion in malnutrition( Reference Batista, da Silva and Amaral 88 ). Mice supplemented with taurine (2 %) have higher insulin content, and insulin secretion from isolated islets accompanied by higher expression of genes required for glucose-stimulated insulin secretion including GK( Reference Carneiro, Latorraca and Araujo 89 , Reference de Oliveira, Latorraca and de Mello 90 ).
Regulation of glucokinase by dietary fat: liver
In rats fed a HF (65 % fat) diet, hepatic GK activity is strongly reduced( Reference Vaughan, Hannon and Vaughan 82 ) or even not different from that observed in food-deprived animals (75 % energy as fat)( Reference Niemeyer, Clark-Turri and Garcés 83 ) (Fig. 4 and Table 2). However, while in the early stages of continuous overnutrition in mice with a HF diet (32 % safflower-seed oil) hepatic GK is up-regulated( Reference Tsukita, Yamada and Uno 91 ), chronic studies showed also that in the long term a fatty-acid-rich diet (cafeteria diet, 59 % fat) reduces GK activity (–29 %) and protein levels in rats( Reference Oakes, Cooney and Camilleri 92 , Reference Peng, Rideout and Rakita 93 ). Additionally, higher GK activities than in the control group were reported in rats fed on a HF (25 % coconut oil)–high cholesterol (1 %) diet, which has been associated with the needs of the liver to synthesise other substrates when glucose provided by the diet is low( Reference Zulet, Barber and Garcin 94 ).
In this sense, it is known that NEFA inhibit GK activity through allosteric binding( Reference Tippett and Neet 95 ) and impair GK translocation in hepatocytes( Reference Agius and Peak 96 ). The effect of fatty acids depends on their nature. In the rat, GK mRNA increases when MUFA (10 % of triolein) is added to a carbohydrate-enriched diet. However, if this fatty acid is replaced by PUFA (menhaden oil), the induction of GK mRNA is decreased by 60 to 70 %( Reference Jump, Clarke and Thelen 97 ). In vivo NEFA induce hepatic insulin resistance, probably due to an impairment of the ability of insulin to increase glucose cycling (through GK) and in vivo GK activity (for a review, see Lam et al. ( Reference Lam, Carpentier and Lewis 98 )). In this sense, in the HF diet-induced obese mice, decreased levels of the hepatic sirtuin (silent mating type information regulation 2 homologue 1; SIRT1), AMP-protein kinase α (AMPKα) and GK-3β proteins were described in comparison with the lean controls and were associated with steatosis, oxidative stress and inflammation( Reference Peng, Rideout and Rakita 93 ).
The ability of hepatic GK to be induced during development (about 18 d after birth) can be abolished or severely retarded by diets high in fat (25 %)( Reference Walker and Eaton 74 ).
In human subjects, variability at the GKRP gene locus (LIPGENE study) showed that n-3 PUFA levels were associated with the degree of insulin resistance and plasma concentrations of C-reactive protein( Reference Perez-Martinez, Garcia-Rios and Delgado-Lista 99 ). This suggests that a recommendation to increase n-3 PUFA could have an even more beneficial effect on insulin resistance and inflammatory markers only among metabolic syndrome patients carrying the C/C genotype.
Regulation of glucokinase by dietary fat: pancreas
Kim et al. ( Reference Kim, Iwashita and Tamura 100 ) demonstrated that pancreatic GK is nutritionally regulated by dietary lipids. When feeding rats with a HF diet (40 % fat) they observed a 50 % reduction in GK mRNA levels and insulin secretion in comparison with the group fed the control diet (HC/low fat). This suggests that the deleterious effect of a HF diet on glucose homeostasis could be based on a direct impact on pancreatic GK. Further support for this deleterious effect of dietary lipids is found in the study of Gremlich et al. ( Reference Gremlich, Bonny and Waeber 101 ) in which elevated fatty acid levels decrease the mRNA and protein levels of GK and insulin secretion in an in vitro rat pancreatic model.
The powerful effect of early nutrition on pancreatic GK and later β-cell functionality has been further confirmed using HF diets. Thus, weanlings from dams fed on a HF diet throughout both gestation and lactation have reduced GK mRNA and protein expression( Reference Cerf, Muller and Du Toit 102 – Reference Cerf, Chapman and Muller 104 ).
Regulation of glucokinase by feeding-related hormones. Glucokinase in the diabetic state and other metabolic-related disorders: liver
The first evidence of insulin regulating GK activity came from experiments in alloxan-diabetic rats, where insulin levels are almost undetectable. Thus, hepatic GK activity in diabetic rats is much lower than in normal rats( Reference DiPietro and Weinhouse 36 , Reference Viñuela, Salas and Sols 37 ) and if insulin is administrated to diabetic-induced alloxan rats then GK activity is recovered and normal levels are achieved between 16 and 24 h of infusion( Reference Sharma, Manjeshwar and Weinhouse 40 ). Consistent with this, insulin administration has been shown to increase GK activity in rats, either acutely( Reference Salas, Vinuela and Sols 39 ) or chronically (up to 14 d)( Reference Walker and Rao 105 ).
In contrast to this, although GK mRNA levels recover from the diabetic state when insulin is administrated( Reference Sibrowski and Seitz 43 ), the kinetics of the mRNA levels was not equivalent, as higher GK expression has been found only 1 h after stimulation, with a maximum level 8 h after. In comparison, in in vitro studies, the mRNA levels of GK were rapidly increased, with the maximum levels observed between 4 and 8 h after insulin stimulation, which was independent of the glucose concentration in the medium( Reference Iynedjian, Jotterand and Nouspikel 106 ). Furthermore, the effect of insulin on GK was prevented by the addition of glucagon.
Hepatic GKRP quantity increases with insulin and decreases in the diabetic state( Reference Vandercammen and van Schaftingen 45 ), which is further supported by the fact that glucagon inhibits in vitro the GK translocation to the cytoplasm( Reference Brown, Kalinowski and Megill 25 ).
A recent study also suggests that the impaired inhibition of hepatic glucose production and increased glucose uptake in the liver of hyperglycaemic Zucker rats could be due to a failure of GK to be released from the GK–GKRP complex( Reference Shin, Torres and Catlin 107 ).
The relationship between human GK and insulin was first evident from the study of hepatic activity in diabetic patients, in which GK can be depressed 50 % when compared with a healthy volunteer( Reference Borrebaek, Hultman and Nilsson 63 ). Further data confirm this, as the hyperinsulinaemia observed at certain stages of the diabetic condition is also able to actually increase GK activity in human subjects( Reference Willms, Ben-Ami and Söling 108 ). The confirmation of an insulin-sensitive GK in the human liver came from the studies by Iynedjian et al. ( Reference Iynedjian, Marie and Gjinovci 109 ) using hepatocytes isolated from fasted human subjects, where GK activity and expression are strongly up-regulated, with a peak of induction 8 h after stimulation by insulin. Consistent with this, the addition of glucagon to the medium abolishes the action of insulin, highlighting the inhibitory effect of this hormone on human GK.
A very recent paper has shown that liver GK gene expression (in the fasting state) is associated with de novo lipogenesis markers and hepatic TAG content in the human liver, suggesting that GK activity may induce fatty liver and its metabolic and hepatic consequences in humans( Reference Peter, Stefan and Cegan 110 ).
Regulation of glucokinase by feeding-related hormones. Glucokinase in the diabetic state and other metabolic-related disorders: pancreas
At least two characteristics differentiate hepatic and pancreatic GK, including that fact that the β-cell-specific promoter does not show a dramatic nutritional regulation by insulin and glucagon, and that glucose rather than insulin (as occurs in the liver) acts as its major regulator.
Among the diabetic and obesity animal models it is worth mentioning that in the sand rat (Psammomys obesus) after 1 week feeding with a high-energy diet, the pancreatic β-cell volume was reduced by one-third in hyperglyaemic animals. Insulin and GK immunostaining in the cytoplasm of the pancreatic β-cells were reduced by more than 50 %. After 3 weeks of high-energy diet feeding, all changes observed after 1 week were even more pronounced, with reductions in the range of 70–95 %. For all changes observed, there was a significant correlation with the increase in blood glucose concentration. Thus, increasing glycaemia appears to be the factor responsible for the deterioration of the pancreatic β-cell function and the resulting loss of the insulin-secretory capacity in Psammomys. The final result of this development is an irreversible diabetic state due to the feeding of the high-energy diet characterised by muscle insulin resistance and the inability of insulin to activate insulin signalling( Reference Jörns, Tiedge and Ziv 111 ).
