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1.
Calcium (Ca2+) increased insulin-receptor binding in both membrane and solubilised receptor preparations. Ca2+ increased both receptor affinity and initial rate of association of [125I]insulin to the receptor preparations. Ca2+ had no effect on insulin receptor number in either receptor preparation. The effect of Ca2+ on affinity could be mimicked by ions with similar ionic radii and properties (e.g., Ba2+, Mg2+ and Sr2+). EDTA and oleic acid reduced insulin binding and receptor affinity and these effects were reversed by the addition of Ca2+. These studies suggest that Ca2+ and Ca2+-like ions may bind to a site on or near the receptor and may be responsible for a conformational change with a consequent increase in receptor affinity.  相似文献   

2.
We have altered the phospholipid composition of the plasma membranes of Ehrlich ascites cells grown in mice and studied the effects on the properties of the insulin receptor of this cell. The insulin receptor of the Ehrlich cell demonstrated all of the binding characteristics of mammalian insulin receptors: specificity for insulin and insulin analogs, saturability, inverse relationship of steady-state binding levels to temperature, and negative cooperativity. Cellular phospholipids enriched in monounsaturated fatty acyl groups were produced by growth in animals that were maintained on a diet rich in coconut oil; cellular phospholipids enriched in polyunsaturated fatty acyl groups were produced in animals fed sunflower oil. Insulin receptors were present in the normal cells at 180 000 sites/cell but this fell to 125 000 (p <0.001) in cells enriched in monounsaturated fatty acids and rose to 386 000 (p <0.001) in cells enriched in polyunsaturated fatty acids. The normal cells had affinity constants ( and ) of 0.03 and 0.01 nM−1. The cells enriched in monounsaturated fatty acids had an increase in these affinity constants to 0.06 and 0.03 nM−1 whereas values of 0.01 and 0.005 nM−1 were obtained in the cells enriched in polyunsaturated fatty acids (all comparison p <0.001). Thus, increased unsaturation of plasma membrane phospholipids, produced by dietary manipulations, was associated with an increase in insulin receptor number but a decrease in binding affinity. In contrast, increased saturation of the phospholipids of the plasma membrane was associated with a decrease in receptor number and an increase in affinity. The results can be explained by a model in which the insulin receptor is assumed to be multimeric.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The present study was conducted to characterize insulin receptors and to determine the effects of insulin in synaptosomes prepared from adult rat brains. Binding of125I-insulin to synaptosome insulin receptors was highly specific and time dependent: equilibrium binding was obtained within 60 minutes, and a t1/2 of dissociation of 26 minutes. Cross-linking of125I-insulin to its receptor followed by SDS-PAGE demonstrated that the apparent molecular weight of the alpha subunit of the receptor was 122,000 compared with 134,000 for the liver insulin receptor. In addition, insulin stimulated the dose-dependent phosphorylation of exogenous tyrosine containing substrate and a 95,000 MW plasma membrane associated protein, in a lectin-purified insulin receptor preparation. The membrane associated protein was determined to be the subunit of the insulin receptor. Incubation of synaptosomes with insulin caused a dose-dependent inhibition of specific sodium-sensitive [3H]norepinephrine uptake. Insulin inhibition of [3H]norepinephrine uptake was mediated by a decrease in active uptake sites without any effects in theK m, and was specific for insulin since related and unrelated peptides influenced the uptake in proportion to their structural similarity with insulin. These observations indicate that synaptosomes prepared from the adult rat brain possess specific insulin receptors and insulin has inhibitory effects on norepinephrine uptake in the preparation.  相似文献   

5.
Little is known of the effects of the solvent on hormone-receptor interactions. In the present study the effect of the polar solvent dimethyl sulfoxide on the binding of insulin to its surface receptors on cultured human lymphocytes of the IM-9 line was investigated. At concentrations exceeding 0.1% (v/v), dimethyl sulfoxide produced a dose-related inhibition of 125I-labeled insulin binding. Insulin binding was totally abolished in 20% dimethyl sulfoxide. This inhibition was immediately present and was totally reversible. Analysis of the data of binding at steady state indicated that the decrease in binding of 125I-labeled insulin was due to a reduced affinity of the insulin receptor without noticeable change in the concentration of receptor sites. Kinetic studies showed that the decreased affinity could largely be accounted for by a decreased association rate constant; effects on dissociation and negative cooperativity of the insulin receptor were affected to a much lesser extent.  相似文献   

