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1.
The potential role of guanine nucleotide regulatory proteins (G-proteins) in acute insulin regulation of glucose transport was investigated by using bacterial toxins which are known to modify these proteins. Cholera-toxin treatment of isolated rat adipocytes had no effect on either 2-deoxyglucose transport or insulin binding. Pertussis-toxin treatment resulted in an inhibition of both insulin binding and glucose transport. Insulin binding was decreased in pertussis-toxin-treated cells by up to 40%, owing to a lowering of the affinity of the receptor for hormone, with no change in hormone internalization. The dose-response curve for insulin stimulation of glucose transport was strongly shifted to the right by pertussis-toxin treatment [EC50 (half-maximally effective insulin concn.) = 0.31 +/- 0.04 ng/ml in control cells; 2.29 +/- 1.0 in treated cells), whereas cholera toxin had only a small effect (EC50 = 0.47 +/- 0.02 ng/ml). Correcting for the change in hormone binding, pertussis toxin was found to decrease the coupling efficiency of occupied receptors (50% of maximal insulin effect with 928 molecules bound/cell in control and 3418 in treated cells). Pertussis-toxin inhibition of insulin sensitivity was slow in onset, requiring 2-3 h for completion. Under conditions where pertussis-toxin inhibition of insulin sensitivity was maximal, a 41,000 Da protein similar to the alpha subunit of Gi (the inhibitory G-protein) was found to be fully ribosylated. These results are consistent with the concept that pertussis-toxin-sensitive G-protein(s) can modify the insulin-receptor/glucose-transport coupling system.  相似文献   

2.
We have previously shown in primary cultured rat adipocytes that insulin acts at receptor and multiple postreceptor sites to decrease insulin's subsequent ability to stimulate glucose transport. To examine whether D-glucose can regulate glucose transport activity and whether it has a role in insulin-induced insulin resistance, we cultured cells for 24 h in the absence and presence of various glucose and insulin concentrations. After washing cells and allowing the glucose transport system to deactivate, we measured basal and maximally insulin-stimulated 2-deoxyglucose uptake rates (37 degrees C) and cell surface insulin binding (16 degrees C). Alone, incubation with D-glucose had no effect on basal or maximal glucose transport activity, and incubation with insulin, in the absence of glucose, decreased maximal (but not basal) glucose transport rates only 18% at the highest preincubation concentration (50 ng/ml). However, in combination, D-glucose (1-20 mM) markedly enhanced the long-term ability of insulin (1-50 ng/ml) to decrease glucose transport rates in a dose-responsive manner. For example, at 50 ng/ml preincubation insulin concentration, the maximal glucose transport rate fell from 18 to 63%, and the basal uptake rate fell by 89%, as the preincubation D-glucose level was increased from 0 to 20 mM. Moreover, D-glucose more effectively promoted decreases in basal glucose uptake (Ki = 2.2 +/- 0.4 mM) compared with maximal transport rates (Ki = 4.1 +/- 0.4 mM) at all preincubation insulin concentrations (1-50 ng/ml). Similar results were obtained when initial rates of 3-O-methylglucose uptake were used to measure glucose transport. D-glucose, in contrast, did not influence insulin-induced receptor loss. In other studies, D-mannose and D-glucosamine could substitute for D-glucose to promote the insulin-induced changes in glucose transport, but other substrates such as L-glucose, L-arabinase, D-fructose, pyruvate, and maltose were without effect. Also, non-metabolized substrates which competitively inhibit D-glucose uptake (3-O-methylglucose, cytochalasin B) blocked the D-glucose plus insulin effect.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The in vitro effect of glucocorticoid on insulin binding and glucose transport was studied with rat adipocytes. Isolated rat adipocytes were incubated with or without 0.70 microgram/ml (1.9 mumol) of hydrocortisone in TCM 199 medium at 37 degrees C, 5% CO2/95% air (v/v), pH 7.4, for 2, 4, and 8 h, and then fat cell insulin binding and insulin-stimulated 3-O-methylglucose transport were measured. Hydrocortisone did not affect insulin binding in terms of affinity or receptor number. Glucose transport in the absence of insulin was significantly decreased at the incubation time of 2 h and continued to decrease up to 8 h of incubation with hydrocortisone. Decreased insulin sensitivity of glucose transport (i.e., a right-ward shift of the dose response curve) was also demonstrated after 2 h incubation with hydrocortisone, and the ED50 of insulin was maximally increased at 4 h of incubation (0.53 ng/ml for treated vs. 0.22 ng/ml for control cells). Maximal insulin responsiveness was also significantly decreased in treated cells after 8 h incubation with hydrocortisone. When percent maximum glucose transport was expressed relative to receptor-bound insulin, the ED50 values of treated and control cells were 10.5 and 7.2 pg of bound insulin, per 2 X 10(5) cells, respectively. Thus, it was evident that glucocorticoid induced a post-receptor coupling defect in the signal transmission of insulin-receptor complex.  相似文献   