Another model of GK-related diabetes developed in recent years is the double (liver and pancreas) mutants for gkdel/wt that show a reduced insulin secretion in response to glucose. The impaired glucose tolerance, and compensatory hyperinsulinaemia observed in response to a HF diet, seen in the gkdel/wt mice is similar to the phenotype recently reported in a HF-fed β-cell-specific gkdel/wt mouse strain( Reference Terauchi, Takamoto and Kubota 112 ), suggesting that β-cells and not hepatic GK status may be the driver in the development of diabetes in these mice.
In humans, the impact of GK on metabolic-related diseases is significant, given that even minor changes in this enzyme would result in major changes in glucose homeostasis. Spontaneous mutations of the GK gene are manifested in a wide range of pathologies of glucose homeostasis, including hypoglycaemias, milder forms of persistent hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia of infancy, borderline and mild hyperglycaemias of maturity-onset diabetes of the young type 2 (MODY2), and life-threatening permanent neonatal diabetes mellitus requiring intensive and lifelong insulin therapy (for a review, see Matschinsky( Reference Matschinsky 6 )). Similarly, several mutations in the GKRP gene have been associated with metabolic disorders, including liver fat accumulation in Hispanics on a high-sugar diet( Reference Goran, Walker and Allayee 113 ) and postprandial TAG on whole-grain intake( Reference Nettleton, McKeown and Kanoni 114 ). GK mRNA levels in human diabetic pancreatic tissue is 50 % lower than in healthy controls, which could be associated with the defect in insulin secretion in these patients( Reference Del Guerra, Lupi and Marselli 115 ). The low activities of hepatic GK of untreated diabetic patients were restored to normal values by treatment with insulin or tolbutamide.
A direct effect of leucine on pancreatic GK has recently been reported in rat islets and type 2 diabetic human islets. Leucine culture for 2 d increased glucose-induced cytosolic CaReference Wilson2+ elevation, ATP level, and insulin secretion as well as GK mRNA and protein levels. The increase in GK mRNA levels occurred as early as day 1 and lasted through to 1 week( Reference Yang, Wong and Park 116 ).
As stated before, GK is also expressed in the pancreatic α-cell, where it works as the limiting step for further glucose metabolism( Reference Le Marchand and Piston 117 ). Given that glucagon production is inhibited by glucose, the fact that α-cells express this protein could suggest that in the postprandial period GK may mediate glucose-inhibited glucagon production. However, this hypothesis needs to be explored further.
Carbohydrate-independent mammalian species
Glucokinase in carnivorous species: the example of the cat
During its evolutionary development the cat has adapted to a diet high in protein (about 54 % of DM) and low in carbohydrates (about 8 % of DM), directly linked to its natural diet consisting of animal prey( Reference Dierenfeld, Alcorn and Jacobsen 118 ). In response to these dietary habits, when compared with omnivorous species (such as rodents or humans), cats have lower activities of carbohydrate digestive enzymes in the gastrointestinal tract, slower glucose incorporation rate into glycogen and elongated glucose elimination time in the glucose tolerance test( Reference Verbrugghe, Hesta and Daminet 119 ). These facts imply that the cat as a carnivorous animal is not well adapted to readily metabolise large glucose loads( Reference Thiess, Becskei and Tomsa 120 ). However, on the basis of all these facts, no dietary requirement for carbohydrates has been established for cats( Reference MacDonald, Rogers and Morris 121 ). On the other hand, commercial cat foods often contain considerable amounts of carbohydrates, mainly as starch( Reference Zoran 122 ). According to the carnivore connection theory of Brand Miller and Colagiuri( Reference Brand Miller and Colagiuri 123 , Reference Colagiuri and Brand Miller 124 ), an unnaturally high intake of carbohydrates in carnivores – especially carbohydrates with a high glycaemic index like simple sugars – may contribute to the development of diabetes mellitus. This could certainly be the case with domestic cats( Reference Verbrugghe, Hesta and Daminet 119 , Reference Zoran 122 ). Cats have a very low functional GK with no capacity to be inducible by dietary carbohydrates, which associated with a minimal activity of hepatic glycogen synthase makes felines unable to rapidly minimise blood glucose after a HC meal. Thus, additional starch in the diet that is not stored as muscle glycogen or used for energy is stored as fat with the associated risk of obesity and insulin resistance. As stated above, cats are strict carnivores and considered to be deficient in hepatic GK based on their low GK expression and activity( Reference Washizu, Tanaka and Sako 125 – Reference Jackson, Debey and Lindbloom-Hawley 127 ), which has been proposed as the cause of feline diabetes( Reference Tanaka, Inoue and Takeguchi 126 ). Paradoxically, the presence of GKRP in the liver of cats has not been detected, which discards the hypothesis of a low GK activity caused by its sequestration by the regulatory protein( Reference Vandercammen and van Schaftingen 45 , Reference Hiskett, Suwitheechon and Lindbloom-Hawley 128 ). However, the existence of high HK activities and gluconeogenic enzymes in the feline liver seems to point to a different strategy, where low GK activity would be compensated by HK and the liver would be oriented to glucose production and export rather than glucose use, which is coherent with the nutritional profile of cats( Reference Moore, Coate and Winnick 129 ). Given the nature of strict carnivores, the lack of GK in the feline liver has been traditionally considered as a natural feature of their nutritional condition rather than a metabolic defect( Reference Hiskett, Suwitheechon and Lindbloom-Hawley 128 ). Could it be then that the lack of hepatic GK acts as a ‘carnivorous marker’? The answer is not clear given that other carnivorous species do have GK activity in the liver, including several fish species (see the ‘Glucokinase in fish’ section). In this sense, the GK observed in fish is often inducible by the presence of carbohydrates in the diet, even if they are not natural ingredients in carnivorous diets. As a matter of fact, most of the studies with cats have been made with fasted cats, even if they were fed with high proportions of carbohydrates in the diet. Given that the ability of GK to be induced by dietary carbohydrates is still unknown in the cat liver, then the performance of postprandial studies would be valuable. The main consequence of this putative lack of adaptative GK in the cat liver is that cats have a very poor control of glycaemia following a glucose load. This would result in a more persistent hyperglycaemia and slower glucose clearance than in other comparable mammals, like dogs( Reference Hewson-Hughes, Gilham and Upton 130 ). Given that the glycogen-storage pathway is also very low in the cat( Reference Kirk, Debraekeleer, Armstrong, Hand, Thatcher and Remillard 131 ), then carbohydrates will be stored as lipids through de novo lipogenesis with the consistent associated pathophysiological complications, diabetes included( Reference Zoran 122 ).
In contrast to the situation observed in the liver, nutrient-sensing machinery seems to be present in feline pancreatic tissue, where the activity and expression of GK are comparable with those of other mammalian species( Reference Jackson, Debey and Lindbloom-Hawley 127 ).
Glucokinase in carnivorous species: the example of the dog
Very little information about dog (Canis familiaris) GK is available in the literature. For instance, most of the studies have been conducted using fasted animals, in which GK activity and expression have been characterised( Reference Tanaka, Inoue and Takeguchi 126 ). The earlier studies showed that GK could play a role from a nutritional point of view, given that as in other species, dogs have an adaptative GK( Reference Hornichter, Brown and Snow 132 ) that seems to be regulated by insulin. This conclusion came from studies with diabetic dogs, which have 50 % less GK activity in the liver than normal dogs( Reference Liu and Sharma 133 ). More similarities are also shared with other mammalian species including the possible interaction with a regulatory protein, given that infused fructose (1·7–6·7 μmol/kg per min) is able to release GK from the binding with its regulatory protein, showing that the translocation of GK is a major determinant of hepatic glucose metabolism in dogs( Reference Shiota, Galassetti and Monohan 134 ). GK is also expressed in the dog pancreas. Finally, it is worth mentioning that more work is still needed regarding the characterisation of GK activity in dogs, given that some inconsistencies remain visible. Thus, the earliest studies reported quite high activity of hepatic GK, about 45 mU/mg protein in the fasted state. However, more recent studies do not agree with these results, and situate the GK activity in two different ranges: either about 10 mU/mg protein( Reference Tanaka, Inoue and Takeguchi 126 ) or 10–15 μU/mg protein( Reference Chen, Santomango and Williams 135 ). While these differences are probably related to the experimental conditions rather than to the activity assessing method, further studies should be developed in order to better characterise this enzyme in the dog. At the nutritional level, very little is known in dogs. Recently, Coate et al. ( Reference Coate, Kraft and Irimia 136 ) showed that in normal dogs GK activity increases in response to a meal, while in HF/high-fructose-fed dogs the GK protein content and activity are significantly reduced, resulting also in impaired net hepatic glucose uptake and glycogen storage( Reference Moore, Coate and Winnick 129 ). Similarly, 4 weeks of a HF/high-fructose-diet feeding, a diet inducing glucose intolerance, markedly reduced GK protein content and GK activity in vivo in dogs, leading to impaired hepatic glucose uptake and postprandial hyperglycaemia( Reference Moore, Coate and Winnick 129 , Reference Coate, Smith and Shiota 137 ).
