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1.
The kinase activity of partially purified insulin receptor obtained from human placenta was studied. When autophosphorylation of the beta-subunit of the receptor was initiated by ATP prior to the addition of the exogenous substrate, both basal and insulin-stimulated kinase activity was increased. However, half-maximum effective insulin concentrations were unchanged. Insulin receptor autophosphorylation as stimulated by ATP and insulin failed to affect significantly 125I-insulin binding to partially purified insulin receptor from human placenta. It is concluded that autophosphorylation of the insulin receptors regulates its kinase activity but not its affinity for insulin. The catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase failed to phosphorylate either subunit of the insulin receptor, and each kinase failed to affect the affinity of the other one. Thus no functional interaction between cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase and insulin receptors was observed in the in vitro system.  相似文献   

2.
S Gammeltoft  M Fehlmann  E Van Obberghen 《Biochimie》1985,67(10-11):1147-1153
Insulin receptors in rat and human central nervous system have been identified by binding of 125I-insulin on purified synaptic plasma membranes; affinity labelling of receptors by chemical cross-linking 125I-insulin; or phosphorylation of receptors with [gamma-32P]ATP. Brain insulin receptors showed significant differences in their binding characteristics and subunit structure when compared with receptors in other tissues like adipose and liver cells: absence of negatively cooperative interactions; a distinct binding specificity i.e. porcine proinsulin, coypu insulin and insulin-like growth factor I and II showed 2-5 times higher binding affinity in brain than in other cell types; a smaller molecular size of the brain receptor alpha-subunit than in other tissues (Mr approximately 115,000 instead of 130,000). In contrast, the size (Mr approximately 94,000) and function of the insulin receptor beta-subunit kinase was identical with that described in other cells. We conclude, that insulin receptors in mammalian brain represent a receptor subtype which may mediate growth rather than metabolic activity of insulin.  相似文献   

3.
125I-Insulin binding to rat liver plasma membranes initiated two processes that occurred with similar time courses: an increase of receptor affinity for hormone and degradation of the Mr 135,000 alpha subunit of the insulin receptor to a fragment of Mr 120,000. Inhibitors of serine proteinases prevented alpha subunit degradation without affecting the affinity change. This shows that the change of affinity is not produced by receptor proteolysis and that the intact alpha subunit of the insulin receptor can exist as a higher or lower affinity species. Hormone binding was much more rapid than receptor proteolysis and the initial rate of alpha subunit degradation was independent of the concentration of occupied lower affinity receptors. Only persistent hormone binding and the accumulation of higher affinity insulin-receptor complexes led to significant receptor proteolysis. As the incubation time between 125I-insulin and membranes increased, the rate at which hormone dissociated from Mr 135,000 complexes diminished, whereas hormone dissociated from Mr 120,000 complexes slowly after brief or extended incubations. These observations suggest that 125I-insulin binds to membranes to form low affinity complexes that are not substrates for proteolysis. A slow conformational change produces higher affinity hormone-receptor complexes that are selectively degraded. Thus, the conversion between states of affinity may play a role in the regulation of receptor proteolysis and, consequently, insulin action in cells.  相似文献   

4.
Purification and characterization of the human brain insulin receptor   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The insulin receptor from human brain cortex was purified by a combination monoclonal antibody affinity column and a wheat germ agglutinin column. This purified receptor preparation exhibited major protein bands of apparent Mr = 135,000 and 95,000, molecular weights comparable to those for the alpha and beta subunits of the purified human placental and rat liver receptors. A minor protein band of apparent Mr = 120,000 was also observed in the brain receptor preparation. Crosslinking of 125I-insulin to all three receptor preparations was found to preferentially label a protein of apparent Mr = 135,000. In contrast, cross-linking of 125I-labeled insulin-like growth factor I to the brain preparation preferentially labeled the protein of apparent Mr = 120,000. The purified brain insulin receptor was found to be identical with the placental insulin receptor in the amount of neuraminidase-sensitive sialic acid and reaction with three monoclonal antibodies to the beta subunit of the placental receptor. In contrast, a monoclonal antibody to the insulin binding site recognized the placental receptor approximately 300 times better than the brain receptor. These results indicate that the brain insulin receptor differs from the receptor in other tissues and suggests that this difference is not simply due to the amount of sialic acid on the receptor.  相似文献   

