Can someone make sense of this? Does it seem to indicate that the EGCG suppresses testosterone therefore suppressing DHT?
British Journal of Pharmacology (2003) 140, 487−499. doi: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0705460
Published online 26 August 2003
Interactions of androgens, green tea catechins and the antiandrogen flutamide with the external glucose-binding site of the human erythrocyte glucose transporter GLUT1
Richard J Naftalin1, Iram Afzal1, Philip Cunningham2, Mansur Halai1, Clare Ross1, Naguib Salleh1,3 and Stuart R Milligan3
1New Hunt's House, King's College London, Guys Campus, London SE1 1UL
2Computing Department, King's College London, Guys Campus, London SE1 1UL
3Physiology Group, Centres for Vascular Biology and Medicine, and Endocrinology Group, New Hunt's House, King's College London, Guys Campus, London SE1 1UL
Correspondence: Richard J. Naftalin, New Hunt's House, King's College London, Guys Campus, London SE1 1UL. E-mail: richard.Naftalin@kcl.ac.uk
Received 06 March 2003; Revised 19 June 2003; Accepted 17 July 2003; Published online 26 August 2003.
Top of pageAbstract
This study investigates the effects of androgens, the antiandrogen flutamide and green tea catechins on glucose transport inhibition in human erythrocytes. These effects may relate to the antidiabetogenic effects of green tea.
Testosterone, 4-androstene-3,17-dione, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and DHEA-3-acetate inhibit glucose exit from human erythrocytes with half-maximal inhibitions (Ki) of 39.28.9, 29.63.7, 48.110.2 and 4.80.98 M, respectively. The antiandrogen flutamide competitively relieves these inhibitions and of phloretin. Dehydrotestosterone has no effect on glucose transport, indicating the differences between androgen interaction with GLUT1 and human androgen receptor (hAR).
Green tea catechins also inhibit glucose exit from erythrocytes. Epicatechin 3-gallate (ECG) has a Ki ECG of 0.140.01 M, and epigallocatechin 3-gallate (EGCG) has a Ki EGCG of 0.970.13 M. Flutamide reverses these effects.
Androgen-screening tests show that the green tea catechins do not act genomically. The high affinities of ECG and EGCG for GLUT1 indicate that this might be their physiological site of action.
There are sequence homologies between GLUT1 and the ligand-binding domain (LBD) of hAR containing the amino-acid triads Arg 126, Thr 30 and Asn 288, and Arg 126, Thr 30 and Asn 29, with similar 3D topology to the polar groups binding 3-keto and 17- OH steroid groups in hAR LBD. These triads are appropriately sited for competitive inhibition of glucose import at the external opening of the hydrophilic pore traversing GLUT1.
Keywords: Glucose transport, androgens, green tea catechins, flutamide, GLUT1
Abbreviations: DHEA, dehydroepiandrosterone; DHT, 5--dihydrotestosterone; ECG, epicatechin 3-gallate; EGCG, epigallocatechin 3-gallate; GLUT1, glucose transporter protein 1; G6PD, glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase; hAR, human androgen receptor; Km(ic), Km of glucose binding to external site infinite cis; Km (ic glucose/test), Ki of the testosterone-dependent reduction of glucose affinity at external site; LBD, ligand-binding domain; PBS, phosphate-buffered saline; TMs, helical transmembrane domains
Top of pageIntroduction
Androgens are known to inhibit glucose transport in human erythrocytes (Lacko et al., 1975; Krupka & Devés, 1980; May & Danzo, 1988). Androgens, for example, testosterone, also produce a number of clinical effects that are consistent with the inhibition of glucose transport in peripheral tissues (Woodard et al., 1981). Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) is an androgen secreted in relatively large amounts by the adrenal, and is used as a nutritional supplement. DHEA and other androgens, for example, DHEA, epiandrosterone and DHEA 3 −sulphate, are known to be uncompetitive antagonists of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) (Gordon et al., 1995). DHEA inhibits growth and induces apoptosis in BV-2 cells in the absence of glucose, but these effects are reversed by the addition of glucose (5−20 mM) to the growth medium (Yang et al., 2000). These inhibitions are independent of DHEA inhibition of G6PD (Biaglow et al., 2000; Yang et al., 2002). It is unclear as to whether DHEA exerts a significant inhibition of glucose transport in vivo.