Glucokinase in ruminants
In contrast to single-stomached animals, in ruminants only small amounts of glucose are absorbed and transported from the gastrointestinal tract to the liver. Micro-organisms in the rumen ferment carbohydrates to the volatile fatty acids acetate, propionate and butyrate and these largely replace glucose as the main metabolic fuel of the tissues in the fed condition. As a result, blood glucose concentrations in cattle are significantly lower than in dogs, ranging between 2·4–4·5 mm in sheep and 2·3–4·2 mm in cattle( Reference Arai, Washizu and Sagara 138 , Reference Kaneko, Harvey, Bruss, Kaneko, Harvey and Bruss 139 ). The insulin-secretory response in ruminants also differs from that in non-ruminants, plasma propionate being a more potent stimulus for insulin release in ruminants( Reference Farningham and Whyte 140 ). Since no or very little glucose passes through the liver, the activity of the enzyme necessary for glucose phosphorylation (hepatic GK) is very low( Reference Allen, Bradford and Oba 141 , Reference Tanaka, Urabe and Takeguchi 142 ). The very little free glucose that is normally absorbed by the ruminant intestinal tract does not allow the induction of this hepatic enzyme. On the other hand, the reliance of ruminants on fatty acids, especially volatile fatty acids, makes glucose an unattractive candidate as a primary fuel, also taking into account that the lack of hepatic GK may represent a metabolic advantage considering the continual need for gluconeogenesis in ruminants.
GK has been described to be present in several other mammalian species (revised by Cardenas( Reference Cárdenas, Matschinsky and Magnuson 8 )) (Table 1). Among those species of special interest, it is worth mentioning that GK has not been detected in the liver of ruminants like dairy cows( Reference Tanaka, Urabe and Takeguchi 142 ). However, once more, the experimental design could be critical in order to detect this enzyme activity. Thus, while on this occasion cows were unfasted, no information about the exact postprandial period is offered. Moreover, cows were fed on a low-carbohydrate diet, which certainly needs to be explored more deeply. GK gene expression has been reported in the liver of offspring sheep at 1 year of age. It was increased in obese sheep as compared with lean sheep, but maternal diet restriction had no influence on the stimulatory effect of obesity on the GK gene( Reference Hyatt, Gardner and Sebert 143 ). Finally, the possibility of the expression of a fetal GK on ruminants has not been explored yet. Given that possible episodes of hyperglycaemia can exist during the nutritional transitions associated with animal development, further studies on this subject could be of interest.
Glucokinase in birds
Concerning birds, very little is known in comparison with mammals, and only a few species have been approached so far (Table 1). Among them, 72 % of the published papers have focused on the chicken GK, the only species for which a partially exploitable GK sequence is available. The rest of the species are anecdotally represented, yet, very interestingly, species from different nutritional habits have been studied.
GK studies related in the present paper concern principally two granivorous domesticated species (chicken and duck) and a carnivorous wild species (owl) (Table 1).
Peculiarities of glucose metabolism in avian species
Birds develop adaptive mechanisms ensuring them an active energy metabolism characterised by a high basal temperature and glycaemia (42°C and 11 mm). In spite of the high plasma glucose level, less evidence (see Scanes & Braun( Reference Scanes and Braun 144 )) supports close consistency in the control of metabolism in wild and domesticated birds, some species being more tolerant than others as revealed by glucose tolerance tests. The ability of birds to maintain and tolerate comparatively high plasma glucose concentrations appears to have evolved independently of other vertebrate groups( Reference Polakof, Mommsen and Soengas 145 ). The basis for the relatively high glucose levels in birds is still unknown. All carbohydrate metabolic pathways studied in mammals appear to operate in birds; they are merely observed in different proportions. For instance, there is a quick transition to gluconeogenesis in granivorous birds because of their small glycogen stores and high metabolic rates. Carnivorous birds demonstrate continuous gluconeogenesis from amino acids in both the fed and the fasted state, enabling meat-eating species to use a meal-eating schedule( Reference Pollock 146 ). Despite significant research focus on glucose metabolism in poultry and to a smaller extent in wild birds (for recent reviews, see Braun & Sweazea( Reference Braun and Sweazea 147 ) and Scanes( Reference Scanes 148 )), certain fields have long been debated such as the existence of GK in avian species( Reference Cárdenas, Cornish-Bowden and Ureta 1 ), or remain still enigmatic including the still-undefined nature of GLUT in avian muscle and fat tissue( Reference Seki, Sato and Kono 149 ). These fields covering two limiting steps in peripheral glucose utilisation may, however, be a key to further understanding of the peculiarities of glucose homeostasis in avian species. Data concerning avian GK (mainly domestic birds) are further developed.
Characterisation of glucokinase at the biochemical and molecular level in avian species
Liver glucokinase activity
The presence of GK has long been controversial in avian species. Studies involved only liver GK activity and led to divergent results, mostly because of methodological difficulties in differentiating GK activity from other HK activities (Table 1). The methods currently used to measure GK activity in the 20 000 to 100 000 g supernatant fraction from liver extracts according to methods used in mammals( Reference Viñuela, Salas and Sols 37 ) have failed to detect a GK-like activity in avian species and its induction by a carbohydrate- or glucose-enriched meal (for a review, see Berradi et al. ( Reference Berradi, Guy and Rideau 150 )). This has long precluded establishing the presence of a typical GK in avian carbohydrate metabolism( Reference Cárdenas, Cornish-Bowden and Ureta 1 , Reference Ureta 151 , Reference Ureta, Medina and Preller 152 ). From a comparative physiological point of view this was a relevant and interesting question because GK plays an important role in mammalian glucose homeostasis and because avian species present several specific characteristics regarding glucose metabolism (see above). Two different extraction procedures( Reference Tranulis, Dregni and Christophersen 153 , Reference Wals and Katz 154 ) made it possible to measure higher glucose phosphorylation at 100 mm-glucose (H) and at 0·5 mm-glucose (L), with in both cases a H/L value higher than 1·5 accepted as a preliminary suggestion of GK-like activity( Reference Tranulis, Dregni and Christophersen 153 , Reference Ureta, Reichberg and Radojkovic 155 ). This is not sufficient, however, to prove the presence of GK, as N-acetylglucosamine kinase (EC 2.7.1.59) can also phosphorylate glucose with low affinity. Precaution is thus needed for avoiding confusion between GK and N-acetylglucosamine kinase, such as verifying that the enzyme is competitively inhibited by N-acetylglucosamine( Reference Davagnino and Ureta 156 ) or using additional criteria. Wals & Katz( Reference Wals and Katz 154 ) identified GK-like activities in chicken (Gallus gallus) and Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica) liver extracts in fractions (1000 g and 27 000 g pellets) that were discarded by previous investigators. Klandorf et al. ( Reference Klandorf, Clarke and Scheck 157 ) further confirmed the presence of a GK-like enzyme in chicken liver extracts and showed equal distribution in the soluble and particulate fractions. A GK activity detected in 1000 g pellets suggested that avian GK was present in the nuclear fraction. Berradi et al. ( Reference Berradi, Guy and Rideau 150 ) also reported GK-like activity in soluble and particulate fractions of duck liver extracts. It was, on the other hand, possible to measure a soluble GK-like activity in the supernatant fraction of crude liver homogenates (900 g supernatant fraction) from the chicken and duck as described by Panserat et al. ( Reference Panserat, Blin and Médale 158 ). This method first reported for Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)( Reference Tranulis, Dregni and Christophersen 153 ) is commonly used to measure GK activity in fish species. GK-like activity measured in crude liver homogenates from fed chickens presented a high apparent half-saturating concentration of glucose of 8.6 mm ( Reference Berradi, Taouis and Cassy 159 ). In addition, N-acetyl-d-glucosamine, a known inhibitor of GK activity in mammals, significantly inhibited chicken GK activity by increasing the apparent K m for glucose( Reference Berradi, Bernadet and Guy 160 ), which confirmed specificity of GK activity measurement. In addition, changes in GK kinetic parameters in response to GK activator (GKA) provide unequivocal evidence for the presence of a functional GK in chicken liver, most probably very similar in its structure and activity to those of mammalian GK( Reference Rideau, Derouet and Grimsby 161 ). Immunological and physiological studies further support that GK activities can be measured.
