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1.
Insulin-like growth factors (IGFs) I and II are homologous peptides, which stimulate growth of several vertebrate tissues. Expression of IGF I and IGF II genes and production of IGFs have recently been demonstrated in rat and human brain. In search for the function of IGF I and IGF II in the central nervous system, we have studied IGF receptors in fetal and adult mammalian brain and growth effects of IGFs on primary cultures of fetal rat astrocytes. Two types of IGF receptor are present on adult rat brain cortical plasma membranes, on fetal rat astrocytes and on human glioma cells. Type I IGF receptor is composed of 2 types of subunits: alpha-subunits which bind IGF I and IGF II with high affinity and insulin weakly, and beta-subunits which show tyrosine kinase activity and autophosphorylation stimulated by IGF I and IGF II with almost similar potency. The molecular size of the type I IGF receptor alpha-subunit is larger in cultured fetal rat astrocytes and human glioma cells than in normal adult brain (Mr 130,000 versus 115,000), whereas the beta-subunit has the same electrophoretic mobility (Mr 94,000). The type II IGF receptor is a monomeric protein (Mr 250,000), which binds IGF II 5 times better than IGF I, and does not recognize insulin. The amounts of type II IGF receptor are significantly higher in fetal and malignant cells than in adult brain. Based on these findings we suggest that IGF receptors in brain undergo changes during fetal development and malignant transformation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Gene expression, receptor binding and growth-promoting activity of insulin-like growth factor I (IGF I) was studied in cultured astrocytes from developing rat brain. Northern blot analysis of poly(A)+ RNAs from astrocytes revealed an IGF I mRNA of 1.9 kb. Competitive binding and receptor labelling techniques revealed two types of IGF receptor in astroglial cells. Type I IGF receptors consist of alpha-subunits (Mr 130,000) which bind IGF I with significantly higher affinity than IGF II, and beta-subunits (Mr 94,000) which show IGF I-sensitive tyrosine kinase activity. Type II IGF receptors are monomers (Mr 250,000) which bind IGF II with three times higher affinity than IGF I. Both types of IGF receptor recognize insulin weakly. DNA synthesis measured by cellular thymidine incorporation was stimulated 2-fold by IGF I and IGF II. IGF I was more potent than IGF II, and both were significantly more potent than insulin. Our findings suggest that IGF I is synthesized in fetal rat astrocytes and acts as a growth promoter for the same cells by activation of the type I IGF receptor tyrosine kinase. We propose that IGF I acts through autocrine or paracrine mechanisms to stimulate astroglial cell growth during normal brain development.  相似文献   

3.
In rat brain cortex synaptosomes insulin stimulated the phosphorylation of its own receptor beta-subunit (94 kDa) as identified by immunoprecipitation with anti-insulin or anti-receptor antiserum. The receptor alpha-subunit (115 kDa) was characterized by specific labeling with 125I-labeled photoreactive insulin. These observations indicate that: (i) insulin receptors in brain are composed of alpha-subunits which bind insulin, and beta-subunits, the phosphorylation of which can be stimulated by insulin; (ii) the size of alpha-subunits in brain is significantly smaller than in other tissues (115 vs 130 kDa), whereas beta-subunits (94 kDa) are identical. We suggest that brain insulin receptors represent a subtype regarding their binding function, whereas their enzyme function is more conserved.  相似文献   

4.
The insulin-like growth factors IGF-I and IGF-II are mitogenic polypeptides with a high degree of chemical homology. Two distinct subtypes of receptors for the IGFs have been identified on the basis of structure and binding specificity. Type I IGF receptors bind IGF-I with equal or greater affinity than IGF-II, and also bind insulin with a low but definite affinity. They are structurally homologous to insulin receptors, containing disulfide-linked a-subunits that bind the peptides and beta-subunits that have intrinsic tyrosine-specific kinase activity. Type II IGF receptors typically bind IGF-II with greater affinity than IGF-I, and do not interact with insulin. They consist of a single polypeptide and lack tyrosine kinase activity. Because of the extensive cross-reactivity of IGF-I and IGF-II with both type I and type II receptors, we believe that potentially either receptor may mediate the biological responses of either peptide. Type I IGF receptors have been shown to mediate the mitogenic effects of the IGFs in some cell types. Whether type II IGF receptors mediate the same or different functions remains to be elucidated.  相似文献   