Low insulin sensitivity is commonly found in congenital adrenal hyperplasia, and in polycystic ovarian disease. Both conditions lead to testosterone hypersecretion, and are often accompanied by hypersecretion of insulin, hyperlipidaemia and hirsuitism (Speiser et al., 1992; Livingstone and Collison, 2002). These clinical signs improve after treatment with the antiandrogen flutamide (Ibanez et al., 2000). Flutamide is a nonsteroidal antiandrogen, known to antagonise testosterone binding to the androgen receptor (Benten et al., 1999; McDonald et al., 2000; Poujol et al., 2000). It is used mainly in the treatment of androgen-sensitive prostatic adenomas, some of which regress after treatment (Alberts & Blute, 2001).
Although the main actions of androgens are thought to be via a specific nuclear receptor that acts on DNA, nongenomic actions of androgens are also recognised. Membrane-bound androgen receptors have been reported in the brain, macrophages and aorta (Benten et al., 1999; Perusquia & Villalon, 1999; Zhu et al., 1999; Matias et al., 2000). They are thought to activate Ca2+-dependent cell signalling pathways (Perusquia & Villalon, 1999). Some of these nongenomic effects are also sensitive to flutamide (Zhu et al., 1999), others not (Benten et al., 1999; Perusquia & Villalon, 1999).
We decided to investigate if the antiandrogen flutamide antagonises androgen-sensitive inhibition of glucose transport in erythrocytes. We have also explored the structure−affinity relationships of a number of androgens on glucose transport. Although the physiological concentrations of circulating androgens are lower than those used here, much higher local concentrations 100 can occur in the ovary and testis (Jarow et al., 2001; Burger, 2002). The reported nongenomic effects of androgens on Ca2+ channels occur in the 10−100 M range of androgens (Benten et al., 1999; Perusquia & Villalon, 1999).
Several reports indicate that the green tea polyphenols, albeit at very high concentrations, for example, epicatechin gallate, reduce the intestinal absorption of sugars via the Na+-dependent glucose transporter, reduce glycosuria in diabetics (Ki epicatechin gallate=0.38 mM) (Kobayashi et al., 2000), and reduce the activation of enzymes causing gluconeogenesis (Waltner-Law et al., 2002). Green tea polyphenols have also been reported to reduce prostatic enlargement in benign prostatitis, and in testosterone-dependent metastatic prostatic tumours in a mouse model (Gupta et al., 2001). Here we show that the whole green tea extract and the major catechin gallates present in green tea inhibit glucose transport in erythrocytes in vitro at the same site as androgens, at concentrations equivalent to those found in tea drinkers' plasma.
Additionally, as the effects of androgens on glucose transport show high specificity, the possibility that there are sequence homologies between GLUT1 and the androgen receptor has also been explored similarly to the way in which we investigated oestrogen−GLUT1 interactions (Afzal et al., 2002). Here we show that there are good matches in the outside-facing regions of GLUT1 with the ligand-binding domain (LBD) of the androgen receptor. These may provide a structural basis for the observed interactions between androgens and the glucose transporter. These findings suggest that many of the membrane-associated nongenomic effects of androgens may occur at mimetic sites to the androgen receptor ligand-binding domain (hAR LBD), rather than to the receptor itself.