Comparison of glucokinase-like activity levels
It is difficult to compare GK activities of various species measured under different experimental conditions, media and techniques. However, some comparative studies carried out by the same author or using the same technique are available (Table 1). These studies suggest that GK activity is lower in the liver of avian species than in that of various mammals or fish species. Using a radiochemical method in the presence of glucose-6-phosphate as an inhibitor of low-K m HK, Stanley et al. ( Reference Stanley, Dohm and McManus 41 ) reported three to ten times lower GK activities (U/g liver; nutritional state not defined) in the 100 000 g supernatant fraction of various avian species (chickens, pigeons and ducks) than in mammals (rats, mice and human subjects). GK activities reported by Myers & Klasing (U/mg protein) were 100 times weaker in the liver of the chicken or owl (Tyto alba) than in the rat in this same 100 000 g supernatant fraction( Reference Myers and Klasing 162 ). When compared with fish species in the fed state, liver GK activity (U/mg protein) measured in the 10 000 g supernatant fraction was weaker in the chicken (standard diet, 35 % carbohydrates) than in the rat (standard rodent chow, 60 % carbohydrate) or the fish (10 % carbohydrate)( Reference Polakof, Miguez and Soengas 47 ). GK activity (U/mg protein) measured in the 900 g supernatant fraction from chicken liver( Reference Rideau, Berradi and Skiba-Cassy 163 ) was similar to those of common carp (Cyprinus carpio) and gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata) but were three to six times lower than that of rainbow trout (24 h after meal, > 20 % starch)( Reference Panserat, Médale and Blin 164 ) (see Table 1). At the moment, there is no hypothesis for the low GK activities in the liver of chickens and ducks as well as in those of some fish.
Chicken–duck comparison
GK-like activity was reported in the liver of 15-week-old overfasted mule ducks and 5-week-old overfasted broiler chickens( Reference Berradi, Bernadet and Guy 160 ). In this study, liver GK activities were higher in ducks than in broilers (chicken diet 37 % carbohydrates/duck diet 45 % carbohydrates). The difference may be linked to age or body weight. However, a species-related difference is possible and may be a characteristic of avian species susceptible to hepatic steatosis, such as Muscovy ducks (Cairina moschata) or Landes geese (Anser anser)( Reference Bedu, Chainier and Sibille 165 , Reference Mourot, Guy and Lagarrigue 166 ). Moreover, in the absence of overfeeding, fatty acid synthase activity of duckling livers was 10-fold higher than that of chicken livers( Reference Hsu, Tanaka and Inayama 167 ). The molecular basis for the high incorporation rate of glucose into fatty acids and the high level of lipogenic enzymes may involve GK, as suggested by the high level of GK (1·76 v. 0·88 mU/mg protein) and by the GK:HK ratio (GK:HK = 3·2 v. 1·01), respectively, observed in fasted ducks compared with fasted chickens( Reference Berradi, Bernadet and Guy 160 ).
Chicken–owl comparison
In the owl, a carnivorous bird species that consumes a diet consisting almost exclusively of animal prey, GK-like activity is six times lower than in the chicken( Reference Myers and Klasing 162 ). Chickens and barn owls have large differences in the shapes of their glucose tolerance curves after either an oral (22·2 mmol glucose/kg body weight in 10 ml by oral administration) or intravenous glucose (5 ml/kg body weight of 1·1 m) challenge. Very low liver GK activity in barn owls may be one possible explanation for these large differences in rates of glucose clearance( Reference Myers and Klasing 162 ). Similarly, the lack of liver GK activity reported in cats (strict carnivorous mammal species) is believed to contribute to the prolonged glucose elevation observed following a glucose challenge( Reference Hewson-Hughes, Gilham and Upton 130 ).
Pancreas glucokinase
Preliminary tests performed in our laboratory (N Rideau, unpublished results) showed the presence of GK-like activity in the particulate fraction of chicken pancreas obtained according to Wals & Katz( Reference Wals and Katz 154 ) (the soluble fraction was not studied). A GK-like activity in the 900 g supernatant fraction from chicken pancreas was, according to Tranulis et al. ( Reference Tranulis, Dregni and Christophersen 153 ), however, not detectable. It is possible that the enzyme links with some particulate fraction that protects it from degradation (in particular by pancreatic enzymes). However, isolated islets of Langerhans constitute a better medium of study than whole pancreas homogenates. In mammals indeed, GK activity is studied using isolated islets of Langerhans.
Liver and pancreatic glucokinase messenger RNA and protein
Developments in molecular biology techniques have confirmed the presence of the GK gene in chickens and ducks. A gene coding for GK has not yet been found in the chicken genome database (http://www.ensembl.org/Gallus_gallus/). It is, however, noteworthy that the chicken genome has not been fully sequenced to date. A chicken complementary DNA fragment exhibiting high homology with human GK (> 80 %) was, however, sequenced( Reference Rideau, Berradi and Skiba-Cassy 163 ) from chicken liver and pancreas (gi 148743499 (1326 bp mRNA) and gi 44888569 (751 bp mRNA), respectively). A physical radiation hybrid mapping in the chicken suggests that the GK gene is most probably located on GGA22, a not yet sequenced microchromosome (N Rideau and M Morisson, personal communication cited in Nadaf et al. ( Reference Nadaf, Pitel and Gilbert 168 )). A predicted Gallus gallus GK (HK 4) (GK) mRNA sequence present on chromosome 22 was recently reported in Genbank databases (gi: 363745396, 1263 bp mRNA). A single fragment from mule duck liver (600 bp) was also obtained, purified, cloned and sequenced( Reference Berradi, Bernadet and Guy 160 ). Comparison of the deduced amino acid (a.a.) sequence of chicken (Q8JHA6_CHICK; a.a. 1–442) and human liver GK (a.a. 1–465) shows 83.9 % identity and 90.1 % similarity( Reference Rideau, Derouet and Grimsby 161 , Reference Dupont, Tesseraud and Derouet 169 ). The deduced ‘avian GK protein’ presents no amino acid modification at the glucose or ATP binding sites( Reference Harrison, Weber, Matschinsky and Magnuson 170 ), at the allosteric activator site and hydrophobic surface for GKA( Reference Dunten, Swain, Kammlott, Matschinsky and Magnuson 171 ), at the GK regulator (GKR) binding site except N166(K) and L355(F) that participate in the binding of GKRP( Reference Baltrusch and Tiedge 172 , Reference Baltrusch, Francini and Lenzen 173 ). Looking for hyperglycaemic mutations (avian species have a high basal glucose level and they are relatively insensitive to glucose-induced insulin release), we find some mutations located on amino acids showing mutations associated with mild hyperglycaemias of maturity-onset diabetes of the young type 2 (MODY2)( Reference Velho, Froguel, Gloyn, Matschinsky and Magnuson 174 ) but no difference on hyperglycaemic mutations as indicated by Zelent et al. ( Reference Zelent, Golson and Koeberlein 16 ). There is no mutation on amino acid-activating mutation sites( Reference Grimsby, Matschinsky, Grippo, Matschinsky and Magnuson 175 ).
Liver and pancreatic GK proteins were immunodetected using two different polyclonal antibodies directed against the C terminal part of human GK (C20: a.a. 445–465/H88: a.a. 318–405)( Reference Berradi, Guy and Rideau 150 ). In the chicken, antibody H88 detected one band of expected molecular mass (50 kDa) in the liver and two bands close to 50 kDa in the pancreas. This suggests that, as in mammals( Reference Cárdenas, Cornish-Bowden and Ureta 1 , Reference Liang, Jetton and Zimmerman 176 , Reference Magnuson 177 ), there may be a second immunoreactive isoform of this protein in chicken pancreas. In duck liver, both antibodies revealed one band at 50 kDa. Intensity of the signal varied in response to overfeeding but in opposing ways according to the GK antibody used. Two isoforms of GK that are both immunoreactive have been characterised in mammal livers, but the minor isoform lacks catalytic activity( Reference Cárdenas 5 , Reference Liang, Jetton and Zimmerman 176 , Reference Magnuson 177 ). In duck liver, two isoforms of GK are present as in mammals. One of the isoforms increases in response to overfeeding, as observed in rat liver after refeeding( Reference Toyoda, Miwa and Kamiya 178 ).