5.
Purified human placental insulin receptors were incorporated into small unilamellar phospholipid vesicles by the addition of n-octyl beta-glucopyranoside solubilized phospholipids, followed by removal of the detergent on a Sephadex G-50 gel filtration column and extensive dialysis. The vesicles have an average diameter of 142 +/- 24 nm by Sephacryl S-1000 gel filtration chromatography and 119 +/- 20 nm by transmission electron microscopy. These vesicles are impermeant to small molecules as indicated by their ability to retain [gamma-32P]ATP, which could be released by the addition of 0.05% Triton X-100. Detergent permeabilization or freeze-thawing of the insulin receptor containing vesicles in the presence of 125I-insulin indicated that approximately 75% of the insulin binding sites were oriented right side out (extravesicularly). Sucrose gradient centrifugation of insulin receptors incorporated at various protein to phospholipid mole ratios demonstrated that the insulin receptors were inserted into the phospholipid bilayer structure in a concentration-dependent manner. Addition of [gamma-32P]ATP to the insulin receptor containing vesicles was relatively ineffective in promoting the autophosphorylation of the beta subunit in the absence or presence of insulin. Permeabilization of the vesicles with low detergent concentrations, however, stimulated the beta-subunit autophosphorylation approximately 2-fold in the absence and 10-fold in the presence of insulin. Insulin-stimulated beta-subunit autophosphorylation was also observed under conditions such that 94% of those vesicles containing insulin receptors had a single receptor per vesicle, suggesting that the initial beta-subunit autophosphorylating activity is intramolecular. Phospho amino acid analysis of the vesicle-incorporated insulin receptors demonstrated that the basal and insulin-stimulated beta-subunit autophosphorylation occurs exclusively on tyrosine residues. It is concluded that when purified insulin receptors are incorporated into a phospholipid bilayer, they insert into the vesicles primarily in the same orientation as occurs in the plasma membrane of intact cells and retain insulin binding as well as insulin-stimulated beta-subunit autophosphorylating activities.  相似文献   

6.
The purified human placental alpha 2 beta 2 heterotetrameric insulin receptor complex was reduced and dissociated into functional alpha beta heterodimers by a combination of alkaline pH and dithiothreitol treatment. Insulin treatment of the isolated alpha beta heterodimeric complex was observed to induce the complete reassociation to an alpha 2 beta 2 heterotetrameric state when analyzed by nondenaturing Bio-Gel A-1.5m gel filtration chromatography. Nonreducing sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of 125I-insulin affinity cross-linked and 32P-autophosphorylated alpha beta heterodimers demonstrated that the insulin-dependent reassociation to the alpha 2 beta 2 heterotetrameric state occurred both covalently and noncovalently under these conditions. Comparison by reducing and nonreducing sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed that the insulin-dependent covalent reassociation to an alpha 2 beta 2 heterotetrameric complex was due to the formation of a disulfide linkage(s) between the alpha beta heterodimers. beta subunit autophosphorylation of the control alpha 2 beta 2 heterotetrameric insulin receptor preparation was maximally stimulated within 5 min of insulin preincubation and occurred exclusively in the Mr = 400,000 alpha 2 beta 2 complex. Similarly, maximal insulin-stimulated beta subunit autophosphorylation of the alpha beta heterodimeric preparation occurred within 5 min of insulin pretreatment in the Mr = 210,000 alpha beta complex. However, 4 h of insulin pretreatment of the alpha beta heterodimer preparation induced the formation (6-fold) of a covalent 32P-labeled alpha 2 beta 2 heterotetrameric complex. Maximal stimulation of substrate phosphorylation for the alpha 2 beta 2 heterotetrameric complex was also observed to occur within 5 min of insulin treatment, whereas maximal insulin-stimulated substrate phosphorylation of the alpha beta heterodimeric complex required greater than 4 h. These data demonstrate that (i) insulin treatment can induce the reassociation of the alpha beta heterodimeric complex into a covalent alpha 2 beta 2 heterotetrameric state, and (ii) insulin-dependent protein kinase activation of the alpha beta heterodimeric insulin receptor correlates with the covalent reassociation into a disulfide-linked alpha 2 beta 2 heterotetrameric complex.  相似文献   