Top of pageMethods
Solutions
The erythrocyte suspension medium was phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) adjusted to pH 7.4. D-glucose, phloretin, flutamide, cyproterone acetate, testosterone, dihydrotestosterone, 5-androstan-17-ol-3-one, 5-androstan-3, 17-diol, epiandrosterone (5-androstan-3-ol-17-one), androsterone (5-androstan-3-ol-17-one) (androstenedione 4-androstene-3, 17-dione), etiocholano-3-ol-17-one, dehydroepiandrosterone-3-acetate (DHEA acetate) and dehydroepiandrosterone-3-sulphate (DHEA sulphate), and all the pure catechins were obtained from Sigma Chemicals Ltd, Poole, Dorset. DHEA and 3, 17-dihydroxyandrostenediol were purchased from Steraloids, Inc. (Newport, Rhode Island 02840, U.S.A.). Green tea extract contains, in percent g g-1 extract, 51.94% epigallocatechin gallate, 19.45% epicatechin gallate, 4.99% epicatechin, 4.62% epigallocatechin, 85.4% total catechins, and 99.2% tea polyphenols, with less than 0.1% caffeine. The extracts were analysed at 30°C by HPLC, mobile phase, water : methanol : phosphoric acid=27 : 78 : 0.1, using a UV absorption detector at 280 nm. The extracts were obtained as a gift from Mr Tang Ping Yuan, China Herb Company, 210−504, 4th District, Fuxiang Nan, Yuyao, Zhejiang, 315400, China, http://www.china-tea.com, E-mail: Chinaherb@hotmail.com. A recent report shows that the Ki of caffeine-dependent inhibition of 3-O-methyl-glucose uptake into normal human red cells is 1.5 mM (Ho et al., 2001). This means that the very low xanthine content of the green tea extracts used in this study can be excluded as possible inhibitors of glucose transport; hence, the only inhibitors of glucose transport in green tea extract are catechins. The low caffeine content of the tea extract permits us to exclude this as a possible source of inhibition.
Cells
Fresh human erythrocytes were obtained by venepuncture, and then washed three times in isotonic PBS by repeated centrifugation and resuspension. The cells were then suspended in PBS solutions with 100 mM D-glucose added, final haematocrit 10%, and incubated for at least 2 h at 37°C. The cells were then recentrifuged in 100 mM D-glucose saline to obtain a thick cell suspension ca. 95% haematocrit. This cell suspension was kept at 4°C until required. Cells were always used within 72 h of collection. Aliquots of prewarmed cells (7.5 l) were added to a 1 cm2 fluorescence cuvette containing 3 ml of saline solution, which had been prewarmed to 24°C. The cell suspensions were mixed vigorously, and photometric monitoring was started within 5 s of mixing.
Photometric monitoring: glucose exit
The exit rates of D-glucose from cells were monitored photometrically using a Hitachi 2000-F fluorescence spectrometer with a temperature-controlled and monitored cuvette; Eex=Eem=650 nm. The output was recorded and stored with a MacLab 2e (AD Instruments). Data were collected at a rate of 0.33−5 points s-1, depending on the time course of exit; each run consisted of 200−2000 data points. The photometric response was found to be approximately linear for osmotic perturbations50 mM NaCl. In the absence of glucose, an osmotic change results in a step change in output, which remains stationary for at least 30 min, indicating that there is no secondary cause of volume change other than sugar movement.
The time courses of D-glucose exit were fitted to monoexponential curves of the form yt=A{1-B exp (Ct)}, using Kaleidagraph 3.6 (Synergy Software), where the voltage yt was recorded at elapsed time (ts); the coefficient A is a scaling factor that fits the curves to the voltage signal yt, and B and C are the monoexponential coefficients. These fits gave correlation coefficients r>0.98, and standard errors of the means of the rate coefficients. Where the net glucose rate was measured in solutions containing glucose at concentrations >0 mM, the rate coefficient C was multiplied by the factor D=(100-[glucose]ext mM)/100 to account for the decreased extent of the net decrease in intracellular glucose rate; that is, yt=A{1-B exp(DCt)}. Strictly, coefficient A is redundant, but it permits the curve-fitting programme to operate within a narrow range of B and C coefficients, and thus to fit the curves without altering the initial coefficient estimates.
In all cases, the cells were exposed to test substances only during the period of glucose exit. Pre-equilibration for 1 h with varying concentrations of testosterone makes no difference to the inhibition of glucose exit. The external androgen concentration is the determinant of the inhibition constant.
Statistics
All the statistical probabilities were estimated from two-tailed Student's t-values for unpaired means. The n values were estimated from the number of degrees of freedom, and all data points were obtained from the means of 3−5 sets of data.