Nutritional regulation of avian hepatic glucokinase: glucokinase regulation in chickens
In standard conditions (ad libitum feeding), liver GK-like activity was 2.2 higher in the fed state (regular, diet containing 37 % carbohydrates and 22 % proteins) than in the 24 h fasted state, but GK mRNA expression and protein level did not differ between the fasted and fed states( Reference Berradi, Taouis and Cassy 159 ). Nutritional regulation of GK was further shown in chickens previously trained to meal-feeding (same regular diet as above, 2 h meal per d) and submitted to different nutritional conditions( Reference Rideau, Berradi and Skiba-Cassy 163 ). Also, 2 h of refeeding alone was ineffective in altering hepatic GK mRNA, protein or activity. However, when an acute oral carbohydrate load was imposed at the beginning of the meal, GK activity significantly increased at the end of the meal and up to at least 3 h after the end of the 2 h meal; liver GK mRNA and protein significantly increased 3 h after the end of the meal (2-fold). Chicken liver GK expression (mRNA and protein) and activity were therefore inducible by feeding a meal with acute oral administration of carbohydrate. However, even in these highly stimulatory conditions, liver GK activity remained relatively low in comparison with other species (Table 2 and Fig. 4). Meal-induced GK gene expression was delayed in chickens when compared with rodents where a significant increase in GK gene expression was reported as soon as 1 and 2 h after refeeding following fasting whereas GK activity increased later on( Reference Sibrowski and Seitz 43 , Reference Iritani, Fukuda and Tada 44 , Reference Dhahbi, Mote and Wingo 179 – Reference Sibrowski and Seitz 181 ). It thus seems that there is not a temperature effect, which has been a problem when comparing the kinetics of fish and mammal GK activities.
Nutritional regulation of avian hepatic glucokinase: glucokinase regulation in ducks
Muscovy ducks and Pekin ducks (Anas platyrhynchos) present different susceptibility to liver steatosis in response to HC overfeeding (about 600 g starch/kg). Muscovy ducks are able to produce a heavy fatty liver (about 500 g) while the Pekin duck produces a small fatty liver (about 300 g). After 14 overfeeding days, Pekin ducks exhibited higher liver GK than Muscovy ducks, suggesting a greater ability to use glucose consistent with lower glycaemia (respectively 8·83 v. 10·44 mm). Plasma levels of insulin did not differ between Pekin and Muscovy ducks. In spite of lower specific GK activity, activities of the main enzymes involved in lipogenesis from glucose indicated that hepatic synthesis of fatty acids was more efficient in Muscovy ducks than in Pekin ducks( Reference Chartrin, Bernadet and Guy 182 ). Greater glucose utilisation in Pekin ducks, associated with a lower capacity for lipid synthesis, suggests that glucose may be directed towards ATP-producing pathways rather than lipid synthesis or to storage under glycogen form. Liver glycogen level in Pekin ducks is in fact half that of Muscovy ducks after overfeeding (E Baeza personal communication)
Nutritional variations of GK activity were also reported in the soluble and particulate phase of chicken liver( Reference Klandorf, Clarke and Scheck 157 ) and duck liver( Reference Berradi, Guy and Rideau 150 ). Waltz & Katz( Reference Wals and Katz 154 ) demonstrated for the first time in chickens that GK-like activity was present in the soluble and particulate fractions of liver extract. As described above, the particulate fraction is not clearly defined but involves cellular and nucleus membranes. Klandorf et al. ( Reference Klandorf, Clarke and Scheck 157 ) demonstrated further that glucose plus insulin (1 U/kg intramuscularly + oral glucose intubation 2·5 g; pre-treatment 24 h, 12 h and 2 h before cervical dislocation and excision of the tissues) significantly increased both soluble and particulate GK activities in the chicken liver v. ad libitum-fed chickens. In ducks a striking modification in the distribution of GK-like activity between the soluble and particulate fractions was observed in response to overfeeding( Reference Berradi, Guy and Rideau 150 ). GK-like activity per mg protein was strikingly low in the soluble fraction from control ducks. It increased massively and significantly in response to overfeeding, reaching a level fourteen times higher than that in controls after 1 d of overfeeding. It declined during the subsequent stages but remained stable, with a five times higher level than controls. Overfeeding also increased the particulate fraction GK-like activity per mg protein but to a lesser extent, as activity only doubled as compared with controls( Reference Berradi, Guy and Rideau 150 ). Meal-induced GK translocation may thus occur in birds and contribute actively to glucose disposal during the whole overfeeding period. Hepatic lipogenesis remains very active until the end of the overfeeding period in the goose( Reference Mourot, Guy and Lagarrigue 166 ).
Glucokinase-regulatory protein in chickens
Recently, Polakof et al. ( Reference Polakof, Miguez and Soengas 47 ) obtained evidence for the existence of a regulatory protein of GK (a GKR-like protein) in liver homogenates of vertebrates, such as fish (trout, goldfish (Carassius auratus) and carp) and a bird (chicken), where previous studies failed in the detection of both GK and GKR-like protein( Reference Vandercammen and van Schaftingen 45 ). A GKR-like protein in the liver of those species presented a molecular weight (68 kDa) and kinetic characteristics similar to those described in mammals; however, several of the biochemical properties of rainbow trout GKR-like protein were closer to the mammalian model whereas those of chicken protein were specific. The authors also compared the presence and properties of GKR-like protein in livers of different teleost species that exhibit different tolerances to glucose such as rainbow trout (intolerant) and goldfish and common carp (tolerant). The results showed that the most powerful GKR-like protein was found in the most intolerant species, whereas the inhibition exerted by GKR-like protein in tolerant species was closer to the chicken than to the rat.
What is the relationship between hepatic glucokinase, plasma glucose and insulin levels in birds?
In mammals, liver GK is induced in response to a meal or following the administration of insulin (see above). One of the major roles of insulin in the liver is stimulation of the synthesis and activity of GK in mammals( Reference Narkewicz, Iynedjian and Ferre 183 ). In the chicken and duck, nutritional variations of GK activity are linked to an increase in plasma glucose and insulin levels and to a very significant increase in liver relative weight( Reference Berradi, Guy and Rideau 150 , Reference Berradi, Taouis and Cassy 159 , Reference Rideau, Berradi and Skiba-Cassy 163 , Reference Chartrin, Bernadet and Guy 182 ) (Table 2 and Fig. 5).
Insulin dependency of liver GK (mRNA and protein) was clearly demonstrated after insulin immunoneutralisation in the chicken( Reference Dupont, Tesseraud and Derouet 169 ). In this experiment, liver GK gene expression and protein decreased at 5 h following insulin privation or fasting. Large hyperglycaemia was induced by anti-insulin serum injection. Hyperglucagonaemia and low triiodothyronine were early hormonal perturbations observed in the absence of an insulin signal. This agrees with mammals, where glucagon and thyroid hormones, respectively, decrease and increase liver GK gene expression( Reference Fernandez-Mejia, German, Matschinsky and Magnuson 29 ). The decrease in liver GK mRNA and protein in fed chickens following insulin privation should decrease liver glucose utilisation and contribute to the development of marked hyperglycaemia. GK knockout mice display mild basal hyperglycaemia and exhibit a profound defect in glucose turnover( Reference Postic and Magnuson 184 ).
In contrast, oral administration of a GKA to ad libitum-fed chickens induced a dose-dependent and large decrease in plasma glucose( Reference Rideau, Derouet and Grimsby 161 ). The GKA induced a 40–50 % decrease in plasma glucose level in fed chickens and a 13 % decrease in fasted chickens. Even at 40 mg/kg, i.e. the dose required to obtain the maximal hypoglycaemic effect, GKA did not induce a clear increase in plasma insulin levels early in the experiment. Within the same period of time (3–15 min), plasma glucagon levels did not change. In chickens GKA appears to act mostly if not exclusive by activating liver GK in the fed or fasted state, which contrasts with results obtained in mammals( Reference Grimsby, Sarabu and Corbett 185 , Reference Leighton, Atkinson and Coghlan 186 ). In the dog GK activation is able to enhance net hepatic glucose uptake in the absence of insulin secretion following somatostatin infusion( Reference Futamura, Hosaka and Kadotani 187 ). It is quite possible that the same and still-unidentified steps that prevent nutrients to be insulinotropic in chicken endocrine pancreas( Reference Rideau 188 ) also prevent GKA being insulinotropic in this species. Dupont et al. ( Reference Dupont, Dagou and Derouet 189 ) showed that the high basal glycaemia of avian species does not result from insulin resistance at the hepatic level, as observed in chickens. It can thus be hypothesised that the low liver GK activity reported above in avian liver( Reference Rideau, Berradi and Skiba-Cassy 163 ) may partly contribute to the high basal plasma glucose level of avian species decreasing acutely in response to GK activation
GKA administration to chickens also reduced food intake( Reference Rideau, Derouet and Grimsby 161 ). Infusion of glucose into the hepatic portal vein decreased food intake in a dose-dependent manner in chickens( Reference Shurlock and Forbes 190 ). It has been hypothesised that an increase in hepatocyte metabolism following perfused glucose would generate a neuronal satiety signal to the hypothalamus. A contribution of the liver to the regulation of food intake is thus suggested byRideau et al. ( Reference Rideau, Derouet and Grimsby 161 ), rather than a putative activation of the brain GK by GK activation.