4.
Treatment of primary cultured adipocytes with 20 mM glucose resulted in a progressive increase in specific 125I-insulin binding that began almost immediately (no lag period) and culminated in a 60% increase by 24 h. This effect was dose-dependent (glucose ED50 of 4.6 mM) and mediated by an increase in insulin receptor affinity. Moreover, it appears that glucose modulates insulin receptor affinity through de novo protein synthesis rather than through covalent modification of receptors, since cycloheximide selectively inhibited the glucose-induced increase in insulin binding capacity (ED50 of 360 ng/ml) and restored receptor affinity to control values. Importantly, insulin sensitivity of the glucose transport system was increased by glucose treatment (63%) to an extent comparable with the enhancement in receptor affinity, thus indicating a functional coupling between insulin binding and insulin action. When the long term effects of insulin were assessed (24 h), we found that insulin treatment reduced 125I-insulin binding by greater than 60% by down-regulating the number of cell surface receptors in a dose-dependent manner (insulin ED50 of 7.4 ng/ml). On the basis of these studies, we conclude that 1) insulin binding is subject to dual regulation (glucose controls insulin action by enhancing receptor affinity, whereas insulin controls the number of cell surface receptors); and 2) glucose appears to modulate insulin receptor affinity through the rapid biosynthesis of an affinity regulatory protein.  相似文献   

5.
Vanadate (sodium orthovanadate), an inhibitor of phosphotyrosine phosphatases (PTPs), mimics many of the metabolic actions of insulin in vitro and in vivo. The potential of vanadate to stimulate glucose transport independent of the early steps in insulin signaling prompted us to test its effectiveness in an in vitro model of insulin resistance. In primary rat adipocytes cultured for 18 h in the presence of high glucose (15 mm) and insulin (10(-7) m), sensitivity to insulin-stimulated glucose transport was decreased. In contrast, there was a paradoxical enhanced sensitivity to vanadate of the insulin-resistant cells (EC(50) for control, 325 +/- 7.5 microm; EC(50) for insulin-resistant, 171 +/- 32 microm; p < 0.002). Enhanced sensitivity was also present for vanadate stimulation of insulin receptor kinase activity and autophosphorylation and Akt/protein kinase B Ser-473 phosphorylation consistent with more effective PTP inhibition in the resistant cells. Investigation of this phenomenon revealed that 1) depletion of GSH with buthionine sulfoximine reproduced the enhanced sensitivity to vanadate while preincubation of resistant cells with N-acetylcysteine (NAC) prevented it, 2) intracellular GSH was decreased in resistant cells and normalized by NAC, 3) exposure to high glucose and insulin induced an increase in reactive oxygen species, which was prevented by NAC, 4) EPR (electron paramagnetic resonance) spectroscopy showed a decreased amount of vanadyl (+4) in resistant and buthionine sulfoximine-treated cells, which correlated with decreased GSH and increased vanadate sensitivity, while total vanadium uptake was not altered, and 5) inhibition of recombinant PTP1B in vitro was more sensitive to vanadate (+5) than vanadyl (+4). In conclusion, the paradoxical increased sensitivity to vanadate in hyperglycemia-induced insulin resistant adipocytes is due to oxidative stress and decreased reduction of vanadate (+5) to vanadyl (+4). Thus, sensitivity of PTP inhibition and glucose transport to vanadate is regulated by cellular redox state.  相似文献   

