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1.
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   

2.
Low temperature and the lysosomotropic agent, chloroquine, were used to study the degradation of 125I-insulin in a perfused rat liver. Insulin (1.5 × 10?9m) was removed from the perfusate at 35 °C with a T12 of 12 min, and this process was slowed to 35 min at a temperature of 17 °C. Essentially no degradation of 125I-insulin took place in the liver at 17 °C. After 90 min at that temperature 64% of the liver radioactivity had accumulated in the microsomal fraction of the tissue homogenate, while at 35 °C 60% of the radioactive material was in the supernatant fraction. Greater than 80% of the supernatant radioactivity was acid soluble. Rapid warming of a 17 °C-treated liver to 35 °C allowed the accumulated 125I-insulin in the microsomal fraction to be degraded to acid-soluble products in the normal manner. Chloroquine (0.2 mm) also caused the liver to degrade insulin more slowly. At 60 min after adding 125I-insulin to the chloroquine-treated liver, 50% of the radioactivity in the tissue was still present in the lysosome-rich fraction of the homogenate, while less than 10% was in this fraction in a control liver. The effects of low temperature show transfer of insulin to its degradative site is rate limiting for hormone catabolism and the inhibition by chloroquine suggests lysosomes have a role in insulin degradation by the liver.  相似文献   

3.
The parathyrin receptor in renal cortex has been investigated by studying the binding of 125I-labelled parathyrin, or of unlabelled parathyrin detected with 125I-labelled antibodies, to a partially purified plasma membrane fraction. The kinetics of hormone uptake demonstrated a biphasic response in both systems at 22 °C but this phenomenon was not detectable at 37 °C. Specific displacement of lactoperoxidase labelled 125I-labelled parathyrin occurred with 8 ng unlabelled bovine parathyrin. The apparent affinity constant was 2.3 · 108M?1 and the apparent binding capacity of the membranes 1.25 pmol/mg protein. Using the labelled antibody technique the receptor showed maximal binding at pH 7.0–7.5. As little as 80 pg bovine parathyrin produced a significant increase in binding of labelled anti-bovine parathyrin antibody and saturation of binding sites was demonstrated at 2.5 pmol/mg protein. Oxidized hormone showed undetectable binding. Treatment of membranes with phospholipases A or D, or Trypsin greatly reduced subsequent hormone binding. Prior incubation of membranes with 1–34 synthetic parathyrin decreased the binding of intact hormone whereas gastrin, insulin and glueagon had no effect. Growth hormone and calcitonin slightly increased parathyrin binding.  相似文献   

4.
An epithelial cell line established from a Chinese hamster kidney, CHK-ACE, was separated into two sublines, CHK-ACE-100 and CHK-ACE-400, by 18 successive passages in medium containing 100 and 400 mg/dl glucose, respectively. Binding of CHK-ACE-100 and CHK-ACE-400 cells to 125I-labeled insulin showed similar pH and time dependency; 125I-labeled insulin binding as a function of insulin concentration differed in the two sublines, however. Degradation of 125I-labeled insulin, as determined by its ability to bind insulin antibody and cells, was more extensive when preincubated with CHK_ACE-400 cells than with CHK-ACE-100 cells. When CHK-ACE-100 cells were grown in 400 mg/dl glucose for six passages, these cells showed more insulin binding sites than cells grown parallel in 100 mg/dl glucose; whereas CHK-ACE-400 cells grown in 100 mg/dl glucose for six passages showed fewer insulin binding sites than those grown parallel in 400 mg/dl glucose. A slight increase in Kf/Ke ratio was observed in both sublines when grown in 400 mg/dl glucose as compared to 100 mg/dl glucose, indicating attenuated negative cooperativity of the binding sites in cells grown in 400 mg/dl glucose. Tunicamycin, at concentrations from 0.016 to 0.125 μg/ml, showed no direct effect on the assay of 125I-labeled insulin binding to CHK-ACE-100 cells; exposure of CHK-ACE-100 cells to tunicamycin, at concentrations from 0.01 to 0.2 μg/ml, for 24 h caused a dose-dependent decrease in insulin binding capacity and an increase in Kf/Ke ratio. These data indicate that the number of insulin binding sites in the cultured Chinese hamster kidney epithelial cells increased with high glucose concentrations in the culture medium, whereas tunicamycin, an inhibitor of protein glycosylation, lowered the number of insulin binding sites.  相似文献   

