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1.
K T Yu  J E Pessin  M P Czech 《Biochimie》1985,67(10-11):1081-1093
The regulation of the insulin receptor kinase by phosphorylation and dephosphorylation has been examined. Under in vitro conditions, the tyrosine kinase activity of the insulin receptor toward histone is markedly activated when the receptor either undergoes autophosphorylation or is phosphorylated by a purified preparation of src tyrosine kinase on tyrosine residues of its beta subunit. The elevated kinase activity of the phosphorylated insulin receptor is readily reversed when the receptor is dephosphorylated with alkaline phosphatase. Analysis of tryptic digests of phosphorylated insulin receptor using reverse-phase high pressure liquid chromatography suggests that phosphorylation of a specific tyrosine site on the receptor beta subunit may be involved in the mechanism of the receptor kinase activation. Further studies indicate that tyrosine phosphorylation-mediated increase in insulin receptor activity also occurs in intact cells. Thus, when the histone kinase activities of insulin receptor from control and insulin-treated H-35 hepatoma cells are assayed in vitro following the purification of the receptors under conditions which preserve the phosphorylation state of the receptors, the insulin receptors extracted from insulin-treated cells exhibit histone kinase activities 100% higher than those from control cells. The elevated receptor kinase activity from insulin-treated cells appears to result from the increase in phosphotyrosine content of the receptor. Taken together, these results indicate that tyrosine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor beta subunit exerts a major stimulatory effect on the kinase activity of the receptor. Insulin receptor partially purified by specific immunoprecipitation from detergent extracts of control and isoproterenol-treated cells have similar basal but diminished insulin-stimulated beta subunit autophosphorylation activities when incubated with [gamma-32 P]ATP. Similarly, the ability of insulin to stimulate the receptor beta subunit phosphorylation in intact isoproterenol-treated adipocytes is greatly attenuated, whereas, the basal phosphorylation of the insulin receptor is slightly increased by the beta-catecholamine. These data indicate that in rat adipocytes, a cyclic AMP-mediated mechanism, possibly through serine and threonine phosphorylation of the receptor or its regulatory components, may uncouple the receptor tyrosine kinase activity from activation by insulin. Treatment of 32P-labeled H-35 hepatoma cells with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) results in a marked increase in serine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor beta subunit.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Skeletal muscle rapidly develops severe insulin resistance following denervation, although insulin binding is unimpaired. Insulin-stimulated receptor tyrosyl kinase activity was studied in intact and 24-h denervated rat hind limb muscles using three preparations: (a) solubilized insulin receptors incubated +/- insulin with gamma-[32P]ATP and histone H2b; (b) soleus muscles prelabeled in vitro with [32P]phosphate with subsequent insulin-stimulated phosphorylation of the receptor in situ; (c) assessment of in vivo activation of muscle receptor tyrosyl kinase by insulin. The latter was achieved by solubilizing muscle insulin receptors in the presence of phosphoprotein phosphatase and kinase inhibitors and measuring receptor-catalyzed histone H2b phosphorylation in the presence of limiting (5 microM) gamma-[32P]ATP. Receptors isolated 5 and 30 min after intravenous insulin injection catalyzed 32P incorporation into histone H2b twice as fast as those from saline-treated controls; insulin stimulated histone H2b labeling exclusively on tyrosine. In vivo activation was demonstrated using solubilized and insulin-agarose-bound receptors. Autophosphorylation of the beta-subunit and receptor tyrosyl kinase activity toward histone H2b was stimulated by insulin in denervated muscles as in controls, although the biological response to insulin, in vitro and in vivo, was markedly impaired after denervation, suggesting a postreceptor defect. The method developed to assess insulin-stimulated receptor activation in vivo seems useful in characterizing mechanisms of insulin resistance.  相似文献   