6.
The counter-regulatory effect of adenosine, isoprenaline and selected cyclic AMP analogues on insulin-stimulated 3-O-methylglucose transport and insulin binding were studied in rat fat-cells. Isoprenaline alone had no consistent effect on glucose transport in the presence of maximally effective insulin concentrations. However, it decreased insulin binding by approx. 20% and increased EC50 (concn. giving 50% of maximal stimulation) for insulin from 8 +/- 1 to 17 +/- 2 mu units/ml. Adenosine deaminase (ADA) alone only exerted a slight effect, whereas isoprenaline and ADA in combination consistently decreased the maximal effect of insulin on glucose transport, decreased insulin binding by approx. 30% and markedly decreased insulin-sensitivity (EC50 61 +/- 8 mu units/ml). In cells from pertussis-toxin-treated animals, isoprenaline alone decreased the insulin response by approx. 75%, decreased insulin binding by approx. 45% and caused a marked rightward shift in the dose-response curve for insulin (EC50 103 +/- 34 mu units/ml). The importance of cyclic AMP for these effects was evaluated with the analogue N6-monobutyryl cyclic AMP, which is resistant to hydrolysis by the phosphodiesterase. The importance of phosphodiesterase activation by insulin was studied with 8-bromo cyclic AMP, which is an excellent substrate for this enzyme. N6-Monobutyryl cyclic AMP, in contrast with 8-bromo cyclic AMP, markedly impaired insulin-sensitivity (EC50 approx. 100 mu units/ml). However, the maximal effect of insulin was only slightly attenuated. In conclusion: (1) beta-adrenergic stimulation and cyclic AMP markedly alter insulin-sensitivity, but not responsiveness, mainly through post-receptor perturbations; (2) when cyclic AMP is increased phosphodiesterase activation by insulin is a critical step to elicit insulin action; (3) adenosine modulates the insulin-antagonistic effect of beta-adrenergic stimulation via Ni (inhibitory nucleotide-binding protein) through both cyclic-AMP-dependent and -independent mechanisms.  相似文献   

7.
Previous studies suggested that protein-tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B) antagonizes insulin action by catalyzing dephosphorylation of the insulin receptor (IR) and/or other key proteins in the insulin signaling pathway. In adipose tissue and muscle of obese humans and rodents, PTP1B expression is increased, which led to the hypothesis that PTP1B plays a role in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance. Consistent with this, mice in which the PTP1B gene was disrupted exhibit increased insulin sensitivity. To test whether increased expression of PTP1B in an insulin-sensitive cell type could contribute to insulin resistance, we overexpressed wild-type PTP1B in 3T3L1 adipocytes using adenovirus-mediated gene delivery. PTP1B expression was increased approximately 3-5-fold above endogenous levels at 16 h, approximately 14-fold at 40 h, and approximately 20-fold at 72 h post-transduction. Total protein-tyrosine phosphatase activity was increased by 50% at 16 h, 3-4-fold at 40 h, and 5-6-fold at 72 h post-transduction. Compared with control cells, cells expressing high levels of PTP1B showed a 50-60% decrease in maximally insulin-stimulated tyrosyl phosphorylation of IR and insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) and phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) activity associated with IRS-1 or with phosphotyrosine. Akt phosphorylation and activity were unchanged. Phosphorylation of p42 and p44 MAP kinase (MAPK) was reduced approximately 32%. Overexpression of PTP1B had no effect on basal, submaximally or maximally (100 nm) insulin-stimulated glucose transport or on the EC(50) for transport. Our results suggest that: 1) insulin stimulation of glucose transport in adipocytes requires 相似文献   