6.
Insulin binding to crude plasma membranes derived from human skeletal muscle was characterized. Incubations were performed for 22 h at 4°C. Typical insulin binding characteristics were found, i.e., (a) specificity for insulin, (b) pH sensitivity, (c) dissociation of insulin by the addition of excess insulin and (d) concave Scatchard curves. Half-maximal inhibition of 125I-labeled-insulin binding occurred at 1 · 10?8 M. Affinity constants were 0.76 · 109 and 0.02 · 109 M?1 for the high- and low-affinity receptor (2-site model), respectively, and the corresponding receptor numbers were 89 and 1450 fmol/mg protein, respectively. The procedures employed permit the determination of insulin binding to small quantities of human muscle (approx. 250 mg).  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
The time-course and insulin concentration dependency of internalization of insulin and its receptor have been examined in isolated rat adipose cells at 37°C. The internalization of insulin was assessed by examining the subcellular distribution of cell-associated [125I]insulin among plasma membrane, and high-density (endoplasmic reticulum-enriched) and low-density (Golgi-enriched) microsomal membrane fractions prepared by differential ultracentrifugation. The distribution of receptors was measured by the steady-state exchange binding of fresh [125I]insulin to these same membrane fractions. At 37°C, insulin binding to intact cells is accompanied initially by the rapid appearance of intact insulin in the plasma membrane fraction, and subsequently, by its rapid appearance in both the high-density and low-density microsomal membrane fractions. An apparent steady-state distribution of insulin per mg of membrane protein among these subcellular fractions is achieved within 30 min in a ratio of 1:1.54:0.80, respectively. Concomitantly, insulin binding to intact cells is associated with the rapid disappearance of approx. 30% of the insulin receptors initially present in the plasma membrane fraction and appearance of 20–30% of those lost in the low-density microsomal membrane fraction. However, the number of receptors in the high-density microsomal membrane fraction does not change. This redistribution of receptors also appears to reach a steady-state within 30 min. Both processes are insulin concentration-dependent, correlating with receptor occupancy in the intact cell, and are partially inhibited at 16°C. While the steady-state subcellular distributions of insulin and its receptor do not correlate with that of acid phosphatase, chloroquine markedly increases the levels of insulin associated with all three membrane fractions in apparent proportion to the distribution of this lysosomal marker enzyme activity, without more than marginally potentiating insulin's effects on the distribution of receptors. These results demonstrate that insulin, initially bound to the plasma membrane of the isolated rat adipose cell, is rapidly translocated by a receptor-mediated process into at least two intracellular compartments associated with the cell's high- and low-density microsomes. Furthermore, insulin simultaneously induces the translocation of its own receptor from the plasma membrane into the latter compartment. These translocations appear to represent the internalization and partial dissociation of the insulin-receptor complex through insulin-induced receptor cycling.  相似文献   

9.
To investigate the effects of concanavalin A on insulin binding to R323AC mammary carcinomas, initial experiments were performed to characterize binding of concanavalin A. Concanavalin A binding was found to be specific and saturable. Equilibrium binding experiments demonstrated that addition of low concentration of concanavalin A enhanced the binding of [3H]concanavalin A, suggestive of positively cooperative interactions. Binding of concanavalin A was responsive to hormonal alterations; tumor cells from diabetic rats showed enhanced binding of concanavalin A and insulin compared to cells from intact rats and administration of insulin to diabetic rats returned concanavalin A and insulin binding to levels seen in controls. Incubation of tumor cells with concanavalin A prior to addition of 125I-labelled insulin resulted in a reduction of insulin-binding capacity; succinyl-concanavalin A did not affect binding of insulin. The percent inhibition of insulin binding by concanavalin A was highest at the lower insulin concentrations, providing a linearized Scatchard plot that yielded a calculated Kd value comparable to the low-affinity portion of the curvilinear Scatchard plot for insulin binding. The dissociation rate of bound insulin depended on receptor occupancy. Addition of concanavalin A after insulin binding reached equilibrium resulted in increased insulin binding hormone concentrations, decreased rates of dissociation of insulin and a loss of the correlation between receptor occupancy and dissociation rates. Concanavalin A alone demonstrated an insulin-like effect on glucose transport, which in these tumor cells represents a decrease in transport of 3-O-methylglucose. These suggest that binding of both concanavalin A and insulin to cells from this hormonally responsive neoplasm is under insulin regulation and demonstrates similar characteristics to those reported for a variety of normal cells. Furthermore, the interaction between concanavalin A and the cell membranes affects the affinity of the insulin receptor for insulin and appears to decrease the observed negative cooperativity.  相似文献   