3.
To explain the insulin resistance induced by catecholamines, we studied the tyrosine kinase activity of insulin receptors in a state characterized by elevated noradrenaline concentrations in vivo, i.e. cold-acclimation. Insulin receptors were partially purified from brown adipose tissue of 3-week- or 48 h-cold-acclimated mice. Insulin-stimulated receptor autophosphorylation and tyrosine kinase activity of insulin receptors prepared from cold-acclimated mice were decreased. Since the effect of noradrenaline is mediated by cyclic AMP and cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, we tested the effect of the purified catalytic subunit of this enzyme on insulin receptors purified by wheat-germ agglutinin chromatography. The catalytic subunit had no effect on basal phosphorylation, but completely inhibited the insulin-stimulated receptor phosphorylation. Similarly, receptor kinase activity towards exogenous substrates such as histone or a tyrosine-containing copolymer was abolished. This inhibitory effect was observed with receptors prepared from brown adipose tissue, isolated hepatocytes and skeletal muscle. The same results were obtained on epidermal-growth-factor receptors. Further, the catalytic subunit exerted a comparable effect on the phosphorylation of highly purified insulin receptors. To explain this inhibition, we were able to rule out the following phenomena: a change in insulin binding, a change in the Km of the enzyme for ATP, activation of a phosphatase activity present in the insulin-receptor preparation, depletion of ATP, and phosphorylation of a serine residue of the receptor. These results suggest that the alteration in the insulin-receptor tyrosine kinase activity induced by cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase could contribute to the insulin resistance produced by catecholamines.  相似文献   

4.
H-35 rat hepatoma cells were labelled with [32P]orthophosphate and their insulin receptors isolated on wheat germ agglutinin (WGA)-agarose and anti-(insulin receptor) serum. The incubation of these cells with 10 mM-H2O2 for 10 min increased the phosphorylation of both the serine and tyrosine residues of the beta subunit of the insulin receptor. Next, insulin receptors were purified on WGA-agarose from control and H2O2-treated H-35 cells and the purified fractions incubated with [gamma-32P]ATP and Mn2+. Phosphorylation of the beta subunit of insulin receptors obtained from H2O2-treated cells was 150% of that of control cells. The kinase activity of the WGA-purified receptor preparation obtained from H2O2-treated cells, as measured by phosphorylation of src-related synthetic peptide, was increased about 4-fold over control cells. These data suggest that in intact cell systems, H2O2 may increase the insulin receptor kinase activity by inducing phosphorylation of the beta subunit of insulin receptor.  相似文献   

5.
We have studied how insulin-mediated internalization of insulin receptors and insulin activation of the insulin receptor kinase might be inter-related. Isolated rat adipocytes were exposed to 0, 6, or 500 ng/ml insulin for 40 min at 37 degrees C. Subsequently, plasma membrane, low-density microsomal membrane and high-density microsomal membrane subcellular fractions were prepared. Measurement of insulin binding to insulin receptors isolated from the membrane fractions revealed that exposure of cells to insulin resulted in a loss of binding activity (13% at 6 ng/ml, 27% at 500 ng/ml insulin) from the plasma membranes which was completely accounted for by the appearance of receptors in the low-density and high-density microsomal membrane fractions, indicating that insulin had induced translocation of insulin receptors from the surface to the cell interior. Measurement of kinase activity of the isolated receptors revealed that exposure of intact cells to 500 ng/ml insulin resulted in as much as a 35-fold increase in the intrinsic kinase activity of receptors from subcellular fractions. The kinase activity per receptor was equal in all fractions at 3-4 min but by 20 min the activity of the internalized receptors fell approximately 40% to a steady state; plasma membrane receptors, on the other hand, remained fully active over time. This indicates that newly internalized receptors retain their kinase activity but undergo subsequent deactivation. Following exposure of cells to 6 ng/ml insulin, the degree of activation of the insulin receptor kinase was lower in the plasma membrane fraction (24% of the insulin effect at 500 ng/ml) than in the low-density and high-density microsomal membrane fractions (54 and 77%, respectively, of the insulin effect at 500 ng/ml). These results suggest that receptors with an activated kinase are preferentially internalized. We conclude that exposure of adipocytes to insulin causes endocytosis of insulin receptors and activation of insulin receptor kinase, newly internalized receptors are fully active tyrosine kinases but are deactivated as they traverse the intracellular organelles represented by low-density and high-density microsomal membranes, and insulin receptor occupancy, possibly by stimulating phosphorylation and activating the insulin receptor kinase, is important for targeting insulin receptors for internalization.  相似文献   