8.
Preincubation of adipocytes with insulin (10 ng/ml) stimulated binding of IGF-II to maximal levels of 160% above controls. Vanadate also augmented IGF-II binding with an increase of 126% above controls at a concentration of 1 mM. Coincubation of vanadate (1 mM) with a maximal stimulatory dose of insulin (10 ng/ml) produced no additive effect. However, at submaximal doses of insulin (0.1 ng/ml) the effect of vanadate was additive. Amiloride, a potent inhibitor of the insulin receptor kinase, inhibited the effects of both vanadate and insulin. The data are consistent with an effect of vanadate via a similar sequence of steps to that of insulin; perhaps involving activation of the insulin receptor kinase.  相似文献   

9.
A severe resistance to the stimulatory action of insulin on glucose metabolism has been shown in ruminant adipose tissue or isolated adipocytes as compared to that of rats. To elucidate the mechanism of insulin resistance in ruminants, we measured the stimulatory effect of insulin on 3-O-methylgulose transport and on intracellular glucose metabolism in isolated adipocytes from sheep and rats. At a glucose concentration (0.1 mM) where transport is thought to be rate-limiting for metabolism, lipogenesis from [U-14C]glucose by ovine adipocytes was markedly less than by rat adipocytes in both the basal state and at all insulin concentrations. The responsiveness to insulin assessed by percent increase above basal was reduced to about 15% of that in rat adipocytes, but the insulin sensitivity was similar, because the insulin concentration giving half-maximal stimulation, ED50, did not differ significantly between ovine and rat adipocytes. The maximal insulin-stimulated 3-O-methylglucose transport in ovine adipocytes per cell was less than 20% of that in rat adipocytes, with a significant lowering in basal rates of transport. However, when data was expressed per 3-O-methylglucose equilibrium space no significant differences were found between ovine and rat in the basal transport rates, but a lowered ability of insulin to stimulate glucose transport was still seen in ovine adipocytes. The dose-response curve for glucose transport was slightly shifted to the right in ovine adipocytes compared to rat adipocytes, indicating a small decrease in insulin sensitivity. The decrease in glucose transport was due to 60% reduction in the maximum velocity in the insulin--stimulated state, with no change in the Km.  相似文献   

10.
The receptors for insulin and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) have in common a high sequence homology and diverse overlapping functions, (e.g., the stimulation of acute metabolic events and the induction of cell growth.). In the present study, we have compared the potential of insulin and IGF-I receptors in stimulating glucose transport activity, glucose transporter gene expression, DNA-synthesis, and expression of proto-oncogene c-fos in 3T3-L1 adipocytes which express high levels of both receptors. Binding of both hormones to their own receptors was highly specific as compared with binding to the respective other receptor (insulin receptor: KD = 3.6 nM, KI of IGF-I greater than 500 nM; IGF-I receptor, KD = 1.1 nM, KI of insulin = 191 nM). Induction of proto-oncogene c-fos mRNA by insulin and IGF-I paralleled their respective receptor occupancy and was thus induced by both hormones via their own receptor (EC50 of insulin, 3.7; IGF-I, 3.9 nM). Similarly, both insulin and IGF-I increased DNA synthesis (EC50 of insulin, 5.8 nM; IGF-I, 4.0 nM), glucose transport activity (EC50 of insulin, 1.7 nM; IGF-I, 1.4 nM), and glucose transporter (GLUT4) mRNA levels in concentrations corresponding with their respective receptor occupancy. These data indicate that in 3T3-L1 cells the alpha-subunits of insulin and IGF-I receptors have an equal potential to stimulate a metabolic and a mitogenic response.  相似文献   