Glucokinase in fish
Fish is a quite particular group regarding the study of GK. While this group does not represent a major interest for human studies (only 4 % of the studies involved zebrafish), the characterisation of GK has been approached in several species, most of them (86 %) carnivores. This is of special interest, given that in the other groups carnivores are rarely represented and the study of GK in this particular (maybe unexpected) group could be key to understand better the evolution and function of this enzyme. In this sense, while 58 % are mono-species (rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss), other fish such as carps or sea breams are quite well represented. From a phylogenic point of view, the most-clear group represents the cyprinids (omnivores), while salmonids and sparids (both carnivorous) appear quite far from each other.
Both reptiles and amphibians have been very rarely approached as models for GK studies, except for Xenopus, which was used for rodent and human studies. Other than this, GK activity has been characterised at the biochemical level in a few species (Table 1), while molecular information is just limited to Xenopus (Fig. 3).
No existence of glucokinase in fish: a (false) hypothesis to explain poor dietary carbohydrate use in carnivorous fish
Unlike mammals, glucose appears to be a minor energy fuel in fish( Reference Moon 191 – Reference Polakof, Panserat and Soengas 193 ). Although many tissues (heart, brain and kidney) are highly glycolytic tissues, in the absence of dietary carbohydrates, protein and lipids are oxidised quickly and efficiently to provide the energy required to cover needs( Reference Polakof, Panserat and Soengas 193 , Reference Cowey, Walton, Halver and Halver 194 ). Thus, oral or intraperitoneal administration of glucose or consumption of food rich in digestible carbohydrates lead to the appearance of a prolonged postprandial hyperglycaemia in rainbow trout up to 17 mm over 24 h (‘normal’ glycaemia is about 4–5 mm)( Reference Hemre, Mommsen and Krogdahl 192 , Reference Polakof, Panserat and Soengas 193 , Reference Hemre, Torrissen and Krogdahl 195 , Reference Wilson 196 ). Studies have shown that there are differences for glucose tolerance tests between fish species; between carnivorous salmonids (low tolerance) and omnivorous cyprinids (tolerant); between coldwater fish and warmwater fish( Reference Polakof, Panserat and Soengas 193 , Reference Wilson 196 ). This observation is really linked to the fact that fish are the largest group of vertebrates (25 000 species). In this section, we will try to give the name of the species in order to be more precise in our review.
Some authors proposed 20 years ago a hypothesis that could explain the poor glycaemic control observed in some teleosts: it was the inability of fish to efficiently phosphorylate glucose to glucose-6-phosphate, a reaction catalysed by the HK enzyme family. In fish, the high activities of enzymes such as low-K m HK (mainly HK-I) have been described in tissues such as the heart, kidney and brain, but in other tissues (liver, muscle), the data have been less clear( Reference Wilson 196 ). Three hypotheses have been advanced to explain the occurrence of postprandial hyperglycaemia in some species: (i) low glucose phosphorylation by HK in insulin-sensitive tissues such as white muscle (and a poor glucose transport); (ii) a lack of expression of inducible GK in the liver( Reference Wilson 196 ); and (iii) in some species, the amino acids are recognised as molecules as effective as glucose itself to induce insulin secretion( Reference Moon 191 ). This could be explained by a lack of expression of GK in pancreatic β-cells. The absence of GK activity in the livers and pancreas of fish has been contradicted by many different studies from the 1990s up to now in many fish species; the discover of GK in fish is described in the following section.
Characterisation of hepatic glucokinase at biochemical and molecular levels
Proof of the existence of hepatic GK in fish was first described at the level of enzymic activities in the 1990s followed by molecular characterisation of GK mRNA in the 2000s. The first analysis and proof of existence of GK activities in the liver were described by Tranulis et al. ( Reference Tranulis, Dregni and Christophersen 153 ) and Borrebaek et al. ( Reference Borrebaek, Waagbø and Christophersen 197 ) in Atlantic salmon after partial purification of the enzyme: this enzyme had a low affinity for glucose, a molecular mass estimated at 50·7 ± 0·6 kDa, displayed positive cooperativity with respect to glucose and was totally inhibited by a N-acetylglucosamine (a specific GK inhibitor) with a inhibitor constant (K i) of 0·28 mm. The presence of hepatic GK was later confirmed at a biochemical level in different fish species such as rainbow trout, gilthead sea bream, European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax), perch (Perca fluviatilis) and common carp( Reference Panserat, Médale and Blin 164 , Reference Caseras, Metón and Fernández 198 – Reference Enes, Panserat and Kaushik 200 ). In mammals, GK is regulated in vivo by a regulatory protein through a nucleus-to-cytoplasm translocation enhanced by fructose-1-phosphate and counteracted by fructose-6-phosphate; Polakof et al. ( Reference Polakof, Miguez and Soengas 47 ) obtained for the first time the presence of a regulatory-like protein in the liver of rainbow trout, goldfish and common carp, with molecular weight (68 kDa) and kinetics characteristics similar to those described in mammals.
In parallel with these biochemical studies, there were many studies on molecular cloning of the full-length GK complementary DNA in rainbow trout, gilthead sea bream and common carp( Reference Panserat, Blin and Médale 158 , Reference Caseras, Metón and Fernández 198 ). Compared with mammals, the amino acid deduced sequences were highly similar to those of mammals (more than 80 %), suggesting strongly the existence of GK genes in fish with GK-specific amino acid signatures (Fig. 3). An interesting study searched fish HK genes (mRNA) in zebrafish by BLAST (Basic Local Alignment Search Tool) analysis( Reference González-Álvarez, Ortega-Cuellar and Hernández-Mendoza 201 ); the authors determined their expression in liver, muscle, brain and heart; measured their response to fasting and glucose administration; and performed homology sequencing studies to glimpse their evolutionary history. The study also suggested strongly the presence of GK genes in fish.
Nutritional regulation of hepatic glucokinase
Regulation of hepatic glucokinase by dietary carbohydrates
As already explained, there is no need for dietary carbohydrates for many of the studied fish which are located at the high trophic levels (as predators, trophic level between 3 and 4). The induction of hepatic GK after feeding carbohydrates in these fish species, after controversies, has been definitely proved by different studies in distinct carnivorous fish; freshwater fish (such as rainbow trout) and marine fish (sea bass and sea bream)( Reference Panserat, Médale and Blin 164 , Reference Caseras, Metón and Fernández 198 , Reference Enes, Panserat and Kaushik 202 – Reference Polakof, Moon and Aguirre 206 ). In rainbow trout, the level of enzymic activities is equivalent to that found in mammals (20 mU/mg protein)( Reference Panserat, Médale and Blin 164 , Reference Soengas, Polakof and Chen 207 , Reference Polakof, Míguez and Moon 208 ). Moreover, this induction of activity is mainly linked to the induction of GK gene expression in the liver. The increased GK gene expression in the liver of carnivorous fish appears after long-term feeding with carbohydrates but also after a single meal with carbohydrates, as shown in rainbow trout( Reference Skiba-Cassy, Panserat and Larquier 204 , Reference Panserat, Capilla and Gutiérrez 209 , Reference Seiliez, Panserat and Lansard 210 ) (Figs. 3 and 4). As expected, fasted fish have no more GK activities and gene expression. They seem to have no gradual regulation of GK, but more an on–off system linked to the presence or the absence of the carbohydrates. However, the molecular mechanism of this regulation remains to be elucidated, representing one of the greatest challenges in the field. More surprisingly, the induction of GK activity by carbohydrates is lower in omnivorous fish known to utilise carbohydrates well, i.e. common carp( Reference Panserat, Médale and Blin 164 , Reference Capilla, Médale and Panserat 211 ), Indian carp (Catla catla)( Reference Kumar, Sahu and Pal 212 ), silver sea bream (Pagrus auratus)( Reference Leung and Woo 213 ), zebrafish (Danio rerio)( Reference Robison, Drew and Murdoch 214 ), tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus x O. aureus)( Reference Shiau 215 ) and grass carp (Ctenopharyngodon idella)( Reference Gao, Liu and Tian 216 ). This suggests that induction of hepatic GK is not a limited factor to use dietary carbohydrates. GK regulation can depend also of the sources of carbohydrates; indeed, hepatic GK activities were higher in fish fed glucose and the maltose diets than those fed with dextrin and starch( Reference Enes, Sanchez-Gurmaches and Navarro 217 , Reference Enes, Panserat and Kaushik 218 ). The induction of hepatic GK by dietary carbohydrates is very reactive and can increase and decrease very quickly; postprandial analysis of GK expression and activities describe perfectly the postprandial profile of GK after refeeding even with a single meal( Reference Panserat, Capilla and Gutiérrez 209 , Reference Seiliez, Panserat and Lansard 210 , Reference Metón, Caseras and Fernández 219 , Reference Metón, Fernández and Baanante 220 ) (Fig. 5). In another study, the response of the GK gene to dietary carbohydrates varied by sex; indeed, after increased dietary carbohydrate intake, male zebrafish up-regulated genes associated with oxidative metabolism while only female zebrafish up-regulated genes associated with glucose phosphorylation (for example, GK)( Reference Robison, Drew and Murdoch 214 ). Finally, fish being poikilotherms, at high temperature, the induction of hepatic GK expression and activities in gilthead sea bream and European sea bass fed with carbohydrates is stronger( Reference Couto, Enes and Peres 221 – Reference Enes, Panserat and Kaushik 223 ), showing interaction between nutrition and temperature in fish.
