Cardiovascular disease, diabetes and cancer have a dramatic impact on modern society, and in great part are related to uptake of cholesterol and sugar. At the start of this project, we still knew surprisingly little about the molecular details of the processes that goes on in this essential part of human basic metabolism. Our work has addressed cholesterol and sugar transport to elucidate the molecular mechanism of cholesterol and sugar uptake in humans and all eukaryotes. It aimed to move the frontiers of the field by shifting the focus to molecular studies in vitro allowing hitherto untried structural and biochemical experiments to be performed.
After the conclusion of the action, we have now shifted the frontiers significantly. We have elucidated the atomic details that pathway for sterol uptake in from lysosomes into the cellular membranes, and helped to pinpoint the mechanisms that govern this process. We have a deep and detailed understanding of sugar uptake, both in humans but also expanding to other eukaryotes, such as plants. The action has generated insights, based on the human sugar uptake system, that can have wide-ranging consequences for our ability model, control and argument sugar uptake in a range of organisms (humans, bacteria, plants).