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1.
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   

2.
Using the number and concentration of amino acids in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium as reference (DMEM = 100%), we found that a maximally effective concentration of insulin (10 ng/ml) stimulated protein synthesis by 125% over basal rate in the presence of 50% amino acids (EC50 = 19%), but by only 48% in amino acid-free buffer. Moreover, time course experiments revealed that amino acid regulation of insulin action was very rapid (t1/2 of 9.5 min) and readily reversible (less than 30 min). This effect was specific in that basal rates of protein synthesis were unaltered by amino acids. A second effect of amino acids was to markedly enhance insulin sensitivity of the protein synthesis system in a dose-dependent manner. Thus, the half-maximally effective concentrations of insulin required to stimulate protein synthesis fell from 0.43 to 0.25 to 0.15 ng/ml in the presence of 0, 50, and 150% amino acids. Neither insulin sensitivity nor maximal insulin responsiveness of the glucose transport system was altered by amino acids, nor did amino acids affect the insulin binding capacity of cells. When we divided the 14 amino acids found in DMEM into two groups, we found that one group of 7 amino acids had little or no effect on insulin sensitivity or responsiveness, whereas the other group was fully active (a 157% increase in insulin responsiveness, ED50 of 0.21 ng/ml versus a 68% increase, ED50 of 0.51 ng/ml, with no amino acids). Isoleucine and serine together increased both insulin sensitivity and responsiveness to 60-70% of that seen with the full complement of amino acids. In conclusion: 1) amino acids modulate insulin action by enhancing maximal insulin responsiveness and insulin sensitivity of the protein synthesis system, and the regulatory site of amino acid action appears to be distal to the common signal pathway, within the insulin action-protein synthesis cascade, and 2) the effects of amino acids are specific, in that basal rates of protein synthesis are unaffected, only certain amino acids influence insulin action, and amino acids fail to alter insulin binding or the insulin-responsive glucose transport system. These studies, together with those in the companion paper, demonstrate that the pleiotropic actions of insulin on enhancing glucose uptake and protein synthesis are mediated through divergent pathways that can be independently regulated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Stimulation of Na+-Ca2+ exchange in heart sarcolemma by insulin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Insulin was found to stimulate Na+-dependent Ca2+ uptake in dog heart sarcolemma in a concentration dependent manner (0.001 to 1 milliunits/ml). Maximal stimulation (160 to 170%) was seen at 0.1 to 1 milliunits/ml of insulin. Unlike Na+-dependent Ca2+ uptake, ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake was unaltered by 1 microunit/ml of insulin. However, high concentrations of insulin (0.01 to 1 milliunits/ml) significantly increased the ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake activity of heart sarcolemma; maximal increase (60%) was observed at 1 milliunit/ml of insulin. The Na+ K+-ATPase activity did not change upon incubating sarcolemma with insulin. The membrane preparation exhibited specific insulin binding characteristics. The Scatchard plot analysis of the data indicated two binding sites for insulin; the association constants for the high and low affinity sites were 2 X 10(9) M-1 and 4.4 X 10(8) M-1, respectively. These results support the view regarding the presence of insulin receptors in the heart cell membrane and indicate a dramatic effect of insulin on the sarcolemmal Ca2+ transport systems.  相似文献   

4.
In chicken thymocytes isolated from 15--40 day-old chickens, after a 2 h incubation at 37 degrees C, insulin stimulated amino isobutyric acid uptake (maximal response: 40--50% of increase at 1 microgram insulin/ml and half maximal response at 60 ng/ml) by specifically stimulating the influx without altering the efflux. Insulin also stimulated glucose oxidation (maximal response: 11% of increase at 1 microgram insulin/ml). Binding of 125I-labelled chicken insulin to thymocytes was rapid and higher at 15 degrees C than at 37 degrees C. At steady state, (90 min at 15 degrees C), chicken, porcine and goose insulins were equipotent in inhibiting the binding of 125I-labelled chicken insulin. Maximal binding capacity was estimated at 1250 pg insulin/10(8) cells, i.e., 1250 binding sites/cell with an apparent dissociation constant of 200 ng insulin/ml at 15 degrees C. Degradation of 125I-labelled chicken insulin in the incubation medium was negligible at 15 degrees C but very noticeable at 37 degrees C. Therefore, the low level of insulin binding at 15 degrees C reflects a true scarcity of insulin receptors in chicken thymocytes as compared to rat thymocytes.  相似文献   