6.
Regulation of the insulin receptor kinase by hyperinsulinism   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
A murine fibroblast cell line transfected with human insulin receptor cDNA, NIH 3T3 HIR3.5, was observed to display insulin-induced down-regulation of insulin-binding activity in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. Maximal inhibition of insulin-binding activity (54%) occurred within 16 h of exposure to 100 nM insulin in vivo, where in vivo refers to intact cells in tissue culture. The decrease in cellular insulin-binding activity was the consequence of a decrease in the number of cell-associated insulin receptors as determined by Scatchard analysis of insulin binding, 125I-insulin affinity cross-linking, and Western blotting of the insulin receptor beta subunit. Acute insulin treatment in vivo (1-60 min) resulted in the activation of the insulin receptor protein tyrosine kinase as determined by in vitro phosphorylation of glutamic acid:tyrosine (4:1), where in vitro refers to broken cell preparations. This acute in vivo insulin activation of the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase resulted in a greater stimulation (1.4-1.9-fold) of tyrosine kinase activity in the glutamic acid:tyrosine (4:1) assay than the maximal stimulation produced by insulin treatment in vitro. In contrast, long term (24 h) insulin treatment in vivo resulted in a 50-70% decrease in intrinsic protein tyrosine kinase activity of the insulin receptors compared with that of acutely activated (1 min) insulin receptors. Under these conditions, the insulin receptor protein kinase activity remained insulin independent in the in vitro substrate kinase assay. Surprisingly, the insulin-independent activated (1 min in vivo insulin-treated) and uncoupled (24 h in vivo insulin-treated) insulin receptors displayed similar stoichiometries of 32P incorporation into the beta subunit by in vitro autophosphorylation when compared with the control insulin receptors, ranging from 1.5 to 1.8 mol of phosphate incorporated/mol of insulin receptor. Phosphoamino acid analysis demonstrated that the phosphoserine/phosphothreonine content of in vivo 32P-labeled insulin receptors increased markedly within a 1-h exposure to insulin in vivo, whereas insulin-induced receptor desensitization was not apparent until 10-24 h after exposure to insulin. These data suggest that insulin treatment in vivo results initially in the activation of the insulin receptor kinase followed by a subsequent uncoupling of protein kinase activity. This insulin-induced desensitization of the insulin receptor kinase does not correlate with the extent of beta subunit serine/threonine phosphorylation.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of 8-bromo-cAMP and forskolin on the phosphorylation state and protein kinase activity of the insulin receptor was evaluated in cultured IM-9 lymphoblasts. 8-Bromo-cAMP (1 mM) or forskolin (10 microM) enhanced the phosphorylation of the insulin receptor purified from 32P-labeled cells by affinity chromatography on wheat germ agglutinin-agarose and immunoprecipitation with monoclonal antibody. In the absence of insulin, phosphorylation of the beta subunit of the receptor was increased approximately 2-fold by raising intracellular cAMP. Phosphoamino acid analysis of the beta subunit following treatment of cells with forskolin revealed an increase in phosphoserine and phosphothreonine residues. In contrast, the insulin-stimulated phosphorylation of the receptor occurred on serine, threonine, and tyrosine residues and was diminished by prior exposure of cells to forskolin. Pulse-chase experiments indicated that forskolin did not enhance the turnover of phosphate on the receptor of cells previously exposed to insulin. Furthermore, extracts from forskolin-treated cells did not differ from control extracts in their capacity to dephosphorylate 32P-labeled receptor isolated from cells treated with insulin. The insulin-dependent tyrosine protein kinase activity of the receptor isolated from forskolin-treated cells was approximately 50% as active as the receptor isolated from either control or insulin-treated cells. This was assessed using both histone and a peptide synthesized in accordance with the deduced amino acid sequence of a potential autophosphorylation site of the human receptor (Thr-Arg-Asp-Ile-Tyr-Glu-Thr-Asp-Tyr-Tyr-Arg-Lys) as substrates for the protein kinase reaction. These results suggest that agents that raise intracellular cAMP increase phosphorylation of the insulin receptor on serine and threonine residues, reduce insulin-mediated receptor phosphorylation on tyrosine, serine, and threonine residues, and inhibit the insulin-dependent tyrosine protein kinase activity of the receptor. Thus cAMP may attenuate insulin action by altering the state of phosphorylation of the insulin receptor.  相似文献   