The Ki values for direct inhibitors of glucose exit were obtained by nonlinear regression of the change in the exponential exit rate of glucose exit, C, against the inhibitor concentration [I], using the equation y=VmaxKi/(Ki+[I]), where Ki is the inhibitor concentration giving 50% decrease of the rate of exit obtained in the absence of inhibitor. The regression coefficient is expressed as the means.e.m. Each Ki plot was obtained from the means of glucose exit rates against at least 3−4 inhibitor concentrations, that is, typically 16−20 glucose exit rates were determined per estimate of each Ki. Each Ki estimate was repeated 3−4 times.
Monitoring the affinity of glucose at the external site (infinite cis Km) and the maximal rate of glucose exit (zero-trans Vm)
With nominally zero glucose concentration in the external solution, exit is defined as the zero-trans net exit condition, and monitors the maximal rate of glucose net exit Vm.
To measure the affinity of glucose for the external side of the transporter, the rates of glucose exit were obtained with varying concentrations of glucose in the external solution. The glucose concentration in the external solution that was required to reduce the rate of net glucose exit by 50% is the infinite cis Km. This mode of exit where the inside concentration is fixed (infinite cis), but the rate of exit varied, was first introduced by Sen & Widdas (1962). The Km is obtained by least-squares fit of the equation v=KmVm/(Km+Gex), where Vm is the maximal rate of glucose exit in the uninhibited state, Km is the concentration of glucose in the external solution Gex required to reduce the exit rate to 50% of the uninhibited rate and v=CD (see above). Androgens were also tested to determine whether they alter the affinity of glucose for the external site, for example, (Ki ic). The Ki (ic glucose/test) is obtained by observing the increase in the apparent Km of glucose binding to the external site as a function of testosterone concentration. This was obtained by plotting the apparent Km (ic glucose) versus [testosterone]. The Ki (ic glucose/test) is obtained from the intercept/slopes.e.m. of the linear regression line.
The Ki values for indirect inhibition, for example, the effect of flutamide on testosterone, were obtained by linear regression of the apparent Ki values against the inhibitor concentration [I].
As Kapp=Ki1(1+[I]/Ki2), Ki2 is the concentration of modulator, for example, flutamide, required to raise Ki1 of the primary inhibitor (e.g. testosterone (test)) two-fold. This was obtained from (intercept/slope)s.e.m. of the linear regression line of Kapp versus [I].
Screening for androgen and antiandrogenic activity
Androgenic and antiandrogenic activities were investigated using an androgen-inducible yeast screen (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) expressing the human androgen receptor, and containing expression plasmids carrying androgen-responsive sequences controlling the reporter gene lac-Z. This yeast screen was originally developed in the Genetics Department of Glaxo Wellcome plc (Stevenage, Herts, U.K.), and was a gift from Professor J. Sumpter, Brunel University, U.K. Androgenic activity was determined from the metabolism of chlorophenol red-D-galactopyranoside, by monitoring the absorbance at 540 nm, using 5--dihydrotestosterone (DHT) as a standard. Antiandrogenic activity was determined by the ability of test compounds to block the stimulation of 1.25 10-9 M DHT (Sohoni & Sumpter, 1998). A standard antiandrogen response was obtained by observing the decrease in a half-maximal response to DHT with flutamide. At concentrations above 0.1 mM, catechins were cytotoxic to the yeast expression system; and so no further action of these agents could be demonstrated above these concentrations.
Searching for sequence homologies between the LBD of the androgen receptor and GLUT1
Homologies were sought between sequences close to the LBD of the human androgen receptor (hAR-LBD) primary accession number P10275, and in GLUT1 using the Swissprot database GLUT-1 (SLC2A1) human primary accession number P11166 as follows:
The program FASTA (Pearson & Lipman, 1988) was used to identify and evaluate the partial matches between GLUT1 and sequences in the hAR LBD that were adjacent to the ligand-binding cleft (Weatherman et al., 1999; Matias et al., 2000; Poujol et al., 2000; Singh et al., 2000; Sack et al., 2001; Marhefka et al., 2001). The searches were restricted to regions matching the outside-facing regions of GLUT1, as predicted by the hydropathy plots (Mueckler et al., 1985). This constraint was observed as the kinetic interactions between phloretin, testosterone, androstenedione and flutamide show that these ligands bind exclusively to the glucose import site on the outside of GLUT1. The matches were applied to the 3-D template structure of GLUT-1 (Zuniga et al., 2001). The atomic coordinates and structure factors (code 1JA5) are in the Protein Data Bank, Research Collaboratory for Structural Bioinformatics, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, U.S.A. (http://www.rcsb.org/), and can be viewed with Swiss-Pdb viewer, http://www.expasy.ch/spdbv.