5.
Using affinity cross-linking techniques, we report the presence of type I IGF and type II IGF receptors in Madin-Darby canine kidney cells, a line of cells lacking insulin receptors. The IGF receptors were further characterized by competition binding studies and found to be similar to IGF receptors in other tissue types. In Madin-Darby canine kidney cells, the type I IGF receptor binds IGF-I greater than IGF-II greater than insulin and the type II IGF receptor binds IGF-II and IGF-I with approximately the same affinity, but does not bind insulin.  相似文献   

6.
The expression of insulin-like growth factor (IGF) receptors at the cell surface and the changes in IGF responsiveness during differentiation were studied in the L6 skeletal muscle cell line. Throughout the entire developmental sequence, distinct receptors for IGF I and IGF II that differed in structure and peptide specificity could be demonstrated. During differentiation, both 125I-IGF I and 125I-IGF II binding to the L6 cells decreased as a result of a 3-4-fold reduction in receptor number, whereas 125I-insulin binding increased. Under nonreducing conditions, disuccinimidyl suberate cross-linked 125I-IGF I and 125I-IGF II to two receptor complexes with apparent Mr greater than 300,000 (type I) and 220,000 (type II). Under reducing conditions, the apparent molecular weight of the type I receptor changed to Mr 130,000 (distinct from the 120,000 insulin receptor) and the type II receptor changed to 250,000. IGF I and IGF II both stimulated 2-deoxy-D-glucose and alpha-aminoisobutyric acid uptake in the L6 cells with a potency close to that of insulin, apparently through interaction with their own receptors. The stimulatory effects of IGF II correlated with its affinity for the type II but not the type I IGF receptor, as measured by inhibition of affinity labeling, whereas the effects of IGF I correlated with its ability to inhibit labeling of the type I receptor. In spite of the decrease in type I and type II receptor number, stimulation of 2-deoxy-glucose and alpha-aminoisobutyric acid uptake by the two IGFs increased during differentiation.  相似文献   

7.
We synthesized the N-terminal hexapeptide fragment of IGF II to study potential binding to NMDA receptors in analogy to the N-terminal tripeptide of IGF I. The amino acid sequence of the hexapeptide is furthermore identical with the C-terminal sequence of the casiragua insulin B chain. The hexapeptide did not bind to the NMDA receptors, but was found to promote [3H]-thymidine incorporation into fibroblasts at concentrations of 10(-8) - 10(-5) M in a dose-dependent manner. Since [125I]-hexapeptide did not bind to IGF receptors, indirect competition studies using either labelled IGFs or insulin had to be used. The competition of hexapeptide at a concentration of 10(-5) M with labelled IGF I or II was about equal to that of 10(-9) M IGF I or II. IGF receptors were apparently up-regulated by the hexapeptide, as has also been described for insulin. When using casiragua insulin as labelled ligand, IGF II and casiragua insulin competed with equal potency, whereas the hexapeptide at 10(-7) M caused an apparent up-regulation of the casiragua insulin binding sites. Our results that the hexapeptide stimulates [3H]-thymidine incorporation and up-regulates IGF II and casiragua insulin binding sites may be connected to one or several of the following findings: the hystricomorph insulins--of which the casiragua insulin is a member--stimulate DNA synthesis to a greater extent than other insulins; the insulin and type 1 IGF receptor binding regions are localized predominantly in the C-terminal region of the insulin B chain; and the "cooperative" site regulating the affinity of the insulin receptor is also located in the C-terminal region of the insulin B chain. Further experiments will be needed to clarify the exact mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
The interaction between insulin and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF I) receptors was examined by determining the ability of each receptor type to phosphorylate tyrosine residues on the other receptor in intact L6 skeletal muscle cells. This was made possible through a sequential immunoprecipitation method with two different antibodies that effectively separated the phosphorylated insulin and IGF I receptors. After incubation of intact L6 cells with various concentrations of insulin or IGF I in the presence of [32P]orthophosphate, insulin receptors were precipitated with one of two human polyclonal anti-insulin receptor antibodies (B2 or B9). Phosphorylated IGF I receptors remained in solution and were subsequently precipitated by anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies. The identities of the insulin and IGF I receptor beta-subunits in the two immunoprecipitates were confirmed by binding affinity, by phosphopeptide mapping after trypsin digestion, and by the distinct patterns of expression of the two receptors during differentiation. Stimulated phosphorylation of the beta-subunit of the insulin receptor correlated with occupancy of the beta-subunit of the insulin receptor by either insulin or IGF I as determined by affinity cross-linking. Similarly, stimulation of phosphorylation of the beta-subunit of the IGF I receptor by IGF I correlated with IGF I receptor occupancy. In contrast, insulin stimulated phosphorylation of the beta-subunit of the IGF I receptor at hormone concentrations that were associated with significant occupancy of the insulin receptor but negligible IGF I receptor occupancy. These findings indicate that the IGF I receptor can be a substrate for the hormone-activated insulin receptor tyrosine kinase activity in intact L6 skeletal muscle cells.  相似文献   