11.
Semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO) is highly expressed in adipose cells, and substrates of SSAO such as benzylamine in combination with low concentrations of vanadate strongly stimulate glucose transport and GLUT4 recruitment in mouse 3T3-L1 adipocytes and in isolated rat adipocytes. Here we examined whether this combination of molecules also stimulates glucose transport in adipocytes from streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats and from Goto-Kakizaki diabetic rats. As previously reported, adipocytes obtained from streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats, showed a reduced stimulation of glucose transport in response to insulin. Under these conditions, the combination of benzylamine and vanadate caused a marked stimulation of glucose transport that was similar to the stimulation detected in control adipocytes. Adipocytes isolated from Goto-Kakizaki diabetic rats also showed a defective response to insulin; however, acute incubation in the presence of benzylamine and vanadate stimulated glucose transport in these cells to the same extent than in adipocytes from non-diabetic rats. These data indicate that adipocytes obtained from two different models of animal diabetes do not show resistance to the activation of glucose transport by SSAO activity, which is in contrast to the well reported resistance to insulin action. It seems to suggest that SSAO activity in combination with vanadate triggers a glucose transport-activating intracellular pathway that remains intact in the diabetic state. Further, our data support the view that the combination of benzylamine and vanadate could be an effective therapy in diabetes.  相似文献   

12.
The aim of this study was to further characterize the rapid effects of insulin and the tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor vanadate to amplify cell surface insulin binding capacity in isolated rat adipocytes. The effect of 20 min insulin treatment (1000 microU/ml) was 2- to 3-fold (p < 0.01) when cells were treated in medium containing 5.6 mM D-glucose, but it was totally absent in glucose-free medium. Other carbon energy sources, such as fructose and pyruvate, could only partly substitute for D-glucose, with an approximately 1.5-fold insulin effect. Moreover, inhibiting transmembrane glucose transport with cytochalasin B completely blocked the effect of insulin to enhance cell surface binding. The effect of vanadate was only partly glucose-dependent, since a submaximal effect (1.5- to 2-fold, p<0.05) was seen also in the absence of glucose. The tyrosine kinase inhibitor genistein markedly blunted the effect of vanadate (from 3- to 4-fold to approximately 2-fold, p < 0.05) also indicating the importance of tyrosine phosphorylation-related mechanisms in the upregulation of cell surface insulin binding. Glycosylation of insulin receptors as a mechanism for this effect appears unlikely since neither the effect of insulin nor that of vanadate was altered by the glycosylation inhibitor tunicamycin. The time course for the insulin effect displayed a long duration (at least 6 h), suggesting a maintenance role of insulin keeping its receptors accessible for ligand binding at the cell surface. In conclusion, the effect of insulin and vanadate to upregulate cell-surface insulin receptors is energy-dependent and to some extent specifically glucose-dependent.  相似文献   

13.
Autophosphorylation of the insulin receptor on tyrosine residues and activation of the endogenous insulin receptor kinase is postulated to be a critical step in the mechanism of action of insulin. To investigate this hypothesis, the insulin-mimicking effects of vanadate (sodium orthovanadate) and H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide) alone and in combination were examined in freshly isolated rat adipocytes. Vanadate and H2O2 stimulated the translocation of insulin-like growth factor II (IGF-II) receptors to the plasma membrane of rat adipocytes in a manner analogous to insulin. IGF-II binding was increased by maximally effective doses of vanadate (1 mM), H2O2 (1 mM), and insulin (10 ng/ml) to 172 +/- 10, 138 +/- 12, and 289 +/- 16% of control, respectively. Previously (Kadota, S., Fantus, I. G., Hersh, B., and Posner, B. I. (1986) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 138, 174-178), we showed that the combination of these concentrations of vanadate plus insulin was not more potent than insulin alone. In this study, similar results were found with H2O2 plus insulin. In contrast, the combination of vanadate plus H2O2 was synergistic, effecting an increase of IGF-II binding to 488 +/- 23% of control. Amiloride inhibited the effects of vanadate, H2O2, and insulin. Adipocyte insulin receptors purified by wheat germ agglutinin chromatography were assayed for tyrosine kinase activity using the synthetic substrate poly(Glu,Tyr) (4:1). Basal activity (no in vitro insulin) was stimulated by exposure of intact cells to vanadate, H2O2, insulin, and vanadate + H2O2 to 147.7 +/- 4.3, 178.2 +/- 43.4, 495.0 +/- 67.1, and 913.2 +/- 92.0% of control, respectively. The stimulation of tyrosine kinase activity by these agents was accounted for by the insulin receptor as the augmented activity was completely immunoprecipitated with insulin receptor antibody. In these studies, the increase in IGF-II binding correlated significantly with the activation of the insulin receptor-tyrosine kinase (r = 0.927, p less than 0.001). These data support the hypothesis that activation of the insulin receptor kinase is linked to insulin action.  相似文献   