Regulation of hepatic glucokinase expression by dietary proteins and lipids
The effects of macronutrients other than carbohydrates on hepatic GK have also been studied in fish when investigating if dietary proteins or dietary lipids can play a role in hepatic GK regulation. In fish fed with carbohydrates, it has been shown that high levels of dietary proteins or dietary lipids are associated with a decrease of glucose homeostasis. However, the negative effect of high levels of proteins or lipids on glucose tolerance is not linked to a decrease in GK expression and activities (in contrast to the enzymes in gluconeogenesis and lipogenesis which are up- and down-regulated, respectively)( Reference Panserat, Perrin and Kaushik 224 – Reference Kirchner, Kaushik and Panserat 227 ). Finally, the regulation in vivo by the quality of dietary lipids (different level of highly unsaturated fatty acids, i.e. DHA) and dietary proteins (different levels of target amino acids such as glutamate, alanine and aspartate) also did not seem to affect dramatically GK expression and activities( Reference Tapia-Salazar, Bureau and Panserat 228 , Reference Kirchner, Kaushik and Panserat 229 ). All these data suggest that hepatic GK is mainly regulated by dietary carbohydrates also in (carnivorous) fish (Table 2).
Nutritional regulation of hepatic glucokinase expression in fish larvae
The nutritional metabolism at first feeding has been analysed also in fish larvae/alevins. In most fish species, there is a passage between endogenous feeding (using vitellus reserves, naturally poor in carbohydrates) to exogenous feeding after opening of the mouth. Indeed, and intriguingly, the first feeding induces the expression of GK even if the diets are without glucose( Reference Geurden, Aramendi and Zambonino-Infante 230 ). Moreover, if the fish larvae/alevins are fed with carbohydrates, there is significantly higher GK gene expression, showing that the regulation of GK by levels of carbohydrates occurs very early in the life of fish such as common carp and rainbow trout( Reference Geurden, Aramendi and Zambonino-Infante 230 , Reference Panserat, Fontagné and Bergot 231 ). The response of GK to nutrition occurs very early in the life of fish.
Particular case of glucokinase regulation by alternative diets recently developed for aquaculture
For the development of sustainable aquaculture, there is an urgent need for the development of alternative plant diets (composed of plant proteins and vegetable oils) in order to replace the usual ingredients of fish oil and fishmeal in inert diets( Reference Naylor, Hardy and Bureau 232 ). Many of these diets are without carbohydrates even if they are plant-based diets. Globally and, as expected, due to the low level of carbohydrates in the new diets, no drastic differences concerning GK have been described between fish (rainbow trout, gilthead sea bream, Atlantic salmon) fed with the different diets( Reference Gómez-Requeni, Mingarro and Kirchner 233 – Reference Sissener, Hemre and Espe 236 ).
Finally, the GK enzyme seems to be nutritionally regulated (mainly by carbohydrates) as in mammals. The following section will detail the nutritional factors (through nutrients directly or through nutritional hormones) that can regulate GK enzyme expression in fish.
Mechanisms of nutritional regulation of hepatic glucokinase in fish: insulin, glucose and amino acids
In order to better understand the molecular mechanisms for the regulation of hepatic GK in fish, some additional analysis have been performed using in vivo and in vitro approaches mainly in rainbow trout and gilthead sea bream. After intraperitoneal injection of glucose, we observed significant GK induction at the molecular level in rainbow trout( Reference Polakof, Skiba-Cassy and Choubert 237 , Reference Plagnes-Juan, Lansard and Seiliez 238 ). On the other hand, injection of insulin in rainbow trout surprisingly reduced the level of GK gene expression in contrast to mammals and birds, even though insulin has a clear hypoglycaemic mammalian-type effect( Reference Enes, Sanchez-Gurmaches and Navarro 217 , Reference Polakof, Skiba-Cassy and Choubert 237 , Reference Plagnes-Juan, Lansard and Seiliez 238 ). These data were confirmed using micro-osmotic pumps with insulin; the chronic infusion of insulin reduced also the level of GK mRNA( Reference Polakof, Skiba-Cassy and Choubert 237 ). Using rainbow trout hepatocytes, the same antagonist results of glucose and insulin on GK gene expression have been also shown. All these data strongly suggest that hepatic GK expression in rainbow trout is not insulin dependent but glucose dependent; these data are clearly different from what is observed in mammals and birds (see previous section). Hepatic GK in rainbow trout could thus be included in the category of glucose-responsive genes. Because insulin secretion is not dependent on the type of diet (diets without carbohydrates also induce insulin secretion), we can understand why hepatic GK is induced only in presence of carbohydrates in rainbow trout. However, data in fish can be discordant and GK gene expression in gilthead sea bream (also a carnivorous fish) seems to be insulin dependent. Indeed, in hepatocytes of gilthead sea bream, some transcriptional factors have been located in the promoters of GK genes and seem to be functional; the specificity protein Sp1, specificity protein Sp3 and sterol regulatory element-binding protein-1a (Srebp1a) play a role in the induction of GK expression by insulin( Reference Egea, Meton and Baanante 239 , Reference Egea, Metón and Córdoba 240 ). In conclusion, further studies on mechanisms for GK regulation by nutrients are needed to have a better understanding of the function of GK in fish.
Nutritional regulation of extra-hepatic glucokinase (intestine, pancreas and hypothalamus) in fish
GK is expressed in extrahepatic tissues in fish as in mammals. The function of GK protein in these tissues is not to convert excess glucose to glycogen or lipids (through lipogenesis) as in the liver but more to act as a glucose sensor to help the organism regulate glucose homeostasis( Reference Polakof, Panserat and Soengas 193 ). Key to the maintenance of glucose homeostasis in animals is the existence of sensors located in different parts of the body that continuously monitor blood glucose concentration. The molecular basis for the glucose detection is located mainly in pancreatic β-cells and in neurons excited by glucose found in the septum, amygdale, striatum, cortex, hindbrain and hypothalamus. This is the same picture in fish (even those carnivorous) described below( Reference Polakof, Panserat and Soengas 193 ). We will not detail here other factors than nutrients (such as leptin, ghrelin, days/night variation) that can also modify the glucosensing actors in fish (and GK) but are not directly linked to nutritional regulation (thus being out of the scoop of the present review).
Expression of glucokinase in β-pancreas of fish and its regulation by feeding
Several studies have demonstrated the presence of glucosensor actors in β-pancreatic cells in different fish species. The characterisation of a GK protein in fish was performed in the pancreas of fish almost at the same time as in the liver. Indeed, in halibut Brockmann bodies (i.e. masses of pancreatic endocrine cells in some fish species), GK activity was highlighted for the first time by Tranulis et al. ( Reference Tranulis, Christophersen and Borrebaek 241 ) using enzymic data: with increasing glucose concentrations, the enzyme activity showed a GK-like sigmoidal saturation curve. Moreover, N-acetyl-glucosamine inhibited the enzyme competitively against glucose with an inhibitor constant (K i) of 0.26 mm. The existence and induction of a GK enzyme in the pancreas have been described linked to the fasting–refeeding transition( Reference Soengas, Polakof and Chen 207 ). GK activities in the pancreas are up-regulated by the intake of carbohydrates or intraperitoneal glucose injection( Reference Polakof, Míguez and Moon 208 , Reference Polakof, Míguez and Soengas 242 – Reference Polakof, Panserat and Plagnes-Juan 244 ). Moreover, pancreatic GK activities and gene expression (but to a smaller extent) are under the (positive) control of glucose( Reference Polakof, Míguez and Moon 208 ), as in mammals. The key role of GK as a metabolic signal to initiate insulin secretion has been investigated using in vitro approaches( Reference Polakof, Míguez and Soengas 245 ). Even though all these data suggest strongly a key role played by pancreatic GK in insulin secretion in fish, there is for the moment no direct evidence linking changes in this enzyme with hormone secretion in fish.