9.
The biochemical properties of insulin receptors from toad retinal membranes were examined in an effort to gain insight into the role this receptor plays in the retina. Competition binding assays revealed that toad retinal membranes contained binding sites that displayed an equal affinity for insulin and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I). Affinity labeling of toad retinal membrane proteins with 125I-insulin resulted in the specific labeling of insulin receptor alpha-subunits of approximately 105 kDa. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of partially reduced (alpha beta-heterodimer) receptors affinity-labeled with 125I-insulin indicated the presence of a disulfide-linked beta-subunit of approximately 95 kDa. Endoglycosidase F digestion of the affinity-labeled alpha-subunits increased their mobility by reducing their apparent mass to approximately 83 kDa. This receptor was not detected by immunoblot analysis with a site-specific antipeptide antibody directed against residues 657-670 of the carboxy terminal of the human insulin receptor alpha-subunit, whereas this antibody did label insulin receptor alpha-subunits from pig, cow, rabbit, and chick retinas. In in vitro autophosphorylation assays insulin stimulated the tyrosine phosphorylation of toad retina insulin receptor beta-subunits. These data indicate that toad retinal insulin receptors have a heterotetrameric structure whose alpha-subunits are smaller than other previously reported neuronal insulin receptors. They further suggest that a single receptor may account for both the insulin and IGF-I binding activities associated with toad retinal membranes.  相似文献   

10.
The insulin-like growth factors I and II are single chain polypeptides homologous to proinsulin. IGF I and IGF II contribute to cell regulation and stimulate protein synthesis via signaling through type I receptors which are homologous to insulin receptors and activate phosphorylation cascades. IGFs enhance the proliferation of chondocytes and the proliferation of their collagen and proteoglycan matrix; IGFs stimulate longitudinal (endochondral) bone growth. Throughout life, IGFs are constitutvely expressed ubiquitous factors which help to maintain the survival of differentiated cells, Increased expression is found during growth and tissue repair, Six specific binding proteins, IGFBP 1-6, allow additional tissue compartment specific control of IGF activity; IGFBP production favours storage and IGFBP cleavage leads to activation.  相似文献   

11.
The insulin receptor is an integral membrane glycoprotein (Mr approximately 300,000) composed of two alpha-subunits (Mr approximately 130,000) and two beta-subunits (Mr approximately 95,000) linked by disulphide bonds. This oligomeric structure divides the receptor into two functional domains such that alpha-subunits bind insulin and beta-subunits possess tyrosine kinase activity. The amino acid sequence deduced from cDNA of the single polypeptide chain precursor of human placental insulin receptor revealed that alpha- and beta-subunits consist of 735 and 620 residues, respectively. The alpha-subunit is hydrophilic, disulphide-bonded, glycosylated and probably extracellular. The beta-subunit consists of a short extracellular region which links the alpha-subunit through disulphide bridges, a hydrophobic transmembrane region and a longer cytoplasmic region which is structurally homologous with other tyrosine kinases like the src oncogene product and EGF receptor kinases. The cellular function of insulin receptors is dual: transmembrane signalling and endocytosis of hormone. The binding of insulin to its receptor on the cell membrane induces transfer of signal from extracellular to cytoplasmic receptor domains leading to activation of cell metabolism and growth. In addition, hormone-receptor complexes are internalized leading to intracellular proteolysis of insulin, whereas receptors are recycled to the membrane. These phenomena are kinetically well-characterized, but their molecular mechanisms remain obscure. Insulin receptor in different tissues and animal species are homologous in their structure and function, but show also significant differences regarding size of alpha-subunits, binding kinetics, insulin specificity and receptor-mediated degradation. We suggest that this heterogeneity of receptors may be linked to the diversity in insulin effects on metabolism and growth in various cell types. The purified insulin receptor phosphorylates its own beta-subunit and exogenous protein and peptide substrates on tyrosine residues, a reaction which is insulin-sensitive, Mn2+-dependent and specific for ATP. Tyrosine phosphorylation of the beta-subunit activates receptor kinase activity, and dephosphorylation with alkaline phosphatase deactivates the kinase. In intact cells or impure receptor preparations, a serine kinase is also activated by insulin. The cellular role of two kinase activities associated with the insulin receptor is not known, but we propose that the tyrosine- and serine-specific kinases mediate insulin actions on metabolism and growth either through dual-signalling or sequential pathways.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
13.
Biologically active colloid-gold complexes were used to compare ligand-induced microaggregation, redistribution, and internalization of insulin receptors on Rat 1 fibroblasts expressing wild type (HIRc) or tyrosine kinase-defective (HIR A/K1018) human insulin receptors. Insulin-like growth factor I (IGF I) and alpha 2-macroglobulin receptors also were compared. On both cell types, all four unoccupied receptor types occurred predominantly as single receptors. Ligand binding caused receptor microaggregation. Microaggregation of wild type or kinase-defective insulin receptors or IGF I receptors was not different. alpha 2-Macroglobulin receptors formed larger microaggregates. Compared to wild type insulin or IGF I receptors, accumulation of kinase-defective insulin receptor microaggregates in endocytic structures was decreased, and the size of microaggregates in coated pits was significantly smaller. As a result, receptor-mediated internalization of gold-insulin by HIR A/K1018 cells was less than 6% of the cell-associated particles compared to approximately 60% of the particles in HIRc cells. On HIR A/K1018 cells, alpha 2-macroglobulin and IGF I were internalized via coated pits demonstrating that those structures were functional. These results suggest that: 1) ATP binding, receptor autophosphorylation, and activation of receptor kinase activity are not required for receptor microaggregation; 2) receptor microaggregation per se is not sufficient to cause ligand-induced receptor-mediated internalization or the biological effects of insulin; and 3) autophosphorylation of the beta-subunit or activation of the receptor kinase activity is required for the insulin-induced concentration of occupied receptors in coated pits.  相似文献   