8.
The cDNAs encoding the normal human insulin receptor (HIRc) and a receptor that had lysine residue 1018 replaced by alanine (A/K1018) were used to transfect Rat 1 fibroblasts. Lysine 1018 is a critical residue in the ATP binding site of the tyrosine kinase domain in the receptor beta-subunit. Untransfected Rat 1 cells express 1700 endogenous insulin receptors. Expressed HIRc receptors had levels of insulin-stimulable autophosphorylation in vitro comparable to normal receptors, whereas A/K1018 receptors had less than 1% of that activity. Stimulation by insulin of HIRc receptors in situ in intact cells led to phosphorylation of beta-subunit tyrosine residues and activation of tyrosine kinase activity that could be preserved and assayed in vitro after receptor purification. In contrast, A/K1018 receptors showed no such activation, either of autophosphorylation or of kinase activity toward histone. Cells expressing HIRc receptors display enhanced sensitivity to insulin of 2-deoxyglucose transport and glycogen synthase activity. This increased sensitivity was proportional to insulin receptor number at low but not at high levels of receptor expression. A/K1018 receptors were unable to mediate these biologic effects and actually inhibited insulin's ability to stimulate glucose transport and glycogen synthase through the endogenous Rat 1 receptors. Expressed HIRc receptors mediated insulin internalization and degradation, whereas A/K1018 receptors mediated little, if any. Endocytotic uptake of the expressed A/K1018 insulin receptors was also markedly depressed compared to normal receptors. Unlike HIRc receptors, A/K1018 receptors also fail to undergo down-regulation after long (24 h) exposures to high (170 nM) concentrations of insulin. We conclude the following. 1) Normal human insulin receptors expressed in Rat 1 fibroblasts display active tyrosine-specific kinase, normal intracellular itinerary after endocytosis, and normal coupling to insulin's biologic effects. 2) A receptor mutated to alter the ATP binding site in the tyrosine kinase domain had little if any tyrosine kinase activity. 3) This loss of kinase activity was accompanied by a nearly complete lack of both endocytosis and biologic activity.  相似文献   

9.
The phosphorylation characteristics of insulin receptor from control and insulin-treated rat H-35 hepatoma cells 32P-labeled to equilibrium have been documented. The 32P-labeled insulin receptor is isolated by immunoprecipitation with patient-derived insulin receptor antibodies in the presence of phosphatase and protease inhibitors to preserve the native phosphorylation and structural characteristics of the receptor. The unstimulated insulin receptor contains predominantly [32P] phosphoserine and trace amounts of [32P]phosphothreonine in its beta subunit. In response to insulin, the insulin receptor beta subunit exhibits marked tyrosine phosphorylation and a 2-fold increase in total [32P]phosphoserine contents. High pressure liquid chromatography of the tryptic hydrolysates of the 32P-labeled receptor beta subunit from quiescent cells results in the resolution of up to 9 fractions containing [32P]phosphoserine. The insulin-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation is concentrated in two of these receptor phosphopeptide fractions, whereas the increase in [32P]phosphoserine content is scattered in low abundance over all receptor tryptic fractions. Insulin receptors affinity-purified by lectin- and insulin-agarose chromatographies from insulin-treated, 32P-labeled cells exhibit a 22-fold increase in the Vmax of receptor tyrosine kinase activity toward histone when compared to controls. The elevated kinase activity of the insulin receptor derived from insulin-treated cells is not due to the presence of hormone bound to the receptor because the receptor kinase activity is assayed while immobilized on insulin-agarose. Furthermore, the insulin-activated receptor kinase activity is reversed following dephosphorylation of the receptor beta subunit with alkaline phosphatase in vitro. The correlation between the insulin-stimulated site specific tyrosine phosphorylation on receptor beta subunit and the elevation of receptor tyrosine kinase activity strongly suggests that the insulin receptor kinase is activated by hormone-stimulated autophosphorylation on tyrosine residues in intact cells, as previously demonstrated for the purified receptor.  相似文献   