Expression of glucokinase in brain (hypothalamus) and intestine and its regulation by feeding
Many of the studies of GK in the brain have been performed in rainbow trout by Soengas's team. First, GK protein has been localised in different areas of the brain in rainbow trout( Reference Polakof, Miguez and Soengas 47 ): GK activity, expression and immunoreactivity were found in the hypothalamus and hindbrain of rainbow trout where they were related to food intake regulation and glucose homeostasis. The activity and expression of GK were increased in the hypothalamus and hindbrain of rainbow trout in the presence of hyperglycaemia (after carbohydrate intake or glucose administration)( Reference Polakof, Míguez and Moon 208 , Reference Polakof, Míguez and Soengas 242 ), confirming that GK in the brain can also be a glucose sensor in fish. This GK activation in the brain could be related to modulation of the decrease in food intake with hyperglycaemia in fish( Reference Soengas, Polakof and Chen 207 , Reference Polakof, Míguez and Soengas 242 , Reference Polakof, Míguez and Soengas 243 ), as in mammals. However, no direct evidence exists. Finally, GK in the brain can be very important for the counter-regulation of hypoglycaemia( Reference Polakof and Soengas 246 ) through vagal and sympathetic outflow to the level of glucose production in the liver. This relationship between GK in the brain and the regulation of hepatic glucose production needs further studies in fish.
Glucosensing capacities are important in gastrointestinal tract cells in mammals using the same actors as those described in the pancreas. GK transcripts have been detected in enterocytes and enteroendocrine cells( Reference Polakof, Alvarez and Soengas 247 ). These data together with the fact that GK gene expression and activities were enhanced in the midgut of hyperglycaemic trout constituted the first evidence for a glucosensing function in enteroendocrine cells of the gut of rainbow trout.
Conclusions and perspectives
Given the increasing epidemic of diabetes and other metabolic-related diseases in Western countries, an important part of the scientific community has focused its attention on GK, the gene of which has even been called the ‘diabetic gene’( Reference Iynedjian 4 ). However, while the interest in activating GK using a pharmacological approach (the so-called GKA( Reference Matschinsky, Zelent and Doliba 248 )) increases, information about the nutritional role and regulation of this enzyme remains paradoxically (taking into account the nutritional impact on diabetes and obesity incidence) almost unknown. In this sense, maybe the most relevant new information about human GK is the recent genome-wide association studies( Reference Perez-Martinez, Garcia-Rios and Delgado-Lista 99 ), given that some of them have already reported polymorphisms and alleles concerning GK and GKRP that strongly suggest that these protein play a strong role in glucose homeostasis. Further, this opens the door to a new generation of nutritional interventions based on the idea that clusters exist in human populations regarding response to diet. This idea, linked to the new personalised nutrition programmes, should improve in the coming years our knowledge about the nutritional role of GK in humans. On the other hand, and based on the huge amount of data obtained from laboratory animal models (mostly rodents) we know today that the nutritional regulation of GK is of utmost importance. Thus, HF feeding in rodents results in an important reduction in the functionality of the enzyme at all the studied levels and in both the liver and pancreas. This leads in the liver to reduced glucose phosphorylation and capacity to store the glucose excess as glycogen with the concomitant associated glucose intolerance. At the pancreatic level, HF feeding reduces the expression of the enzyme and other components of the glucosensing system, resulting in impaired glucose-induced insulin secretion. Unfortunately, no studies in human subjects have addressed this problem and we do not know the impact of HF consumption in the current human population on GK. The other major dietary actor on GK regulation is fructose. This pentose is known to play a role in the GK–GKRP interaction and, based on this, the first studies in rodents have shown that under low fructose intake the release of GK from the GK–GKRP complex results in increased GK activity and hepatic glucose uptake. However, while this has also been demonstrated in human subjects in the very short term, longer studies do not support this idea. The deleterious effect of high fructose feeding in animal models, yet not totally demonstrated in human subjects, is well known today and given the high fructose consumption in the Western countries these days a more deep analysis of high dietary fructose intake on GK is strongly recommended. As a whole, taking into account the increased consumption of diets with high contents of fat and fructose the long-term impact of this kind of diet on human GK and its role in the loss of glucose tolerance certainly merit further studies.
Finally, the other area of interest concerning the nutritional regulation of GK is that of the species of interest for humans, including companion animals and livestock:
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(1) Concerning the first group, cats are the most affected species, given that their current diets are too high in carbohydrates for this carnivorous species and that they have a very ‘lazy’ and non-abundant GK. In this case, the HC content seems to not be adapted to the nutritional nature of this species, which has been associated with a high prevalence of obesity and diabetes in domestic cats given the inability to clear properly the glucose excursions after a HC meal. Strategies to induce this enzyme in felines or more adapted diets seem to be the better ways to alleviate this problem.
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(2) The other group of animals consists of the farm species. However, the approach does not seem to be the same for ruminant and single-stomached species, given that in the first case the reliance on glucose is minimal and then the absence or very low activity of GK would be justified. In the second case very little information is available, but in those studies in which a nutritional component was present it seems that the role of GK would be worth exploring. Without doubt, more studies are needed in mammalian species such as horses or pigs. In the fish group, it is puzzling and exciting that carnivorous fish fed naturally only with dietary proteins and dietary lipids and without carbohydrates have conserved the mammalian-type nutritional regulation of GK by carbohydrates (except for the insulin-dependent regulation). Because the GK enzyme is mainly known up to now to sense excess glucose in the pancreas and store excess glucose in the liver (after carbohydrate intake), the conservation of GK in carnivorous fish suggests that GK in these animals can play major roles in life probably not only linked to dietary glucose. Indeed, there are other GK-expressing cells of the body that include central nervous system neurons, enteroendocrine cells and the anterior pituitary. All these GK-positive cells also express a wide range of G-protein-coupled nutrient receptors (including the amino acid-sensitive Ca receptor, receptors for NEFA and for sweet taste); this colocalisation suggests that GK operates synergistically (or even permissively) with such nutrient receptors( Reference Matschinsky 7 ). Further studies are thus needed to clarify the function of GK in carnivorous fish. Finally, knowledge relative to GK is much less developed in avian than in fish or mammalian species, mainly due to long-lasting controversies about the presence itself of GK. However, we know now that GK (mRNA, protein and activity) is present in the liver of some avian species and that it is an inducible enzyme as in mammals. GK mRNA and protein are also present in the chicken pancreas. Chicken and duck liver GK are insulin dependent (as in mammals but contrary to most fish species) and contribute to glucose storage (glycogen, lipids) or ATP synthesis as extensively described in mammals and fish. Liver GK activity reported in avian species is relatively low as compared with most fish or mammal species; GK activation strongly decreased plasma glucose, which suggests that low liver GK activity may be involved in the high plasma glucose levels that characterise birds. In addition, a role of GK in glucose intolerance is suggested in a carnivorous species (owl) compared with a granivorous one (chicken). Glucose intolerance is also observed in cats (strict carnivorous mammal species lacking GK), whereas induction of hepatic GK does not seem to be a limited factor to use dietary carbohydrates in fish species. Finally, many domains remain still unexplored in birds including the effects of proteins and lipids on liver GK enzyme and their interplay with carbohydrates in the diet, the developmental regulation of hepatic GK, the presence of extra-hepatic GK (intestine, pancreas and brain) and its nutritional regulation. Involvement of GK in the variations of plasma glucose levels observed under genetic and nutritional factors may also be a relevant question for poultry production.
Acknowledgements
The present review was supported by grants from the French National Institute for Agricultural Research (INRA-PHASE research department), the French National Research Agency (no. ANR-08-JCJC-0025), the ‘Conseil Regional d'Aquitaine’, the interprofessional committee of ‘Foie gras’, and the European Commission (Fisheries Agricultural and Agro-Industrial Research, Contract FAIR-no. CT95-0174; FAIR-no. QLK5-2000-30068, ‘Perspectives of Plant Protein Use in Aquaculture’ (PEPPA); and FAIR-no. Q5RS-2000-30058, ‘Researching Alternatives to Fish Oils in Aquaculture’ (RAFOA), and the contract no. 016249-2, ‘Sustainable Aquafeeds to Maximise the Health Benefits of Farmed Fish for Consumers’ (AQUAMAX)).
All the authors have contributed to the writing and the revision of the text and have approved the final version.
There are no conflicts of interest to declare