5.
The receptor binding and biological potency of despentapeptide insulin (DPI) was assessed in human adipocytes, rat adipocytes and rat hepatocytes. DPI displayed a lower affinity for binding to both human adipocytes (half-maximum displacement at 0.89 +/- 0.04 and 0.20 +/- 0.02 nmol/l for DPI and insulin respectively; P less than 0.001) and rat adipocytes (half-maximum displacement at 7.12 +/- 1.06 and 1.14 +/- 0.18 nmol/l respectively, P less than 0.05). However, although DPI was less potent than unmodified insulin in stimulating glucose uptake in rat adipocytes (half-maximal stimulation at 2.0 +/- 0.67 and 0.47 +/- 0.18 nmol/l respectively; P less than 0.05), DPI was equipotent with insulin in human adipocytes (half-maximal stimulation at 0.034 +/- 0.001 and 0.027 +/- 0.001 nmol/l respectively; P greater than 0.2). In rat hepatocytes, DPI was twofold less potent in binding displacement activity (half-maximum displacement at 3.8 +/- 0.9 and 1.7 +/- 0.3 nmol/l respectively; P less than 0.01) but appeared to be equivalent in stimulating amino butyric acid uptake (half-maximum stimulation at 0.98 +/- 0.12 and 0.95 +/- 0.26 nmol/l respectively). The difference in affinity of DPI binding to rat liver membranes was less marked (1.3 fold decreased compared with insulin: 5.3 +/- 0.7 and 4.2 +/- 0.6 nmol/l respectively; P less than 0.001). Thus, the decreased receptor affinity of DPI was reflected in decreased biological potency in rat adipocytes, but not in human adipocytes nor rat hepatocytes. These data suggest differences in the binding-action linking in the cells of different tissues and different species.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
We have studied the development of high affinity insulin receptors and insulin-stimulated responses in the differentiating nonfusing muscle cell line BC3H-1. In the logarithmic growth phase, these myoblasts exhibit very low levels of insulin binding and no detectable insulin-stimulated glucose or amino acid uptake. Following the cessation of cell division and subsequent spontaneous differentiation, the resulting myocytes develop a 5-fold increase in specific 125I-insulin binding and demonstrate physiologic insulin-stimulated glucose and amino acid uptake (100% increase above baseline) with half-maximum stimulation at 1-3 nM in agreement with the known in vivo and in vitro insulin sensitivity of muscle tissue. Insulin stimulation of 2-deoxyglucose uptake is detectable within 3 min, becomes maximal within 15 min, and is mediated by a rapid increase of plasma membrane transport units, as determined by D-glucose-inhibitable cytochalasin B binding, resulting in a 2-fold increase in the Vmax for 2-deoxyglucose transport with no change in Km. Myocyte insulin binding is specific, reversible, and saturable, yielding equilibrium within 18 h at 4 degrees C. Scatchard analysis identified the high affinity insulin receptor with a Kd of 0.5 nM at 4 degrees C. The myocytes also demonstrate sensitive down-regulation of cell surface insulin receptors, with a maximum decrease of 50% in cell surface insulin binding following exposure to 20 nM insulin for 18 h at 37 degrees C. Since the differentiation of this muscle cell line from myoblasts to nonfusing myocytes is accompanied by the development of high affinity insulin receptors and physiologic insulin-stimulated glucose and alpha-methylaminoisobutyric acid uptake, this continuously cultured system provides an excellent model for the study of differentiation and mechanism of insulin action in muscle, its quantitatively most significant target tissue.  相似文献   

8.
In chicken thymocytes isolated from 15–40 day-old chickens, after a 2 h incubation at 37°C, insulin stimulated amino isobutyric acid uptake (maximal response: 40–50% of increase at 1 μg insulin/ml and half maximal response at 60 ng/ml) by specifically stimulating the influx without altering the efflux. Insulin also stimulated glucose oxidation (maximal response: 11% of increase at 1 μg insulin/ml). Binding of 125I-labelled chicken insulin to thymocytes was rapid and higher at 15°C than at 37°C. At steady state, (90 min at 15°C), chicken, porcine and goose insulins were equipotent in inhibiting the binding of 125I-labelled chicken insulin. Maximal binding capacity was estimated at 1250 pg insulin/108 cells, i.e., 1250 binding sites/cell with an apparent dissociation constant of 200 ng insulin/ml at 15°C. Degradation of 125I-labelled chicken insulin in the incubation medium was negligible at 15°C but very noticeable at 37°C. Therefore, the low level of insulin binding at 15°C reflects a true scarcity of insulin receptors in chicken thymocytes as compared to rat thymocytes.  相似文献   