10.
In intact rat hepatocytes insulin stimulates the phosphorylation of the beta-subunit of its receptor exclusively on serine residues, which are also phosphorylated in the absence of insulin. In contrast, in partially purified insulin receptors derived from these same cells and in highly purified insulin receptors obtained by immunoprecipitation with anti-receptor antibodies, the receptor beta-subunit is phosphorylated solely on tyrosine residues. For both cell-free systems, insulin's stimulatory action on receptor phosphorylation leads to an increase in phosphotyrosine. When partially purified receptors were used to phosphorylate two exogenous substrates, casein and histone, insulin was found to stimulate the phosphorylation of both tyrosine and serine. However, the basal and insulin-stimulated kinase activity of immunoprecipitated receptors was only tyrosine-specific. From these observations we propose that the insulin-receptor complex consists of two different insulin-stimulatable kinase activities: (1) a tyrosine-specific kinase, which is a constituent of the insulin-receptor structure and whose activation is likely to be the first post-binding event in insulin action; and (2) a serine-specific kinase, which is closely associated with the receptor in the cell membrane.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Three agents which mimic insulin action in intact cells (concanavalin A, wheat germ agglutinin, and polyclonal insulin receptor antibody), mimicked insulin's ability to stimulate the kinase activity of purified insulin receptors. In contrast, monoclonal insulin receptor antibody, an antagonist of insulin action, did not stimulate the phosphorylation of the insulin receptor either in intact IM-9 cells or in purified receptor preparations. This antibody, however, antagonized the ability of insulin to stimulate the phosphorylation of the receptor both in intact cells and in the purified receptor. These studies with insulin mimickers and an insulin antagonist are consistent with a role for the kinase activity of the receptor mediating the actions of insulin.  相似文献   

13.
Both vanadate and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) are known to have insulin-mimetic effects. We previously reported that the mixture of vanadate plus H2O2 results in the generation of a peroxide(s) of vanadate, which strongly enhances IGF-II binding to rat adipocytes (Kadota et al., 1987b). We now report that pervanadate mimics insulin in isolated rat adipocytes to (1) stimulate lipogenesis, (2) inhibit epinephrine-stimulated lipolysis, and (3) stimulate protein synthesis. The efficacy of pervanadate is comparable to that of insulin. However, it is 10(2)-10(3) times more potent than vanadate alone. Exposure of intact rat adipocytes to pervanadate was found to activate the WGA-purified insulin receptor tyrosine kinase assayed with the exogenous substrate poly(Glu80/Tyr20) in a dose-dependent manner to a maximum of 1464% of control at 10(-3) M compared with a maximum insulin effect of 1046% at 10(-6) M. In contrast, in vitro assayed autophosphorylation of the WGA-purified extract was increased 3-fold after exposure of intact cells to insulin but not significantly increased after pervanadate. Furthermore, high concentrations of pervanadate (10(-5) M) inhibited subsequent in vitro added insulin-stimulated autophosphorylation. In vitro addition of pervanadate to WGA-purified receptors could not stimulate autophosphorylation or exogenous tyrosine kinase activity and did not inhibit insulin-stimulated autophosphorylation. Labeling of intact adipocytes with [32P]orthophosphate followed by exposure to 10(-4) M pervanadate increased insulin receptor beta-subunit phosphorylation (7.9 +/- 3.0)-fold, while 10(-7) M insulin and 10(-4) vanadate increased labeling (5.3 +/- 1.8)- and (1.1 +/- 0.2)-fold, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
We have previously shown that a mutant human insulin receptor with a COOH-terminal 43-amino acid deletion (HIR delta CT), when expressed in Rat 1 fibroblasts, binds insulin normally, autophosphorylates, and undergoes endocytosis after insulin binding in a manner comparable to the normal human insulin receptor (HIRc). In this paper we have examined the biologic activity of the truncated and normal insulin receptors. In vitro, the HIR delta CT receptors caused a 1.8-fold greater phosphorylation of a Glu4/Tyr1 polypeptide than did the HIRc receptors, but the two receptor types were nearly equivalent in their ability to phosphorylate a src-derived peptide. Furthermore, insulin preactivation of HIRc and HIR delta CT receptors in intact cells led to equivalent stimulation of tyrosine kinase activity as subsequently determined for histone in vitro. Expression of HIRc receptors in cells led to enhanced sensitivity to insulin of 2-deoxy-D-glucose uptake and glycogen synthase activation. This increased sensitivity was proportional to receptor number at low (Ro = 6400) but not at high (Ro = 1.25 X 10(6] levels of receptor expression. However, expression of HIR delta CT receptors (Ro = 2.5 X 10(5] led to little, if any, increase in insulin sensitivity of either 2-deoxy-D-glucose uptake or glycogen synthase activation. Furthermore, compared with HIRc cells, HIR delta CT cells respond poorly to an agonistic monoclonal antibody specific for the human insulin receptor. In conclusion, the HIR delta CT receptor retains intact protein kinase activity in vitro. Despite this, however, the receptor displays low activity in mediating the metabolic effects of insulin.  相似文献   