5.
Brief exposure to the protein neurotoxin, β-bungarotoxin, is known to disrupt neuromuscular transmission irreversibly by blocking the release of transmitter from the nerve terminal. This neurotoxin also has a phospholipase A2 activity, although phospholipases in general are not very toxic. To determine if the toxicity of this molecule might result from specific binding to neural tissue, we have looked for high affinity, saturable binding using 125I-labeled toxin. At low membrane protein concentration 125I-labeled toxin binding was directly proportional to the amount of membrane; at fixed membrane concentration 125I-labeled toxin showed saturable binding. It was unlikely that iodination markedly changed the toxin's properties since the iodinated toxin had a comparable binding affinity to that of native toxin as judged by competition experiments. Comparison of toxin binding to brain, liver and red blood cell membranes showed that all had high affinity binding sites with dissociation constants between one and two nanomolar. This is comparable to the concentrations previously shown to inhibit mitochondrial function. However, the density of these sites showed marked variation such that the density of sites was 13.0 pmol/mg protein for a brain membrane preparation, 2.4 pmol/mg for liver and 0.25 pmol/mg for red blood cell membranes.In earlier work we had shown that calcium uptake by brain mitochondria is inhibited at much lower toxin concentrations than is liver mitochondrial uptake. Both liver and brain mitochondria bind toxin specifically, but the density of 125I-labeled toxin binding sites on brain mitochondrial prepartions (3.3 ± 0.3 pmol/mg) exceeded by a factor of ten the density on liver mitochondrial preparations (0.3 ± 0.05 pmol/mg). It is also shown that the labeled toxin does not cross synaptosomal membranes, suggesting that mitochondria may not be the site of action of the toxin in vivo. We conclude the β-bungarotoxin is an enzyme which can bind specifically with high affinity to cell membranes.  相似文献   

6.
Several semisynthetic analogues of human insulin were prepared by enzyme-assisted coupling of synthetic octapeptides to the C-terminal of porcine desoctapeptide insulin. We report the receptor-binding and biological properties of [LeuB24]- and [LeuB25]-insulins, one of which has the same sequence as a “mutant” insulin recently found in a diabetic patient (Tager, H. et al.(1979) Nature 28:121–125). [LeuB24]- and [LeuB25]-insulins had, respectively, 8–12% and 0.9–1.1% of the binding affinity of human insulin, and 11% and 2.7% of its potency in stimulating lipogenesis in isolated rat fat cells. Neither one was an antagonist of the biological effects of native insulin. While the ability of [LeuB24]-insulin to induce negative cooperativity was clearly impaired, that of [LeuB25]-insulin was almost abolished. [LeuB25]-insulin was also a potent antagonist of the negative cooperativity induced by native insulin.  相似文献   

7.
Insulin receptors could be demonstrated in cultured smooth muscle cells of rat aorta. The specific binding of 125I-insulin was time-, temperature- and pH-dependent. The optimal temperature for our studies was 12 degrees C. At this temperature maximal specific binding was 0.5% of total counts at 120 min incubation. The pH-optimum for the binding process was between 7.5 and 8. Degradation of 125I-insulin at 12 degrees C was 14%, no degradation of binding sites could be measured at this temperature. Dissociation of 125I-insulin was rapid. 50% of the labeled hormone remained associated with the cells. Half-maximal inhibition of 125I-insulin binding was produced by insulin at 4 X 10(-11) mol/l. Scatchard-analysis gave curvilinear plots, that may suggest negative cooperativity. Specificity of binding was studied in competition experiments between 125I-insulin, insulin, proinsulin, insulin-like growth factors and human growth hormone. Half-maximal inhibition of 125I-insulin binding was produced by proinsulin at 2 X 10(-9) mol/l and by insulin-like growth factors at 9 X 10(-9) mol/l. Human growth hormone had no significant effect on the insulin binding.  相似文献   

8.
Insulin stimulation of glycogen synthase activity and insulin binding were measured in fibroblast monolayers at 24, 32, and 37°C. Insulin stimulation of %I glycogen activity increased with increasing temperature. Maximum response was greater at 37°C than at 32°C, and half maximal stimulation required at 2.0 nM insulin at 37°C vs. 10nM at 32°C. Insulin stimulation of glycogen synthase was greater and somewhat faster at 37°C than at 32°C. No insulin effect was observed at 24°C. 125I-insulin binding to monolayers became maximal in 15 min at 37°C, 60 min at 32°C, and 120 min at 24°C. However, insulin binding decreased with increasing temperature, and this decline was due to decreased numbers of receptors. Insulin binding and stimulation of glycogen synthase were comparable at 32°C, with half maxima at 10 nM, indicating no evidence of “spare” receptors. The data indicate that temperature effects on insulin binding and action in fibroblasts are not directly related. The results also suggest that a rate limiting step(s) of insulin action is temperature sensitive, and that this step is not insulin binding.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
In chicken thymocytes isolated from 15–40 day-old chickens, after a 2 h incubation at 37°C, insulin stimulated amino isobutyric acid uptake (maximal response: 40–50% of increase at 1 μg insulin/ml and half maximal response at 60 ng/ml) by specifically stimulating the influx without altering the efflux. Insulin also stimulated glucose oxidation (maximal response: 11% of increase at 1 μg insulin/ml). Binding of 125I-labelled chicken insulin to thymocytes was rapid and higher at 15°C than at 37°C. At steady state, (90 min at 15°C), chicken, porcine and goose insulins were equipotent in inhibiting the binding of 125I-labelled chicken insulin. Maximal binding capacity was estimated at 1250 pg insulin/108 cells, i.e., 1250 binding sites/cell with an apparent dissociation constant of 200 ng insulin/ml at 15°C. Degradation of 125I-labelled chicken insulin in the incubation medium was negligible at 15°C but very noticeable at 37°C. Therefore, the low level of insulin binding at 15°C reflects a true scarcity of insulin receptors in chicken thymocytes as compared to rat thymocytes.  相似文献   