7.
Insulin binding to rat liver plasma membranes promotes proteolysis of the Mr 135,000 alpha subunit of the insulin receptor to a fragment of Mr 120,000 (Lipson, K. E., Yamada, K., Kolhatkar, A. A., and Donner, D. B. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 10833-10838). The enzyme that catalyzes this degradation copurifies with plasma membranes and cannot be identified in any other cellular organelle or in cytosol. The proteinase has optimal activity above pH 7 and is an integral protein based upon its resistance to extraction with 2 M NaCl. After affinity labeling, degraded insulin receptors were identified in plasma membranes isolated from a liver perfused with 1 nM 125I-insulin for 10 min at 37 degrees C, indicating that proteolysis occurs in the hepatocyte cell membrane under physiological conditions. Microsomes do not contain the receptor degrading activity or a detectable amount of degraded receptors under basal conditions. After perfusion of a liver with 125I-insulin, Mr 135,000 and Mr 120,000 complexes were detected in microsomes, suggesting that both intact and degraded receptors can be internalized. The initial absence of degraded receptors in plasma membranes suggests that, following internalization, such sites do not recycle. Thus, hormone-induced proteolysis of the insulin receptor begins at the surface of the rat hepatocyte and can lead to loss of receptors from the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

8.
Insulin receptor was purified 10,000-fold from cultured mouse 3T3-L1 adipocytes in 35% overall yield. The specific activities of 125I-insulin binding and autophosphorylation increased in parallel, following the initial Triton X-100 extraction of membranes. The isolation protocol, performed entirely at pH 8.45, entailed adsorption by avidin-Sepharose CL-4B of a complex formed between Triton X-100-solubilized insulin receptor and N alpha B1-(biotinyl-epsilon-aminocaproyl)insulin, and the specific elution of the complex with biotin. The avidin-Sepharose CL-4B was a partially denatured preparation, showing estimated dissociation constants of 0.2 microM for biotin and approximately 1 microM for the bifunctional ligand at, pH 7, 4 degrees C. The bifunctional ligand was characterized by 70% competency in binding to avidin, 100% competency in binding to solubilized insulin receptor, full stimulation of autophosphorylation of the isolated receptor, and maximal stimulation of hexose uptake by intact 3T3-L1 adipocytes. The insulin binding properties of the insulin receptor were uniform throughout this purification procedure. At pH 8.45, 4 degrees C, an average Kd = 0.72 nM was determined for a single class of noninteracting insulin binding sites. The apparent autophosphorylation of the beta-subunit was also unchanged following affinity chromatography. A single oligomeric structure was established for the purified receptor, composed only of 135,000- and 95,000-Da subunits, whose association was lost by denaturation in the presence of reducing agent. This single structure occurred in the initial Triton X-100 extract. The purified insulin receptor was capable of autophosphorylating the beta-subunit and catalyzed phosphorylation of protein substrates.  相似文献   

9.
Ontogeny of insulin receptors in the rat hemochorial placenta   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Binding of 125I-insulin to rat placental membranes was time and protein concentration dependent, reversible, and specific. Unlabeled porcine insulin competed for 125I-insulin binding with an IC50 of 65 nM, while IGF-I was much less potent with an IC50 of 2.12 mM. Specific binding of 125I-insulin decreased during the second half of gestation from Days 11 to 19. Scatchard analysis of the binding data for membranes prepared from Gestation Days 11 and 19 yielded typical curvilinear plots which showed a marked decrease in the number of binding sites in late gestation placenta. Beginning on Day 14, insulin binding was characterized with isolated labyrinth and basal zone portions of the hemochorial placenta. There was no evidence for differences in Kd values or the number of binding sites in these two functionally distinct portions of the rat placenta. Crosslinking of 125I-insulin followed by SDS-PAGE showed a single protein with a molecular weight of 130,000 from placental tissues on Gestation Days 11 and 19 and confirmed a gestational decrease in the number of insulin receptors. In solubilized, lectin-purified preparations from placenta and liver membranes, insulin stimulated the phosphorylation of a Mr 95,000 protein. 32P-incorporation into this 95,000 protein was stimulated fivefold by insulin in Day 11 placenta receptor, whereas no detectable 32P-incorporation was found in Day 19 placenta. Thus, while the alpha- and beta-subunits of insulin receptors in mid and late gestation placenta have molecular weights which are similar to receptors in maternal liver, data indicate the presence of a functional difference in insulin-stimulated kinase activities.  相似文献   