14.
Exposure of adipocytes of rats to CdCl2 caused acceleration of [3-3H]glucose incorporation into lipid maximally at 500 microM in Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate buffer, pH 7.4, containing 0.2% albumin. T.l.c. of the lipids extracted from adipocytes showed that Cd2+ increased labelling of di- and tri-[14C]acylglycerols predominantly. With increasing concentrations of glucose the apparent Km value was not affected by Cd2+, but the V value was increased, similarly to the effect of insulin. In the presence of insulin, Cd2+ (5 microM) exerted a consistent additive effect with a stimulatory effect of insulin on lipogenesis at all concentrations of insulin tested (5-50 mu units/ml). The stimulation was observed at a high concentration of glucose, suggesting that Cd2+ accelerated intracellular metabolism of glucose, mimicking insulin. However, although Zn2+ and Mn2+ stimulated the transport at a rate similar to that observed with insulin (200 mu units/ml), Cd2+ had no stimulating effect on the membrane transport of 3-O-methylglucose. The biological potency of Cd2+ and the insulin-like effects of Zn2+, both of which metals belong to the same group in the Periodic Table, are similar towards glucose metabolism, but quite different towards glucose transport.  相似文献   

15.
The aim of this study was to determine possible insulin-mimetic effects of vanadate on amino acid transport, glycogen synthesis and glucose production in hepatocytes cultured in vitro. Vanadate, like insulin, caused a significant (100%) increase of amino acid transport. However, vanadate produced a significant (31%) decrease of 14C-glucose incorporation into glycogen, in contrast to insulin which caused a 54% increase. Vanadate also caused a significant decrease (24%) of basal glucose production but had no effect on glucagon-stimulated glucose production. Vanadate and insulin given together reduced more strongly the basal glucose production (68%) and also effectively prevented the glucagon-stimulated effect on glucose production. In hepatocytes cultured in vitro vanadate had insulin-like and non-insulin-like action. Our results clearly demonstrated that non-insulin-like effects of vanadate could have a beneficial influence on the therapy of diabetes type 2 causing a decrease of glucose production from the liver.  相似文献   