15.
We are interested in developing methods to rigorously characterize the intrinsic enzymatic activity of the insulin receptor. We have previously shown that the intact, kinase active form of the receptor can be separated from inactive forms isolated from human placenta. Therefore, the determination of kinase activity, when normalized to the number of receptors based on binding, is not complicated by the presence of insulin receptor forms which bind insulin normally, but are kinase inactive. We now have extended this separation technique to insulin receptor preparations from rat liver. Thus, the determination and comparison of the intrinsic kinase activity of insulin receptor from human placenta and rat liver was performed. When normalized to the same number of insulin receptors which are autophosphorylated to the same degree, the rat liver insulin receptor catalyzes the transfer of phosphate from ATP to three different substrates, on average, 2.8-fold quicker than receptor from human placenta. This probably represents an inherent difference in the intrinsic kinase activity (Vmax), since the values for KM of the substrates are essentially identical, for insulin receptors from both sources. Intrinsic kinase differences may reflect different biological roles and/or differential regulation by exogenous factors. We are now examining this hypothesis in light of reports that demonstrate regulation of intrinsic kinase activity of the insulin receptor in certain physiological and pathological states.  相似文献   

16.
In L6 skeletal muscle cells expressing human insulin receptors (L6(hIR)), exposure to 25 mM glucose for 3 min induced a rapid 3-fold increase in GLUT1 and GLUT4 membrane translocation and glucose uptake. The high glucose concentration also activated the insulin receptor kinase toward the endogenous insulin receptor substrates (IRS)-1 and IRS-2. At variance, in L6 cells expressing kinase-deficient insulin receptors, the exposure to 25 mM glucose elicited no effect on glucose disposal. In the L6(hIR) cells, the acute effect of glucose on insulin receptor kinase was paralleled by a 2-fold decrease in both the membrane and the insulin receptor co-precipitated protein kinase C (PKC) activities and a 3-fold decrease in receptor Ser/Thr phosphorylation. Western blotting of the receptor precipitates with isoform-specific PKC antibodies revealed that the glucose-induced decrease in membrane- and receptor-associated PKC activities was accounted for by dissociation of PKCalpha but not of PKCbeta or -delta. This decrease in PKCalpha was paralleled by a similarly sized increase in cytosolic PKCalpha. In intact L6(hIR) cells, inhibition of PKCalpha expression by using a specific antisense oligonucleotide caused a 3-fold increase in IRS phosphorylation by the insulin receptor. This effect was independent of insulin and accompanied by a 2.5-fold increase in glucose disposal by the cells. Thus, in the L6 skeletal muscle cells, glucose acutely regulates its own utilization through the insulin signaling system, independent of insulin. Glucose autoregulation appears to involve PKCalpha dissociation from the insulin receptor and its cytosolic translocation.  相似文献   

17.
It has previously been demonstrated that the insulin-mimetic agent trypsin stimulates autophosphorylation of purified insulin receptors and activates the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase in vitro. We now report the effects of trypsin on whole cell tyrosine kinase activation and insulin receptor autophosphorylation. Trypsin treatment of intact adipocytes produces a time-dependent stimulation of tyrosine kinase activity as measured in lectin extracts containing the insulin receptor, or specifically immunoprecipitated insulin receptor samples. Trypsin treatment of adipocytes also results in a loss of insulin binding capacity, and a linear correlation exists between loss of binding and stimulation of tyrosine kinase activity. Exposure of adipocytes to trypsin is known to result in a time- and dose-dependent activation of intracellular glycogen synthase. Examination of the time courses of stimulation of tyrosine kinase and glycogen synthase activation in our system indicates that the stimulation of tyrosine kinase activity by trypsin occurs with sufficient rapidity and magnitude to be consistent with a role of phosphorylation in the activation of glycogen synthase. Trypsin has further been demonstrated to stimulate autophosphorylation of the beta-subunit of the insulin receptor in intact adipocytes. Cells prelabeled with [32P]PO4 for 2 h were exposed to trypsin, and receptors were partially purified over wheat germ agglutinin-agarose columns. Receptors were subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and the beta-subunit was identified by autoradiography. The protein was extracted and hydrolyzed, and the phosphoamino acids were separated by electrophoresis and quantitated. Two- and five-fold increases in phosphotyrosine were observed with 3 and 10 min of trypsin treatment, respectively. We conclude that trypsin-induced cleavage of the insulin receptor alpha-subunit is relevant to the ability of trypsin to activate the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase in intact adipocytes. We further conclude that autophosphorylation of the insulin receptor and activation of its tyrosine kinase by trypsin may be important to the insulin-mimetic anabolic effects of trypsin.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of phosphorylation of insulin receptor with adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate-dependent protein kinase (A kinase) on its insulin binding activity was investigated by using insulin receptors prepared from rat liver in vitro. A 95 KDa protein was phosphorylated by stimulation of insulin receptor kinase. This protein was also phosphorylated by A kinase. Analysis of phosphoamino acid showed that tyrosine residue(s) was phosphorylated by activation of insulin receptor kinase, whereas phosphoserine and phosphothreonine were dominantly generated by activation of A kinase. [125I] Iodoinsulin binding activity was decreased by prior phosphorylation of the receptor with A kinase. Scatchard analysis showed that the affinity for insulin was decreased by the phosphorylation with A kinase. Although the maximal activity of insulin receptor kinase was not affected by phosphorylation with A kinase, the insulin concentration which induced half maximal activity (ED50) of the receptor kinase was increased by the phosphorylation with A kinase. These results suggested that counter regulatory hormones whose actions are mediated by the generation of adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate regulate the insulin binding to the alpha subunit through phosphorylation of the beta subunit of insulin receptor.  相似文献   