10.
A model of insulin-receptor down-regulation and desensitization has been developed and described. In this model, both insulin-receptor down-regulation and functional desensitization are induced in the human HepG2 cell line by a 16 h exposure of the cells to 0.1 microM-insulin. Insulin-receptor affinity is unchanged, but receptor number is decreased by 50%, as determined both by 125I-insulin binding and by protein immunoblotting with an antibody to the beta-subunit of the receptor. This down-regulation is accompanied by a disproportionate loss of insulin-stimulated glycogen synthesis, yielding a population of cell-surface insulin receptors which bind insulin normally but which are unable to mediate insulin-stimulated glycogen synthesis within the cell. Upon binding of insulin, the desensitized receptors are internalized rapidly, with characteristics indistinguishable from those of control cells. In contrast, this desensitization is accompanied by a loss of the insulin-sensitive tyrosine kinase activity of insulin receptors isolated from these cells. Receptors isolated from control cells show a 5-25-fold enhancement of autophosphorylation of the beta-subunit by insulin; this insulin-responsive autophosphorylation is severely attenuated after desensitization to a maximum of 0-2-fold stimulation by insulin. Likewise, the receptor-mediated phosphorylation of exogenous angiotensin II, which is stimulated 2-10-fold by insulin in receptors from control cells, is completely unresponsive to insulin in desensitized cells. These data provide evidence that the insulin-receptor tyrosine kinase activity correlates with insulin stimulation of an intracellular metabolic event. The data suggest that receptor endocytosis is not sufficient to mediate insulin's effects, and thereby argue for a role of the receptor tyrosine kinase activity in the mediation of insulin action.  相似文献   

11.
Insulin and IGF-I receptors were solubilized from fused L-6 myocytes, a rat skeletal muscle derived cell line, and compared to rat skeletal muscle receptors. In skeletal muscle, 125I-insulin binding was competed by insulin greater than IGF-I greater than MSA, whereas in L-6 cells IGF-I greater than insulin greater than MSA. 125I-IGF-I binding was competed by IGF-I greater than insulin = MSA in both tissues. On electrophoresis, differences in Mr were observed between skeletal muscle and L-6 derived receptors both in the alpha- and beta-subunits. Six antibodies directed against the human insulin receptor beta-subunit recognized the rat skeletal muscle insulin receptor, while only two reacted strongly with L-6 derived receptors. Skeletal muscle has receptors with relative specificity for insulin and IGF-I respectively; L-6 cells also have two classes of receptors, one is kinetically similar to the IGF-I receptor from skeletal muscle; the other, which binds insulin with relatively high affinity has even greater affinity for IGF-I. This unusual receptor may represent a developmental stage in muscle or the transformed nature of L-6 cells.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Anti-insulin receptor monoclonal antibody MA-10 inhibits insulin receptor autophosphorylation of purified rat liver insulin receptors without affecting insulin binding (Cordera, R., Andraghetti, G., Gherzi, R., Adezati, L., Montemurro, A., Lauro, R., Goldfine, I. D., and De Pirro, R. (1987) Endocrinology 121, 2007-2010). The effect of MA-10 on insulin receptor autophosphorylation and on two insulin actions (thymidine incorporation into DNA and receptor down-regulation) was investigated in rat hepatoma Fao cells. MA-10 inhibits insulin-stimulated receptor autophosphorylation, thymidine incorporation into DNA, and insulin-induced receptor down-regulation without affecting insulin receptor binding. We show that MA-10 binds to a site of rat insulin receptors different from the insulin binding site in intact Fao cells. Insulin does not inhibit MA-10 binding, and MA-10 does not inhibit insulin binding to rat Fao cells. Moreover, MA-10 binding to down-regulated cells is reduced to the same extent as insulin binding. In rat insulin receptors the MA-10 binding site has been tentatively localized in the extracellular part of the insulin receptor beta-subunit based on the following evidence: (i) MA-10 binds to insulin receptor in intact rat cells; (ii) MA-10 immunoprecipitates isolated insulin receptor beta-subunits labeled with both [35S]methionine and 32P; (iii) MA-10 reacts with rat insulin receptor beta-subunits by the method of immunoblotting, similar to an antipeptide antibody directed against the carboxyl terminus of the insulin receptor beta-subunit. Moreover, MA-10 inhibits autophosphorylation and protein-tyrosine kinase activity of reduced and purified insulin receptor beta-subunits. The finding that MA-10 inhibits insulin-stimulated receptor autophosphorylation and reduces insulin-stimulated thymidine incorporation into DNA and receptor down-regulation suggests that the extracellular part of the insulin receptor beta-subunit plays a role in the regulation of insulin receptor protein-tyrosine kinase activity.  相似文献   