14.
Insulin receptors were labeled with 125I-photoreactive insulin (specifically labeling alpha-subunits) and by insulin-stimulated autophosphorylation (specifically labeling beta-subunits). The results show that the insulin receptor exists under different free and disulfide-linked combinations of alpha and beta subunits. Moreover, the insulin receptor is closely associated to class I antigens of the major histocompatibility complex to form a high molecular weight multi-molecular membrane complex.  相似文献   

15.
Insulin receptor-specific polyclonal antipeptide serum was generated against a synthetic pentadecapeptide (residues 657-670) of the deduced amino acid sequence of human insulin proreceptor cDNA for use in the analysis of insulin receptors in the retina. The affinity-purified antibodies recognized peptide antigen but not keyhole limpet hemocyanin as determined by dot blot analysis and solid phase radioimmunoassay. Addition of either synthetic peptide or the affinity-purified serum had no effect on 125I-insulin binding to placental membranes or to cells in culture. alpha-Subunits of approximately 125 kDa from human placental membranes and liver membranes were labeled by immunoblot analysis with this antiserum. In membranes isolated from human retina and brain, two classes of alpha-subunits of approximately 125 and 115 kDa were detectable. The 115-kDa subunit was neuraminidase resistant whereas the 125-kDa subunit was digested to a band of 115 kDa, indicating that these bands represent peripheral and neuronal receptors, respectively. Analysis of human retinas obtained from type I diabetic donors revealed an increased level of neuronal receptor as compared with normal retinas. These data indicate that human retina expresses neuronal insulin receptor subtypes that are up-regulated in diabetes.  相似文献   

16.
The binding affinities of type I IGF receptor, purified to near homogeneity from human placental membranes, were characterized. For this receptor preparation, free of type II IGF receptor and essentially free of insulin receptor, dissociation constants of Kd = 0.05 nM for IGF I and of Kd = 0.2 nM for IGF II (linear Scatchard plots) were determined. Competitive binding studies indicated a cross-reactivity of approximately 40% for IGF II to the type I IGF receptor.  相似文献   

17.
Specific receptors for insulin-like growth factors (IGF) I and II on microvessel-free rat brain cell membranes (RBCM) and in the microvessels that constitute the blood-brain barrier (BBB) were identified and characterized by means of affinity cross-linking techniques and specific anti-receptor antibodies. Two different models of BBB were examined: isolated rat brain capillaries and cultured bovine brain microvessel endothelial cells. Cross-linking with 125-I-IGF-I, followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), revealed an alpha subunit of apparent Mr = 138,000 in both BBB preparations, compared to 120,000 in RBCM. Cross-linking was inhibited by unlabeled IGF and insulin, but not by antibody directed against the IGF-II receptor. When 125-I-IGF-II was cross-linked, followed by SDS-PAGE under reducing conditions, a major band of apparent Mr = 250,000 was identified in RBCM and both BBB preparations. This band, which migrated with an approximately equivalent Mr in both brain and BBB membranes, was inhibited by unlabeled IGF and by antibody specific for the IGF-II receptor. Thus, both rat and bovine brain microvessels possess classical Type I and II IGF receptors. While the alpha subunit of the Type I receptor of brain is smaller than that of the BBB, the Type II receptor of brain and BBB appear to be structurally and immunologically identical.  相似文献   