10.
Considerable data have been reported on the relationship between insulin resistance and zinc deficiency. In this study, insulin receptor binding was measured in isolated rat adipocytes. Two assays were carried out at 37°C (binding and internalization) and 16°C (binding) using125I insulin 0.05–20 nM. A decreased insulin receptor binding was observed in zinc-deficient rat adipocytes, but we could not make any distinction between the specific zinc depletion effects and the effects of the caloric restriction induced by zinc deficiency.  相似文献   

11.
Adult rat heart muscle cells obtained by perfusion of the heart with collagenase have been used to characterize the insulin receptors by equilibrium binding and kinetic measurements. Binding of 125I-labelled insulin to heart cells exhibited a high degree of specificity; it was dependent on pH and temperature, binding at steady increased with decreasing temperatures. About 70% of the radioactivity bound at equilibrium at 25°C could be dissociated by addition of an excess of unlabelled insulin. 54 and 40% of 125I-labelled insulin was degraded by isolated heart cells after 2 h at 37°C and 4 h at 25°C, respectively. This degrading activity was effectively inhibited by high concentration of albumin.Equilibrium binding studies were conducted at 25°C using insulin concentrations ranging from 2.5 · 10?11 mol/l to 10?6 mol/l. Scatchard analysis of the binding data resulted in a curvilinear plot (concave upward), which was further analyzed using the average affinity profile. The empty site affinity constant was calculated to be 9.5 · 107 l/mol with a total receptor concentration of 3.4 · 106 sites per cell.The presence of site-site interactions of the negative cooperative type among the insulin receptors has been confirmed by kinetic experiments. The rate of dilution induced dissociation was enhanced in the presence of native insulin (5 · 10?9 mol/l), both, under conditions of low and high fractional saturation of receptors.  相似文献   

12.
In continuation of our efforts to study the solution structure and conformational dynamics of insulin by time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy, we have synthesized and examined the biological activity of five insulin analogues in which selected naturally occurring residues in the A-chain have been replaced with the strongly fluorescent tryptophan residue. The potency of these analogues was evaluated in lipogenesis assays in isolated rat adipocytes, in receptor binding assays using rat liver plasma membranes, and in two cases, in receptor binding assays using adipocytes. [A3 Trp]insulin displays a potency of 3% in receptor binding assays in both liver membranes and in adipocytes, but only 0.06% in lipogenesis assays as compared to porcine insulin. [A10 Trp] insulin displays a potency ofca. 40% andca. 25% in rat liver receptor binding and lipogenesis assays, respectively. [A13 Trp]insulin displays a potency ofca. 39% in rat liver receptor binding assays, but onlyca. 9% in receptor binding in adipocytes; in lipogenesis assays, [A13 Trp] insulin displays a potency ofca. 12%, comparable to its potency in adipocyte receptor binding assays. [A15 Trp]insulin exhibits a potency of 18% and 9% in rat liver receptor binding and lipogenesis assays, respectively. The doubly substituted analogue, [A14 Trp, A19 Trp] insulin, displays a potency ofca. 0.7% in both rat liver receptor binding assays and lipogenesis assays. These data suggest two major conclusions: (1) the A3 and A15 residues lie in sensitive regions in the insulin molecule, and structural modifications at these positions have deleterious effects on biological activity of the hormone; and (2) [A13 Trp]insulin appears to be a unique case in which an insulin analogue exhibits a higher potency when assayed in liver tissue than when assayed in fat cells.  相似文献   

13.
The glycoproteinic nature of the insulin receptor was indicated using two different approaches: 1. [125I]insulin binding to soluble receptors from mouse liver was inhibited by digestion with β-galactosidase or pretreatment with Ricinus communis I or concanavalin A. An other enzyme (neuraminidase) and lectins (wheat germ agglutinin, Dolichos biflorus) did not affect the binding reaction. These data confirmed that insulin directly interacts with the galactoglycoproteins of liver membranes. 2. The galactose oxidase-sodium boro[3H]hydride technique, previously used for labeling accessible membrane galactoglycoproteins, was again utilized to discern the components that interact with insulin. When liver membranes were equilibrated with 10?7 M insulin prior to labeling, the SDS gel radioactive profiles were specifically modified within two galactoglycoproteins of apparent molecular sizes 195 000 and 145 000, compatible with their participation in the insulin binding interaction. Membrane pretreatment with β-galactosidase or Sophora japonica lectin reduced the labeling in most peaks, thus supporting the argument for labeling sensitivity. Preincubation of membranes with 10?7 M proinsulin slightly hindered labeling while pretreatment with 10?7 M glucagon was ineffective, suggesting a specificity of the insulin effect. These data indicate the glycoprotein nature of the insulin receptor for two reasons: alteration of insulin binding after modification of the galactoglycoproteins, and alteration of galactoglycoprotein labeling after insulin binding. Two galactoglycoproteins, with apparent molecular weights 145 000 and 195 000, respectively, were identified and they are suggested to have insulin binding properties.  相似文献   