14.
A partially purified insulin receptor preparation from rat liver was incubated at 37 degrees C with and without the protein-disulfide interchange enzyme, glutathione-insulin transhydrogenase (thiol: protein-disulfide oxidoreductase/isomerase, EC 1.8.4.2/5.3.4.1). Insulin-binding activity was then assessed by crosslinking receptor-125I-insulin complexes and subjecting them to electrophoresis on SDS-polyacrylamide gels in the absence and presence of reductant followed by autoradiography. Prior incubation of the receptor at 37 degrees C in the absence of the enzyme markedly decreased the subsequent binding of 125I-insulin to the holoreceptor (Mr 350 000) and to its subunits (Mr 180 000 and 130 000), while addition of the enzyme to the preincubation medium served to substantially prevent this decrease. The loss in binding at 37 degrees C was not restored by subsequent addition of the enzyme, nor was the loss prevented by any of the several known inhibitors of proteolysis. The apparent stabilization of receptor by transhydrogenase, as evidenced by the increase in binding above control levels, was proportional to both the enzyme concentration and the duration of incubation. These effects seem to be specific for transhydrogenase, since several other disulfide-containing proteins were found to be ineffective. These data suggest that the stabilization of the subunit structure of the insulin receptor at physiological temperatures may take place via a disulfide interchange reaction catalyzed by glutathione-insulin transhydrogenase.  相似文献   

15.
Insulin receptors of rat skeletal muscle were purified by first extracting a plasma membrane-enriched pellet obtained from a muscle homogenate with Triton X-100, followed by WGA-Sepharose and insulin-Sepharose affinity chromatography. Routinely, 4-5 micrograms of purified receptor were obtained from 15 g of tissue. The purified receptors are composed of two major polypeptides with molecular weights of 130,000 and 95,000, respectively. The binding of [125I]insulin by the purified receptors was analyzed by a Scatchard plot. There are at least two binding components. The high-affinity component, with an apparent association constant (Ka) of 2.0 X 10(9) M-1, comprises 10% of the total insulin binding sites; while the low-affinity component, with a Ka value of 1.4 X 10(8) M-1, represents 90% of the binding sites. Assuming the insulin receptor to have a molecular weight of 300,000, the receptor binds 1.7 mol of insulin per mol at saturation. Insulin is capable of stimulating the autophosphorylation of the beta-subunit of the muscle insulin receptor (Mr 95,000) by 5-10-fold. The stoichiometry of this phosphorylation reaction was determined as 0.8 phosphate per insulin binding site after a 10 min incubation with 100 nM insulin. In a previous report, I showed that the insulin stimulation of glucose transport in diaphragms from neonatal rats was small, even although the diaphragms had normal levels of insulin receptors and glucose transporters (Wang, C. (1985). Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 82, 3621-3625). To determine whether or not receptor autophosphorylation might be related to this insensitivity to insulin, the level of receptor phosphorylation was quantitated in diaphragms from rats at different stages of development. Autophosphorylation remains unchanged from birth to 21 days of age, suggesting that the lower insulin-stimulated glucose uptake by diaphragms at early stages of postnatal development as compared to that by diaphragms of older rats, is not due to a difference in receptor kinase.  相似文献   