18.
Insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I and -II have been cloned from a number of teleost species, but their cellular actions in fish are poorly defined. In this study, we show that both IGF-I and -II stimulated zebrafish embryonic cell proliferation and DNA synthesis in a concentration-dependent manner, whereas insulin had little mitogenic activity. Affinity cross-linking and immunoblotting studies revealed the presence of IGF receptors with the characteristics of the mammalian type I IGF receptor. Competitive binding assay results indicated that the binding affinities of the zebrafish IGF-I receptors to IGF-I, IGF-II, and insulin are 1.9, 2.6, and >190 nM, indicating that IGF-I and -II bind to the IGF-I receptor(s) with approximately equal high affinity. To further investigate the cellular mechanism of IGF actions, we have studied the effects of IGFs on two major signal transduction pathways: mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3 kinase). IGFs activated MAPK in zebrafish embryonic cells in a dose-dependent manner. This activation occurred within 5 min of IGF-I stimulation and disappeared after 1 h. IGF-I also caused a concentration-dependent activation of protein kinase B, a downstream target of PI3 kinase, this activation being sustained for several hours. Inhibition of MAPK activation by the MAPK kinase inhibitor PD-98059 inhibited the IGF-I-stimulated DNA synthesis. Similarly, use of the PI3 kinase inhibitor LY-294002 also inhibited IGF-I-stimulated DNA synthesis. When both the MAPK and PI3 kinase pathways were inhibited using a combination of these compounds, the IGF-I-stimulated DNA synthesis was completely negated. These results indicate that both IGF-I and -II are potent mitogens for zebrafish embryonic cells and that activation of both the MAPK and PI3 kinase-signaling pathways is required for the mitogenic action of IGFs in zebrafish embryonic cells.  相似文献   

19.
Sheep thyroid cells cultured in serum-free medium were used to study the biologic activity, binding, and production of the insulin-like growth factors (IGFs). IGF-I, IGF-II, and insulin stimulated thyroid cell division. Abundant, specific IGF receptors on sheep thyroid cell membranes were identified by binding displacement studies. Maximal specific binding of [125I]-labeled IGF-I and IGF-II to 25 micrograms of membrane protein averaged 21% and 27% respectively. The presence of type I and type II IGF receptors was confirmed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of [125I]IGFs covalently cross-linked to cell membranes. Under reducing conditions, [125I]IGF-I bound to a moiety of approximate Mr = 135,000 and [125I]IGF-II to a moiety of approximate Mr = 260,000. Cross-linking of [125I]IGF-I to medium conditioned by thyroid cells indicated the presence of four IGF binding proteins with apparent Mr = 34,000, 26,000, 19,000 and 14,000. Thyroid cells also secreted IGF-I and II into the medium. IGF synthesis was enhanced consistently by recombinant growth hormone. These data indicate that sheep thyroid cells are a site for IGF action, binding, and production and provide further evidence that IGFs may modulate thyroid gland growth in an autocrine or paracrine manner.  相似文献   

20.
Estrogen sensitizes the MCF-7 estrogen-responsive breast cancer cell line to the mitogenic effect of insulin and the insulin-like growth factors (IGFs). This sensitization is specific for estrogen and occurs at physiological concentrations of estradiol. Dose-response experiments with insulin, IGF-I, and IGF-II suggested that the sensitization is mediated through the type I IGF receptor. Binding experiments with 125I-IGF-I and hybridization of a type I IGF receptor probe to RNA showed that the levels of the type I IGF receptor and its mRNA are increased 7- and 6.5-fold, respectively, by estradiol. IGF-I and estradiol had similar synergistic effects on other estrogen-responsive breast cancer cell lines, but IGF-I alone increased the proliferation of the MDA MB-231 cell line which is not responsive to estrogens. These experiments suggest that an important mechanism by which estrogens stimulate the proliferation of hormone-dependent breast cancer cells involves sensitization to the proliferative effects of IGFs and that this may involve regulation of the type I IGF receptor.  相似文献   

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