9.
Leprechaunism: an inherited defect in a high-affinity insulin receptor.   总被引:8,自引:2,他引:6  
We examined in vivo oral glucose tolerance tests and in vitro insulin binding, cellular response, and insulin-receptor structure of fibroblasts cultured from the skin of a patient with leprechaun syndrome and her parents. In response to oral glucose, the proband exhibited marked hyperinsulinism (maximum plasma insulin = 4,120 microU/ml), the father had mild hyperinsulinism (maximum plasma insulin = 240 microU/ml), and the mother was normal. [125I]insulin binding to monolayers of intact fibroblasts demonstrated complex kinetics that were interpreted using a two-receptor model. Normal high-affinity binding had an apparent KA of 1.6 X 10(10)/molar with 1,100 sites/cell. The proposed low-affinity state receptor had an apparent KA of 6.8 X 10(7)/molar with approximately 30,000 sites/cell. Insulin binding to the proband's cells had no high-affinity binding but had normal low-affinity binding. Cells from the mother had 60%, and cells from the father, 2%, of control insulin binding to the high-affinity receptor, but normal, low-affinity site binding. Two different, insulin-stimulable responses were evaluated under experimental conditions identical with those used for insulin binding. Insulin stimulation of 2-methylaminoisobutyric acid uptake occurred with half-maximal responses between 25 and 50 ng/ml insulin. This response was similar in cells from controls and the patient. By contrast, the uptake and phosphorylation of 2-deoxy-D-glucose was stimulated at half-maximal insulin concentrations between 1 and 10 ng/ml in control cells but was not significantly increased in the proband's cells until 1,000 ng/ml concentrations of insulin were attained. In affinity crosslinking experiments, [125I]insulin was covalently bound to insulin receptors of fibroblast membranes using disuccinimidylsuberate. [125I]insulin specifically bound to 125,000 dalton monomeric subunits and 250,000 dalton dimers. In control cells, the ratio of monomer to dimer was approximately one, but significantly fewer dimers were crosslinked in insulin receptors from the patient's cells. We conclude that in this family two different recessive mutations impair high-affinity insulin-receptor binding and that the proband with leprechaunism is a compound heterozygote for these mutations. The two mutations produced structural changes in the receptor that altered subunit interactions and loss of high-affinity binding and cellular responsivity.  相似文献   

10.
Previous investigations have demonstrated an increase in monocyte insulin receptor affinity two and five hours following oral carbohydrate loading. The present studies were undertaken to see if intravenous (IV) glucose challenge provokes a similar increase in monocyte insulin binding affinity. 25 grams of glucose were given to 10 lean normals and monocytes were isolated for 125I-insulin tracer binding studies (8.4 X 10(-10) M) at 0, 1 and 5 hours after glucose loading. The mean data show that monocytes develop a small, statistically insignificant increase in insulin-binding affinity one hour after intravenous glucose (mean +/- SEM, 7.28 +/- 1.06 ng/ml compared to basal 50% insulin displacement value, B50, of 9.25 +/- 1.62 ng/ml). B50 values demonstrated no increase in binding affinity at five hours (10.77 +/- 2.22 ng/ml). Prior studies have shown a 50 to 70% decrease in B50 following oral glucose, indicating a rapid increase in receptor binding affinity after carbohydrate ingestion. In contrast the present studies have shown that after IV glucose six normals had no decrease in B50 at one or five hours, while the remaining four normals had a 35% decrease at one hour but no decrease at five hours. Intravenous glucose loading, unlike an oral carbohydrate challenge, fails to provoke an acute, consistent increase in monocyte insulin binding affinity at these time points. Elevations in plasma glucose and insulin do not by themselves induce the acute increase in receptor affinity.  相似文献   