16.
Autophosphorylation of the insulin receptor was studied using a glycoprotein fraction solubilized and purified partially from the rat hepatoma cell line, Fao. Incubation of this receptor preparation with [gamma-32P] ATP, Mn2+, and insulin yielded a single insulin-stimulated phosphoprotein of Mr = 95,000 which corresponds to the beta-subunit of the insulin receptor. At 22 degrees C, incorporation of 32P was half-maximal at 30 s and about 90% complete after 2 min. At steady state, about 200 pmol of 32P were incorporated per mg of protein; this value corresponded to about 2 molecules of phosphate per insulin binding site estimated from Scatchard plots. Insulin increased the Vmax for autophosphorylation of the insulin receptor kinase nearly 20-fold with no effect on the Km for ATP. Mn2+ stimulated autophosphorylation by decreasing the Km of the kinase for ATP, whereas Mg2+ had no effect. Dilution of the insulin receptor over a 10-fold concentration range did not decrease the rate of autophosphorylation suggesting that it may occur by an intramolecular mechanism. When the phosphorylated beta-subunit of the insulin receptor was digested with trypsin, at least 5 phosphopeptides could be separated by high performance liquid chromatography on a mu Bondapak C18 reverse-phase column. Insulin stimulated the phosphorylation of all sites. These phosphate acceptor sites varied in their rate and degree of phosphorylation. Phosphopeptides pp4 and pp5 were phosphorylated very rapidly and reached steady state within 20 s, whereas phosphorylation of pp1 and pp2 required several minutes to reach steady state.  相似文献   

17.
The insulin receptor possesses an insulin-stimulated tyrosine-kinase activity; however, the significance of receptor phosphorylation in terms of the binding and signaling function of the receptor is unclear. To help clarify this problem, we have studied insulin binding and receptor phosphorylation in a Cloudman S91 melanoma cell line and two of its variants: the wild type (1A) in which insulin inhibits cell growth, an insulin-resistant variant (111) in which insulin neither stimulates or inhibits growth, and a variant (46) in which insulin stimulates cell growth. 125I-insulin binding to intact cells was similar for the wild-type 1A and insulin-stimulated variant 46. The insulin-resistant variant 111, in contrast, showed approximately 30% decrease in insulin binding. This was due to a decrease of receptor affinity with no major difference in receptor number. When the melanoma cells were solubilized in 1% Triton X-100 and the insulin receptor was partially purified by chromatography on wheat germ agglutinin-agarose, a similar pattern of binding was observed. Phosphorylation was studied by incubation of the partially purified receptor with insulin and [gamma-32P]ATP, and the receptor was identified by immunoprecipitation and NaDodSO4 PAGE. Insulin stimulated phosphorylation of the 95,000-mol- wt beta-subunit of the receptor in all three cells types with similar kinetics. The amount of 32P incorporated into the beta-subunit in the insulin-resistant cell line 111 was approximately 50% of that observed with the two other cell lines. This difference was reflected throughout the entire dose-response curve (10(-9) M to 10(-6) M). Qualitatively similar results were obtained when phosphorylation was studied in the intact cell. Peptide mapping of the beta-subunit using tryptic digestion and reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography column separation indicated three sites of phosphorylation in receptor from the wild type and variant 46, but only two major sites of phosphorylation of variant 111. These data suggest that the insulin- resistant variant melanoma 111 possesses a specific defect in the insulin receptor which alters both its binding and autophosphorylation properties, and also suggests a possible role of receptor phosphorylation in both the binding and the signaling function of the insulin receptor.  相似文献   