Top of pageResults
Effects of androgens on glucose transport
Several androgens inhibit zero-trans net glucose exit (see Methods) (Table 1 ), as determined by the decreased rates of 100 mM glucose exit from human erythrocytes at 21°C with increasing concentrations of androgens. The Ki for testosterone is 39.28.9 M, androstenedione 29.63.7 M, androsterone 44.02.2 M and DHEA acetate 4.80.98 M. Flutamide also has a weak inhibitor effect on glucose exit flux, Ki=73.411.7 M (Table 1). Although low concentrations of flutamide in the range 0−5 M have negligible effects on glucose exit, these lower concentrations competitively antagonise the inhibitor effects of androstenedione, androsterone, testosterone and DHEA acetate on glucose exit (Table 1). This is evident from the increases in the apparent Ki's of these androgens in the presence of increasing concentrations of flutamide, and the increased rates of glucose exit seen in the presence of both flutamide and androgens compared with the rates seen with androgen alone (Figure 1a, b). For example, with flutamide=0 M, the Ki (testosterone) is 39.28.9 M; with flutamide=0.25 M, the Ki (testosterone) is 52.111.3 M; with flutamide=0.5 M, the Ki (testosterone) is 121.029.6 M and with flutamide=1 M, the Ki (testosterone)= 141.334.5 M. Similarly, the Ki (androstenedione) increases from 29.63.7 M in the absence of flutamide to 119.627.7 M, with 0.5 M flutamide present. The Ki's of flutamide against testosterone Ki (test/Flut)=0.350.17 M and against androstenedione Ki (and/Flut)=0.140.05 M are similar (n.s.) (Table 1).
Figure 1.
(a) Effect of flutamide on testosterone-induced inhibition of glucose exit from erythrocytes. Inhibitions of glucose exit by testosterone from human erythrocytes loaded with 100 mM glucose into glucose-free isotonic PBS at 21°C and the effects of flutamide on this inhibition. The rates are estimated by monoexponential fitting, as described in Methods. The lines drawn through the points estimate the Ki as follows: y=VmKi/(I+Ki), where y is the rate of glucose exit (s-1), Vm is the maximal rate of glucose exit with zero inhibitor present and Ki is the concentration of inhibitor that inhibits the rate by 50%. The best-fit lines shown in the figure obtained using the fitting procedures in Kaleidagraph 3.5 (Synergy Systems). The lines show the effects of varying concentrations of testosterone in the absence and presence of flutamide at different concentrations. The Ki (testosterone) increases as the concentration of flutamide is increased; with flutamide=0 M, the Ki (testosterone) is 39.28.9−52.111.3 M; with flutamide=0.25 M, the Ki (testosterone) increases to 52.111.3 M; with flutamide=0.5 M the Ki (testosterone) is 121.029.6 M; and with flutamide=1 M, the Ki (testosterone) is 141.334.5 M. Each data point collected is the average of 3−5 separate fluxes and was repeated at least 4 times i.e. 12−16 fluxes per point. The data shown are from the averaged fluxes of all experiments collected. (b) Comparison of the effects of flutamide on androstenedione and testosterone induced inhibition of glucose exit from erythrocytes. The replots of the Ki's of androstenedione and testosterone with increasing concentrations of flutamide obtained in (b) (androstenedione exit data are not shown) are fitted to a linear regression line and the Ki of flutamide (i.e. the concentration of flutamide that increases the Ki of androstenedione and testosterone 2 ) is estimated from the intercept/slope.
Full figure and legend (78K)
Table 1 - Structure and affinities of androgens to the human erythrocyte glucose transporter.
Full table ()
Infinite cis exit
Glucose exit experiments were carried out where the glucose concentration in the external solution [Gex] was varied according to the technique first employed by Sen & Widdas (1962). The concentration of glucose in this external solution that reduces the rate of glucose exit to half the uninhibited rate measures the affinity of glucose for the external surface 'Sen−Widdas Km'; see Methods (Km ic exit=1.20.3 mM).