14.
The presence and specificity of insulin receptors was investigated in cultured cells obtained from 15–16 days old embryonic mouse cerebra. Developmental studies suggested that the maximum insulin binding occurred at about 11 days in vitro (DIV). Scatchard analysis of binding data revealed two types of binding sites. One type of receptor was the high affinity type (K d=7.77×10–9 M; number of receptor sites,B max=350 fmol/mg protein) while the other type was of low affinity type (K d=5.75×10–8 M;B max=1150 fmol/mg protein). The specificity of receptors for insulin was also confirmed by showing that [125I]insulin was displaced by non-radioactive insulin but not by glucagon or growth hormone. Insulin displayed a clear dose-dependent stimulation of thymidine incorporation. It also stimulated the activity of the enzyme 2,3-cyclic nucleotide phosphohydrolase (CNPase), which is specifically associated with myelin produced from oligodendroglia. Thus insulin has a positive influence on the proliferation and differentiation of brain cells.  相似文献   

15.
Insulin stimulated phosphorylation of tyrosine residues by the insulin receptor kinase may be part of a signalling mechanism associated with insulin's action. We report that indomethacin inhibited the phosphorylation of the -subunit of the solubilized adipocyte insulin receptor. Indomethacin also inhibited several insulin-sensitive processes in intact rat adipocytes. Indomethacin (1 mM) inhibited basal phosphorylation of the -subunit of the solubilized insulin receptor by 6007o and insulin-stimulated phosphorylation by 30%. In adipocytes, indomethacin inhibited basal 3-0-[methyl-14C]-methyl-D glucose transport by 50070 (P < 0.01), D-[6-14C]-glucose oxidation by 5007o (P < 0.01), D-[6-14C]-glucose conversion to lipid by 30010 (P < 0.01), and D-[1-14C]-glucose conversion to lipid by 6007o (P<0.01). Similarly, indomethacin inhibited insulin-stimulated 3-0-[methyl-14C]-methyl-D-glucose transport by 75070 (P<0.01), D-[6-14C]-glucose oxidation by 20% (P<0.05), D-[1-14C]-glucose oxidation by 35070 (P<0.01), D-[6-14C] glucose conversion to lipid by 25010 (P<0.01), and D-[1-14C] glucose conversion to lipid by 4501o (P<0.01). In contrast, insulin binding to its receptor, basal D-[1-14C]-glucose oxidation and both basal and insulin-stimulated activation of glycogen synthase were unaffected by indomethacin. Thus, indomethacin partially inhibited autophosphorylation of the solubilized insulin receptor on tyrosine and partially inhibited some but not all of insulin's actions. This supports the hypothesis that insulin's metabolic effects are linked to activation of the insulin receptor protein kinase and indicates that there may be heterogeneity in the mechanisms of intracellular metabolic control by insulin.  相似文献   

16.
PANDER is a cytokine co-secreted with insulin from islet β-cells. To date, the physiological function of PANDER remains largely unknown. Here we show that PANDER binds to the liver membrane by 125I-PANDER saturation and competitive binding assays. In HepG2 cells, pre-treatment with PANDER ranging from 4 pM to 4 nM for 8 h resulted in a maximal inhibition of insulin-stimulated activation of insulin receptor and insulin receptor substrate 1 by 52% and 63%, respectively. Moreover, PANDER treatment also reduced insulin-stimulated PI3K and pAkt levels by 55% and 48%, respectively. In summary, we have identified the liver as a novel target for PANDER, and PANDER may be involved in the progression of diabetes by regulating hepatic insulin signaling pathways.  相似文献   