18.
It has been found that 1,2- but not 1,3-diacylglycerols stimulated phosphorylation of the insulin receptor of cultured human monocyte-like (U-937) and lymphoblastoid (IM-9) cells both in the intact- and broken-cell systems. The stimulation of the receptor's beta-subunit phosphorylation was dose-dependent, with optimal effect at 100 micrograms/ml of diacylglycerol. The effects of insulin and 1,2-diacylglycerols on the phosphorylation of partially purified insulin receptors were additive. Phosphoamino acid analysis showed a major effect of diacylglycerols on phosphorylation of tyrosine residues. The diacylglycerols also stimulated tyrosine kinase activity of the partially purified U-937 and IM-9 insulin receptors 2.5-3.5-fold when measured by phosphorylation of an exogenous substrate, poly(Glu80Tyr20) in the absence of any added insulin, calcium or phospholipid. Since this diacylglycerol effect could not be reproduced under conditions optimal for protein kinase C activation and the purified protein kinase C did not stimulate phosphorylation of the beta-subunit of the insulin receptor in this system, it is unlikely that the diacylglycerol effect was mediated by protein kinase C. Since these exogenous 1,2-diacylglycerols at the same high concentration also inhibited 125I-insulin binding to the insulin receptor of the intact U-937 and IM-9 cells, diacylglycerols could modulate the function of the insulin receptor and insulin action in human mononuclear cells.  相似文献   

19.
The immunoglobulin fraction prepared from the serum of a rabbit immunized with purified type II insulin-like growth factor (IGF) receptor from rat placenta was tested for its specificity in inhibiting receptor binding of 125I-IGF II and for its ability to modulate IGF II action on rat hepatoma H-35 cells. The specific binding of 125I-IGF II to plasma membrane preparations from several rat cell types and tissues was inhibited by the anti-IGF II receptor Ig. Affinity cross-linking of 125I-IGF II to the Mr = 250,000 type II IGF receptor structure in rat liver membranes was blocked by the anti-receptor Ig, while no effect on affinity labeling of insulin receptor with 125I-insulin or IGF I receptor with 125I-IGF I or 125I-IGF II was observed. The specific inhibition of ligand binding to the IGF II receptor by anti-receptor Ig was species-specific such that mouse receptor was less potently inhibited and human receptor was unaffected. Rat hepatoma H-35 cells contain insulin and IGF II receptor, but not IGF I receptor, and respond half-maximally to insulin at 10(-10) M and to IGF II at higher concentrations with increased cell proliferation (Massague, J., Blinderman, L.A., and Czech, M.P. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 13958-13963). Addition of anti-IGF II receptor Ig to intact H-35 cells inhibited the specific binding of 125I-IGF II to the cells by 70-90%, but had no detectable effect on 125I-insulin binding. Significantly, under identical conditions anti-IGF II receptor Ig was without effect on IGF II action on DNA synthesis at both submaximal and maximal concentrations of IGF II. This finding and the higher concentrations of IGF II required for growth promotion in comparison to insulin strongly suggest that the Mr = 250,000 receptor structure for IGF II is not involved in mediating this physiological response. Rather, at least in H-35 cells, the insulin receptor appears to mediate the effects of IGF II on cell growth. Consistent with this interpretation, anti-insulin receptor Ig but not anti-IGF II receptor Ig mimicked the ability of growth factors to stimulate DNA synthesis in H-35 cells. We conclude that the IGF II receptor may not play a role in transmembrane signaling, but rather serves some other physiological function.  相似文献   

20.
The insulin receptor is a tyrosine-specific protein kinase. Upon binding of the hormone, the kinase is activated resulting in autophosphorylation of the receptor. This kinase activity has been postulated to be an early step in the transmembrane signaling produced by insulin. To evaluate the physiologic relevance of receptor phosphorylation, we have studied insulin binding and autophosphorylation properties using cells from an individual with a variant of the Type A syndrome of severe insulin resistance and acanthosis nigricans. Erythrocytes and cultured fibroblasts from this individual exhibited normal or near normal 125I-insulin binding. Receptors extracted from erythrocytes with Triton X-100 also exhibited normal 125I-insulin binding and competition curves. Despite this, receptors extracted from both erythrocytes and fibroblasts showed a 50% decrease in insulin-stimulated autophosphorylation. Partially purified receptors from the patient's fibroblasts also exhibited a 40% decrease in their ability to phosphorylate exogenous substrates. These data suggest that the insulin resistance in this syndrome is due to a genetic abnormality which impairs insulin receptor phosphorylation and kinase activity and further support the possible role of receptor phosphorylation and kinase activity in insulin action.  相似文献   

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