A model has been proposed for the exofacial configuration of the Glut1 glucose transporter in which eight transmembrane domains form an inner helical bundle stabilized by four outer helices. The role of transmembrane segment 12, predicted to be an outer helix in this hypothetical model, was examined by cysteine-scanning mutagenesis and the substituted cysteine accessibility method using the membrane-impermeant, sulfhydrylspecific reagent, p-chloromercuribenzenesulfonate (pCMBS). A previously characterized functional cysteine-less Glut1 molecule was used to produce 21 Glut1 point mutants by changing each residue along helix 12 to a cysteine residue. These mutants were then expressed in Xenopus oocytes, and their protein levels, functional activities, and sensitivities to pCMBS were determined. Strikingly, in contrast to all nine other predicted Glut1 transmembrane helices that have been previously examined by this method, none of the 21 helix 12 single-cysteine mutants exhibited significant inhibition of specific transport activity. Also unlike most other Glut1 transmembrane domains in which solvent-accessible residues lie along a single face of the helix, mutations in five consecutive residues predicted to lie close to the exofacial face of the membrane resulted in sensitivity to pCMBS-induced transport inhibition. These results suggest that helix 12 plays a passive stabilizing role in the structure of Glut1 and is not directly involved in the transport mechanism. Additionally, the pCMBS data indicate that the predicted exoplasmic end of helix 12 is completely exposed to the external solvent when the transporter is in its exofacial configuration.The transport of glucose across mammalian cell membranes is mediated by proteins produced by the Glut gene family (reviewed in Refs. 1-3), part of the major facilitator superfamily (MFS) 2 that contains several thousand members, present in virtually every organism examined thus far (4). MFS proteins are involved in the transport of a diverse collection of low molecular weight molecules across membranes (5).Glut1 is expressed at its highest known levels in the human erythrocyte and is the only member of the Glut protein family to have been purified (6, 7). It remains one of the most extensively studied and thoroughly characterized members of the MFS (8). Based on analysis of the protein sequence deduced from a human cDNA clone, Glut1 was the first MFS protein predicted to possess 12 transmembrane helices (9), a major feature of most if not all members of this superfamily. A number of experimental observations, most notably a comprehensive glycosylation-scanning mutagenesis study (10), are consistent with this structural prediction. Several of the 12 predicted transmembrane helices are amphipathic, an observation that led to the suggestion that these helices form an exposed cavity in the membrane-buried portion of the protein that participates in the binding and translocation of glucose across the lipid bilayer (9). Hydrogen bond-forming amino acid side chains within the...