17.
Binding kinetics of porcine 125I-insulin were studied in synaptosomal and microsomal fractions of rat brain cortex. Receptor binding was temperature- and pH-dependent with optimum at 4°C and pH 8.0–8.3. At 15°C, steady state binding was heterogenous, and Scatchard analysis revealed two classes of receptors with Kd of 2 nmol/l and 40 nmol/l in amounts of 50 pmol/g and 200 pmol/g of membrane protein. Dissociation kinetics were biexponential with T12 of about 5 min and 180 min, and in contrast to other cell-types, not influenced by negative cooperativity. No receptor-mediated insulin degradation was detectable at 37°C in the presence of bacitracin. Insulin analogues inhibited 125I-insulin binding with potencies relative to porcine insulin (%): human insulin 100, rat insulin (I+II) 71, coypu insulin 47, rat multiplication stimulating activity 8, porcine proinsulin 5, among which the three last values were significantly higher than in rat liver and fat cells. No competition was observed with porcine relaxin and mouse nerve growth factor up to about 1 μmol/l. Receptors were present in all regions of central nervous system with highest concentrations in the cerebral cortex, cerebellum and olfactory bulb, and lowest in the pons, medulla oblongata and spinal cord. In conclusion, insulin receptors in rat brain cortex are functionally different from other tissues regarding the insulin specificity and the absence of negative cooperativity. It is suggested that an insulin receptor subtype in rat brain mediates the growth activity of insulin on nerve cells.  相似文献   

18.
In this study, we report a procedure for producing antisera that block the binding of 125I-insulin to its receptor. After 2 injections with intact IM-9 cultured human lymphocytes, the antisera from 8 of 17 BalbC mice inhibited the binding of 125I-insulin to its receptor on IM-9 cells by 50% or greater. One antiserum at dilutions of 1:200 and 1:50 inhibited the binding of 125I-insulin by 50% and 80%, respectively. Four lines of evidence indicated that the inhibition of 125I-insulin binding by this antiserum was due to a specific immunoglobulin directed against the insulin receptor. First, removal of the immunoglobulin fraction of the antiserum resulted in a complete loss of its inhibitory activity. Second, the antiserum inhibited the binding of 125I-insulin to its receptor on both human cultured lymphocytes and human placenta particles. Third, the antisera bound solubilized insulin-receptor complexes. Finally, the antiserum did not inhibit the binding of 125I-human growth hormone to its receptor on IM-9 lymphocytes. These studies demonstrate therefore, a simple method for producing antibodies that block the binding of 125I-insulin to the human insulin receptor.  相似文献   

19.
Rat pancreatic islets have been shown to possess specific binding sites for 125I-labeled insulin. Enzymatic and chemical modification of islets are used to reveal important structures and chemical groups for insulin binding. Pretreatment with trypsin, neuraminidase, 1-ethyl-3(3-dimethylamino)carbodiimide (a carboxyl reagent), tetranitromethane (a tyrosyl and thiol reagent), and 1,3-difluoro-4,6-dinitrobenze (modification of protein functional groups) decreased binding of insulin. This was due to the diminuation of the receptor number; in the case of trypsin-pretreatment also the receptor affinity was decreased. Inhibition of insulin binding was in each case associated with a decrease of the inhibitory effect of exogenous insulin on glucose-induced insulin secretion (not measured in the case of difluorodinitrobenzene and tetranitromethane). Phospholipase A2 (cleavage of phospholipids) did not affect these parameters. 5,5′-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (Ellman's reagent) and possibly p-chloromercuribenzoate (both thiol reagents) increased the number of receptors and decreased receptor affinity, but did not influence the inhibitory effect of insulin on insulin release. It is concluded that protein functional groups, sialic acid, carboxyl and tyrosyl groups, but not phospholipids and probably not sylfhyryl groups are important for the interaction of insulin with insulin receptors of rat pancreatic islets.  相似文献   

20.
Receptor sites for insulin on GH3 cells were characterized. Uptake of 125I-labeled insulin by the cells was dependent upon time and temperature, with apparent steady-states reached by 120, 20 and 10 min at 4, 23 and 37°C, respectively. The binding sites were sensitive to trypsin, suggesting that the receptors contain protein. Insulin competed with 125I-labeled insulin for binding sites, with half-maximal competition observed at 5 nM insulin. Neither adrenocorticotropic hormone nor growth hormone competed for 125I-labeled insulin binding sites. 125I-labeled insulin binding was reversible, and saturable with respect to hormone concentration. 125I-labeled insulin was degraded at both 4 and 37°C by GH3 cells, but not by medium conditioned by these cells. After a 5 min incubation at 37°C, products of 125I-labeled insulin degradation could be recovered from the cells but were not detected extracellularly. Extending the time of incubation resulted in the recovery of fragments of 125I-labeled insulin from both cells and the medium. Native insulin inhibited most of the degradation of 125I-labeled insulin suggesting that degradation resulted, in part, from a saturable process. At steady-state, degradation products of 125I-labeled insulin, as well as intact hormone, were recovered from GH3 cells. After 30 min incubation at 37°C, 80% of the cell-bound radioactivity was not extractable from GH3 cells with acetic acid.  相似文献   

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