Androgens reduce the affinity of glucose, as is apparent from the androgen-dependent increases in the Km of glucose at the external surface. This is consistent with the inhibitor acting on glucose exit at the external surface of the transporter, for example, testosterone (Ki ic/test=42.80.8 M). This Ki is indistinguishable from the Ki zero-trans/test for inhibition of Vm of net glucose exit at an initial intracellular [glucose]=100 mM. This competitive inhibitor effect of testosterone on the infinite-cis Km is also relieved by flutamide (Ki ic test/Flut=1.10.2 M) (Table 1). Competitive inhibition of glucose binding to the external side of the glucose transport system by testosterone is corroborative evidence that it binds externally.
Comparison of the effects of flutamide on phloretin-, genistein- and oestradiol-induced inhibitions of glucose exit
Additional evidence that flutamide acts at the external site of the glucose transporter is provided by the experiment showing that it antagonises phloretin action (Table 1). The apparent Ki of phloretin inhibition of zero-trans glucose exit is shifted from 0.480.07 M with zero flutamide to 1.100.18 M with 2 M flutamide present (P<0.001). The Ki (phloretin/Flut) is 1.750.22 M (Table 1). Although this Ki (phloretin/Flut) is 5−10 higher than the Ki (test/Flut) for flutamide-dependent reversal of testosterone, or androstenedione inhibition of zero-trans net glucose exit, it is similar to the Ki of flutamide antagonism of testosterone action on infinite-cis glucose exit (see Table 1). This demonstrates that the drug acts at the external face of the transporter, possibly at a site adjacent to the phloretin-binding site (LeFevre & Marshall, 1959) (see below). Further evidence for this view is provided by the finding that low concentrations of phloretin competitively inhibit testosterone action on glucose exit (Table 1). Phloretin, like flutamide, increases the Ki of testosterone inhibition of zero-trans glucose exit (Ki test/phloretin= 76.310.9 nM) although, unlike flutamide, it also reduces the rate of glucose exit (Figure 2) (Basketter & Widdas, 1978). These findings, together with those described above, indicate that phloretin and testosterone bind to contiguous sites.
Figure 2.
Effects of varying concentrations of phloretin on the apparent Ki (testosterone) on glucose exit. (a) The Ki (testosterone) increases as the concentration of phloretin is increased: with 0 M phloretin, the apparent Ki (testosterone) is 351.6 M; with 100 nM phloretin, Ki (testosterone) is 85.712 M; with 250 nM phloretin, Ki (testosterone) is 13225 M; and with 500 M phloretin, Ki (testosterone) is 28852. Each point is the average of 3−5 separate fluxes and each point at each concentration is the average of three experiments.
Full figure and legend (77K)
Effects of flutamide on oestradiol and genistein-induced inhibition of glucose exit
Flutamide is without effect on either oestradiol, or genistein-induced inhibition of glucose exit (data not shown). These compounds have been shown to act at the inside face of the glucose transporter (Afzal et al., 2002). This signifies that flutamide's inhibitor actions on glucose transport are specific to steroids acting on the outside face of the glucose transporter (see below).
Effects of green tea catechins and flutamide on glucose transport in erythrocytes
Application of a mixed green tea extract to the erythrocyte suspension inhibits zero-trans exit and reduces the affinity of glucose Ki (ic green tea) (Figure 3; Table 2 ). These effects of green tea extract are reversed by flutamide (Ki (green tea/Flut)= 0.650.2 M). The Ki of green tea is obtained on the basis that the average molecular weight of green tea catechins is 500 Da.
Figure 3.
Effects of varying concentrations of green tea extract (estimated average mol wt=500) on zero-trans glucose exit at 21°C in the presence or absence of Flutamide (1.0 M). The Ki of green tea extract on zero-trans net glucose exit from human red cells loaded with 100 mM is obtained as described in Methods. Ki (green tea) is 1.310.11 M and with flutamide (1 M) present, Ki (green tea) is 3.490.76 M. Each point is the average of 3−5 separate fluxes, and each point at each concentration is the average of four experiments.
Full figure and legend (54K)