19.
The insulin receptor protein kinase. Physicochemical requirements for activity   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
We determined that the rate of insulin-stimulated autophosphorylation of the insulin receptor is independent of receptor concentration and thus proceeds via an intramolecular process. This result is consistent with the possibility that ligand-dependent autophosphorylation may be a means by which cells can distinguish occupied from unoccupied receptors. We employed dithiothreitol to dissociate tetrameric receptor into alpha beta halves in order to further elucidate the structural requirements for the receptor-mediated kinase activity. Dithiothreitol had a complex biphasic effect on insulin-stimulated receptor kinase activity. Marked stimulation of kinase activity was observed at 1-2 mM dithiothreitol when the receptor was predominantly tetrameric and kinase activity diminished when dimeric alpha beta receptor halves predominate (greater than 2 mM dithiothreitol). N-Ethylmaleimide inhibits insulin-stimulated receptor kinase activity. We suggest that the tetrameric holoreceptor is the most active kinase structure and this structure requires for maximal activity, a reduced sulfhydryl group at or near the active site. We treated receptor preparations with elastase to generate receptor proteolytically "nicked" in the beta subunit. This treatment completely abolishes insulin-dependent autophosphorylation and histone phosphorylation with essentially no effects on insulin binding as determined by affinity labeling of the receptor alpha subunit. We suggest such treatment functionally uncouples insulin binding from insulin-stimulated receptor kinase activity. The possible physiological significance of these findings is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Following insulin administration to intact rats, the insulin receptor kinase activity of subsequently isolated cell fractions was significantly augmented. Of interest was the observation that the endosomal insulin receptor tyrosine kinase displayed four- to six-fold greater autophosphorylation activity than that of plasma membrane. Surprisingly, the endosomal insulin receptor tyrosine kinase displayed a decrease in beta-subunit phosphotyrosine content compared with that seen in the plasma membrane. These observations prompted the suggestion that insulin receptor tyrosine kinase phosphotyrosine dephosphorylation mediated by an endosome-specific phosphotyrosine phosphatase(s) yields activation of the endosomal insulin receptor tyrosine kinase. In a previous study we examined the effect of subsaturating doses of injected insulin. In this work we evaluated insulin receptor tyrosine kinase activity and phosphotyrosine content in plasma membrane and endosomes after a receptor-saturating pharmacological dose of insulin (150 micrograms/100 g body weight). At this dose the phosphotyrosine content per receptor was reduced compared with that seen earlier at insulin doses of 1.5 and 15 micrograms/100 g body weight. Endosomal insulin receptor tyrosine kinase was greater than that seen at the lower nonsaturating insulin doses. Furthermore, endosomal insulin receptor tyrosine kinase activity exceeded that of the plasma membrane, despite retaining about the same phosphotyrosine content per receptor. These data are consistent with the view that insulin receptor tyrosine kinase activity may be regulated by a particular pattern of phosphotyrosine content on the beta-subunit wherein both activating and inhibitory phosphotyrosine residues play a role.  相似文献   

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