11.
The ability of glucose and insulin to modify insulin-stimulated glucose transport and uptake was investigated in perfused skeletal muscle. Here we report that perfusion of isolated rat hindlimbs for 5 h with 12 mM-glucose and 20,000 microunits of insulin/ml leads to marked, rapidly developing, impairment of insulin action on muscle glucose transport and uptake. Thus maximal insulin-stimulated glucose uptake at 12 mM-glucose decreased from 34.8 +/- 1.9 to 11.5 +/- 1.1 mumol/h per g (mean +/- S.E.M., n = 10) during 5 h perfusion. This decrease in glucose uptake was accompanied by a similar change in muscle glucose transport as measured by uptake of 3-O-[14C]-methylglucose. Simultaneously, muscle glycogen stores increased to 2-3.5 times initial values, depending on fibre type. Perfusion for 5 h in the presence of glucose but in the absence of insulin decreased subsequent insulin action on glucose uptake by 80% of the effect of glucose with insulin, but without an increase in muscle glycogen concentration. Perfusion for 5 h with insulin but without glucose, and with subsequent addition of glucose back to the perfusate, revealed glucose uptake and transport similar to initial values obtained in the presence of glucose and insulin. The data indicate that exposure to a moderately increased glucose concentration (12 mM) leads to rapidly developing resistance of skeletal-muscle glucose transport and uptake to maximal insulin stimulation. The effect of glucose is enhanced by simultaneous insulin exposure, whereas exposure for 5 h to insulin itself does not cause measurable resistance to maximal insulin stimulation.  相似文献   

12.
Lectins specific for D-mannose (concanavalin A), N-acetyl-D-glucosamine (wheat-germ agglutinin) or D-galactose (Ricinus communis agglutinin I) inhibited insulin binding and activated glucose transport in rat adipocytes [Cherqui, Caron, Capeau & Picard (1982) Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 28, 627-643]. In the present investigation, the intracellular activities of insulin and lectins on lipogenesis and protein synthesis were studied under conditions where neither agent had an effect on membrane transport processes. (1) When glucose transport was rate-limiting (0.5 mM-glucose), insulin (0.8 ng/ml) and lectins (20 micrograms/ml) increased lipogenesis by 2.4-3-fold. (2) When passive diffusion of glucose was amplified (10 mM-glucose), insulin (0.8 ng/ml) and lectins (20 micrograms/ml) increased lipogenesis by 1.6-1.8-fold even in the presence of 50 microM-cytochalasin B, which completely blocked glucose transport. (3) Insulin (6 ng/ml), concanavalin A and wheat-germ agglutinin (40 micrograms/ml) stimulated the incorporation of L-[U-14C]leucine into fat-cell protein 1.5-fold but did not modify alpha-aminoisobutyric acid uptake or 14C-labelled protein degradation. (4) Peanut and soya-bean agglutinins (specific for O-glycosidically-linked oligosaccharides), known not to alter insulin binding, were ineffective. (5) Lectin effects were dose-dependent and were markedly inhibited by specific monosaccharides (50 mM). (6) Insulin and lectin maximal effects were not additive and were completely abolished by neuraminidase treatment of fat-cells (0.05 unit/ml). These data indicate involvement of surface sialylated glycoproteins of the complex N-linked type in the insulin stimulation of glucose and amino acid intracellular metabolic processes. They suggest, together with our previous results, that the transmission of the insulin signal for both membrane and intracellular effects occurs via glycosylated effector entities of, or closely linked to, the insulin-receptor complex.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of a short term (2 hour) incubation of 5 microM triiodothyronine (T3) on 125I-insulin binding and insulin stimulated (14C)-2-deoxy-D-glucose uptake in rat adipocytes was investigated. In the presence of 5 microM T3, (14C)-2-deoxy-D-glucose uptake was significantly decreased by 11 to 24% at insulin concentrations of 5 to 1000 microU/ml. The concentration of insulin eliciting a half maximal response for insulin stimulated (14C)-2-deoxy-D-glucose uptake was 11.5 microU/ml in the control, and 14.3 microU/ml in the T3 treated cells (p less than 0.01). T3 treated adipocytes bound 9 to 22% less 125I-labeled insulin yet the concentration of native insulin necessary to displace 50% of the bound 125I-labeled insulin was the same in the control and T3 treated cells (75 and 70 ng/ml, respectively). These studies indicate that the decreased sensitivity of T3 treated cells to insulin is in accordance with a decreased number of receptors with the same binding characteristics as those of the control cells. The decreased maximal uptake of (14C)-2-deoxy-D-glucose at saturating insulin levels is likely to be independent of receptor number and result from a second, undetermined alteration in the hexose transport system of adipocytes treated with T3.  相似文献   