16.
17.
The effect of alterations to the insulin receptor on the insulin sensitivity of isolated adipocytes was studied. Receptor changes were induced by treatment of adipocytes with either phospholipase C or trypsin. After enzyme treatment, binding of insulin to insulin receptors and insulin-mediated glucose metabolism were examined. Exposure of adipocytes to phospholipase C (2 units/ml) significantly increased insulin binding to the cells, but destroyed the ability of the cells to oxidize glucose. After treatment with trypsin (500 micrograms/ml) for 5 min, insulin binding to the adipocytes was significantly increased. This was shown to be due to an increase in insulin-receptor affinity. Metabolic studies showed that trypsin treatment led to an increase in basal glucose transport but markedly decreased the response to insulin at all concentrations tested. Adipocytes treated with trypsin showed no significant difference in basal glucose oxidation rates when compared with controls, but were less sensitive to insulin at low insulin concentrations, and showed a decreased maximum response at high insulin concentrations. In conclusion, these findings indicate a dissociation between induced changes in binding of insulin to insulin receptors and subsequent hormone action. The importance of post-receptor events in the biological action of insulin is highlighted.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of cAMP on insulin binding and insulin stimulation of glucose transport was investigated in isolated rat adipocytes. Preincubation for 30 min in medium containing 16 mmol/l glucose and either db-cAMP or bromo-cAMP in concentrations of 10(-4)-10(-3) M inhibited high affinity binding of insulin by 15 to 30% and glucose transport by 30 to 50%. Preincubation with IBMX (10(-4)-10(-3) M) reduced insulin binding by 25% and glucose transport by 70%. Closer analysis of these data indicated that preincubation with these compounds caused not only a decrease in insulin binding but also a post-receptor resistance. High intracellular cyclic AMP-levels seem therefore to induce insulin resistance at both receptor and post-receptor levels.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of pre-incubation with isoprenaline and noradrenaline on insulin binding and insulin stimulation of D-glucose transport in isolated rat adipocytes are reported. (1) Pre-incubation of the cells with isoprenaline (0.1-10 microM) in Krebs-Ringer-Hepes [4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazine-ethanesulphonic acid] buffer (30 min, 37 degrees C) at D-glucose concentrations of 16 mM, in which normal ATP levels were maintained, caused a rightward-shift in sensitivity of D-glucose transport to insulin stimulation by 50% and a decrease in maximal responsiveness by 30% (2) [A14-125I]insulin binding was reduced significantly by 35% at insulin concentrations less than 100 mu-units/ml and Scatchard analysis showed that this consisted mainly of a decrease in high-affinity binding. (3) Pre-incubation with catecholamines under the same conditions but at low glucose concentrations (0-5 mM) caused a fall in intracellular ATP levels of 65 and 45% respectively. (4) The fall in ATP additionally lowered insulin binding by 50% at all insulin concentrations and a parallel shift of the binding curves in the Scatchard plot showed that this was due to a decrease in the number of receptors. (5) At low and high ATP concentrations the insulin stimulation of D-glucose transport was inhibited to a similar extent. (6) Pre-incubation with catecholamines thus inhibited insulin stimulation of D-glucose transport in rat adipocytes mainly by a decrease in high-affinity binding of insulin, which was not mediated by low ATP levels. This mechanism may play a role in the pathogenesis of catecholamine-induced insulin resistance in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
Regulation of hormone action with aging has been extensively studied; adipocytes provide an interesting model for some of these questions. We have compared the ability of insulin to stimulate glucose uptake and suppress lipolysis in adipocytes isolated from two month and twelve month-old rats. The ability of insulin to stimulate maximal glucose transport was decreased in adipocytes from the older rats (P less than 0.001); as well, insulin's EC50 was also higher (P less than 0.01) in these cells. Furthermore, these defects were present when insulin-stimulated glucose transport was measured in the presence or absence of adenosine deaminase which metabolizes endogenously released adenosine. Endogenously released adenosine is a stimulator of glucose transport and an inhibitor of lipolysis. Maximal suppression of isoproterenol-induced lipolysis by insulin was similar when adipocytes isolated from the two age groups were incubated in the absence of adenosine deaminase. However, maximal insulin-mediated suppression of lipolysis was found to be significantly decreased (P less than 0.001) in adipocytes isolated from older rats when the experiments were done in the presence of adenosine deaminase; also, insulin's EC50 was increased in these cells under these conditions (P less than 0.001). These results emphasize the importance of the adenosine receptor in modulating the response of isolated adipocytes to insulin, particularly for lipolysis, and document the presence of age-associated defects in insulin regulation of both glucose transport and lipolysis.  相似文献   

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