14.
Ruthenium red increased specific insulin binding to isolated adipocytes 5.4 fold and 2.6 fold over binding determined in the absence and presence of Ca2+ and Mg2+. The increase in insulin binding was not accompanied by an increase in insulin sensitivity. The lack of effect of ruthenium red on insulin action argued strongly against an increase in intracellular Ca2+ as a potential messenger/transducer of insulin action and suggested that the enhancing effect of Ca2+ on insulin action was a result of increased receptor affinity.Abbreviations RR ruthenium red - BSA bovine serum albumin - Hepes 4-(2-hydroxyethyl-1-piperazineethane-sulphonic acid  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Sodium vanadate has several insulin-like effects. To determine whether vanadate acts via the insulin receptor, I investigated the effect of vanadate on glucose transport (2-deoxyglucose uptake) in adipocytes that had been treated to decrease the number of insulin receptors. Trypsin (100 micrograms/ml) caused greater than 95% loss of 125I-insulin binding and rendered glucose transport resistant to both insulin and an anti-insulin-receptor antibody. However, vanadate caused an 8-fold increase in the transport rate [EC50 (concn. giving 50% of maximum effect) 0.2 mM] in both control and trypsin-treated cells, demonstrating that the insulin receptor does not have to be intact for vanadate to stimulate glucose transport. Insulin receptors were depleted by treatment of adipocytes with insulin (100 ng/ml) in the presence of Tris (which blocks receptor recycling). A 2 h treatment caused 60% loss of receptors, and a shift to the right in the dose-response curve for insulin stimulation of glucose transport (EC50 0.3 ng of insulin/ml in controls, 1.2 ng/ml in treated cells). The response to vanadate was again unaffected. Treatment with insulin for 4 h caused a 67% decrease in insulin binding and, in addition to the rightward shift in the insulin dose-response curve, a decrease in basal and maximal transport rates (which cannot be explained by decreased insulin receptor number). The EC50 of vanadate was again equal in control and treated cells, but glucose transport in the presence of a maximally effective concentration of vanadate (1 mM) was decreased. I conclude that the effect of vanadate on glucose transport is independent of the insulin receptor. Induction of a post-receptor defect (which may be a decrease in the total number of cellular glucose transporters) by prolonged exposure to insulin decreases the potency of a maximally effective concentration of vanadate. The findings demonstrate that vanadate stimulates glucose transport by an effect at a level distal to the insulin receptor.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of the insulin-like growth factor, multiplication-stimulating activity (MSA), on chick myotube cultures were investigated. In serum-free media, MSA at levels reported to be present in fetal serum (5 ng/ml) significantly inhibited overall rates of protein degradation and stimulated protein synthesis and amino acid uptake. Half-maximal effects on protein degradation (-30%), synthesis (+25%), and amino acid uptake (+50%) occurred at approximately 0.05 micrograms/ml. In contrast, 10(2)-10(3)-fold higher concentrations (5 micrograms/ml) were required to stimulate transport of the glucose analog 2-deoxyglucose. The results indicate that MSA is an effective anabolic agent regulating protein metabolism and amino acid uptake, but not sugar transport in these cells. Parallel studies conducted with insulin demonstrated similar size effects on protein metabolism and amino acid uptake in serum-free media. However, unlike MSA, insulin levels (10(-2) units/ml) well in excess of its normal physiological range were required to produce significant effects. In addition, the relative sensitivity of sugar transport with respect to protein metabolic effects differed for insulin and MSA. Thus, 2-deoxyglucose transport was approximately 10 times more sensitive to insulin than protein synthesis, proteolysis, or amino acid uptake in contrast to MSA where the reverse was true. However, despite the relatively higher sensitivity of sugar transport to insulin, supraphysiological levels (10(-3) units/ml) of this hormone were still required for significant stimulation. These results suggest a generally low insulin sensitivity in cultured chick myotubes relative to adult tissues. In contrast, the effects of MSA are consistent with a possible role of this or similar factors in regulating growth and development of embryonic muscle.  相似文献   

18.
The response of the erythrocyte insulin receptor to a prolonged intravenous infusion of insulin has been measured in normal individuals during hypoglycaemia and when hypoglycaemia was prevented by the concurrent infusion of glucose. When euglycaemia was maintained, mean (+/- S.D.) specific insulin binding following the 5 hour insulin infusion was unchanged (6.9 +/- 2.1 to 6.65 +/- 2.2% bound per 2.25 X 10(9) erythrocytes). In the presence of mild hypoglycaemia, mean (+/- SD) specific insulin binding rose from 6.6 +/- 2.3 to 7.6 +/- 2.5% bound per 2.25 X 10(9) erythrocytes (P less than 0.01), after 5 hours. This increase was due to increased receptor affinity. It was not correlated with the increase in the concentration of any individual counter-regulatory hormone. Initial insulin receptor binding correlated strongly with the subsequent decline in plasma glucose concentration (r = 0.9527; P less than 0.01). Thus, acute hyperinsulinaemia, when associated with hypoglycaemia, does not result in downregulation of insulin receptors on erythrocytes but rather results in increased receptor binding. Consequently, the insulin receptor may not play an active role in protecting the individual against acute hypoglycaemia.  相似文献   

19.
Summary The binding affinity of sulphated insulin compared with unmodified, neutral insulin has been reported to be approximately four times lower in human and rat adipocytes but over twenty times lower in rat hepatocytes. In the present study the biological action of sulphated insulin was assesed in rat hepatocytes and human and rat adipocytes. To achieve half-maximal stimulation of fatty acid synthesis in rat hepatocytes about twenty one times higher concentrations of sulphated than neutral insulin were required (15.07±5.50 vs 0.71±0.34 nmol/l), this ratio being similar to the ratio of binding affinity in rat hepatocytes. In human adipocytes, half-maximal stimulation of initial rates of glucose uptake was observed at 11.6±5.1 vs 2.9±1.3 pmol/l for sulphated and neutral insulin respectively, and half-maximal inhibition of lipolysis at 31.0±13.5 vs 7.3+2.5 pmol/I respectively. These data are consistent with the four-fold lower binding affinity of sulphated insulin to human adipocytes. However, in rat adipocytes the biological potency of sulphated insulin was found to be much lower than anticipated from the binding data, half-maximal stimulation of initial rates of glucose uptake being observed at 757±299 vs 35±13 pmol/l respectively and half-maximal inhibition of lipolysis at 35.9±12.1 vs 1.5±0.5 pmol/l respectively. Thus, in rat adipocytes, approximately 22 times the concentration of sulphated insulin was required to achieve equivalent biological effect. A discrepancy between binding affinity and biological action with respect to sulphated insulin was identified in rat adipocytes but not human adipocytes nor rat hepatocytes suggesting differences in the binding-action linkage in these cells.  相似文献   

20.
Despite intensive research efforts, the functional role and regulation of the insulin receptor kinase remain enigmatic. In this investigation, we demonstrate that calmodulin enhances insulin-stimulated phosphorylation of the beta subunit of the insulin receptor and histone H2b and that insulin also stimulates phosphorylation of calmodulin. Using wheat germ lectin-enriched insulin receptor preparations obtained from rat adipocyte plasma membranes, calmodulin stimulated the rate and increased the amount of 32P incorporated predominantly into tyrosine residues of the beta subunit of the receptor when assayed in the presence of insulin. The stimulatory effect of calmodulin was both dose-dependent and saturable with half-maximal and maximal phosphorylation of the beta subunit occurring at 0.4 and 2.0 microM calmodulin, respectively. Ca2+ enhanced the ability of calmodulin to stimulate insulin-mediated phosphorylation of the beta subunit with an apparent K0.5 of approximately 0.6 microM. Calmodulin also induced an approximately 2-fold increase in both the rate and amount of insulin-mediated incorporation of 32P into histone H2b. The stimulatory effect of calmodulin was only observed in the presence of insulin and was concentration-dependent (K0.5 approximately 3.0 microM calmodulin), saturable (at 5 microM calmodulin), and Ca2+-dependent (K0.5 = 0.2 microM free Ca2+). Insulin also induced phosphorylation of a 17-kDa protein. On the basis of its molecular weight and purification via immunoadsorption with protein A-Sepharose-bound anti-calmodulin IgG, this phosphoprotein was identified as a phosphorylated form of calmodulin. Phosphorylation of calmodulin was only observed in the presence of insulin and was both Ca2+- and insulin concentration-dependent with half-maximal effects observed at 0.1 microM free Ca2+ and 350 microunits/ml insulin. Collectively, these results support the hypothesis that Ca2+ and calmodulin participate in the molecular mechanism whereby binding of insulin to its receptor is coupled to changes in cellular metabolism.  相似文献   

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