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.
Insulin was tritiated by exposure to tritium gas activated by microwave radiation. 3H-insulin competed with 125I-insulin for binding to cultured human lymphocytes and to anti-insulin antibody to the same extent as did native insulin. The affinity constant for the binding of 3H-insulin to specific receptors on cultured human lymphocytes was 0.48 × 109 M?1 (SD-0.06). The affinity constant for the binding of 125I-insulin was 0.57 × 109 M?1 (SD=0.23). As was the case with 125I-insulin, the Scatchard plot of the binding of 3H-insulin to human lymphocytes was curvilinear, suggesting the presence of a heterogeneous population of receptors, or of a homogeneous population of receptors that exhibit negative cooperativity. The similarity observed between 3H-insulin and 125I-insulin helps refute the argument that distortion of the insulin molecule caused by introduction of an iodine atom may interfere with its binding to insulin receptors.  相似文献   

13.
The influence of a mild heat shock on the fate of the insulin-receptor complex was studied in cultured fetal rat hepatocytes whose insulin glycogenic response is sensitive to heat [Zachayus and Plas (1995): J Cell Physiol 162:330–340]. After exposure from 15 min to 2 hr at 42.5°C, the amount of 125I-insulin associated with cells at 37°C was progressively decreased (by 35% after 1 hr), while the release of 125I-insulin degradation products into the medium was also inhibited (by 75%), more than expected from the decrease in insulin binding. Heat shock did not affect the insulin-induced internalization of cell surface insulin receptors but progressively suppressed the recycling at 37°C of receptors previously internalized at 42.5°C in the presence of insulin. When compared to the inhibitory effects of chloroquine on insulin degradation and insulin receptor recycling, which were immediate (within 15 min), those of heat shock developed within 1 hr of heating. The protein level of insulin receptors was not modified after heat shock and during recovery at 37°C, while that of Hsp72/73 exhibited a transitory accumulation inversely correlated with variations in insulin binding, as assayed by Western immunoblotting from whole cell extracts. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments revealed a heat shock-stimulated association of Hsp72/73 with the insulin receptor. Affinity labeling showed an interaction between 125I-insulin and Hsp72/73 in control cells, which was inhibited by heat shock. These results suggest that increased Hsp72/73 synthesis interfered with insulin degradation and prevented the recycling of the insulin receptor and its further thermal damage via a possible chaperone-like action in fetal hepatocytes submitted to heat stress. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
A radioiodinated form of the highly potent enkephalin analog FK 33-824 has been characterized with respect to its binding properties in vitro. 125I-FK 33-824 is distinctive among the short opioid peptides in three ways. First, 125I-FK 33-824 binds stereospecifically to rat brain homogenates with very high affinity (Kd = 0.42 nM). Secondly, dissociation of the 125l-labelled peptide from membrane-bound opiate receptors occurs with a relatively long τ12 of 25 min at 4° in contrast to other enkephalins which dissociate more rapidly. Third, competitive binding analyses reveal that the 125l-FK 33-824 binds equally well to both enkephalin (δ) and morphine (μ) classes of opiate receptors. These characteristics distinguish the 125l-labelled peptide as a particularly suitable probe for molecular studies and purification of the opiate receptor.  相似文献   

15.
Binding of 125I-insulin to primary cultures of differentiated mouse astrocytes was time-dependent, reaching equilibrium after 2 h at 22 degrees C, with equilibrium binding corresponding to 20.79 fmol/mg of protein, representing approximately 5,000 occupied binding sites/cell. The half-life of 125I-insulin dissociation at 22 degrees C was 2 min, with an initial dissociation rate constant of 4.12 X 10(-2) s-1. Dissociation of bound 125I-insulin was not accelerated significantly in the presence of unlabeled insulin (16.7 microM). Porcine and desoctapeptide insulins competed for specific 125I-insulin binding in a dose-dependent manner, whereas growth hormone, glucagon, and somatostatin did not. For porcine insulin, Scatchard analysis suggested multiple-affinity binding sites (high-affinity Ka = 4.92 X 10(8) M-1; low-affinity Ka = 0.95 X 10(7) M-1). After incubation with insulin (0.5 microM) for 2 h at 37 degrees C, increases above basal values of 254 +/- 23 and 189 +/- 34% for [3H]uridine uptake and incorporation, respectively, were observed. After incubation with insulin (0.5 microM) for 24 h at 37 degrees C, there were increases of 145 +/- 6% for [3H]thymidine uptake and 166 +/- 11% for thymidine incorporation. Basal and stimulated uridine and thymidine uptake and incorporation were inhibited by 50 microM dipyridamole. These studies confirm that mouse astrocytes in vitro possess specific insulin receptors and demonstrate an effect of insulin on pyrimidine nucleoside uptake and incorporation.  相似文献   

16.
Previous studies have suggested that transglutaminase has a role in the internalization of some polypeptide hormones and is inhibited by the antibiotic, bacitracin. Bacitracin has been used in insulin-receptor studies to inhibit extracellular degradation of 125I-labelled insulin. The aim of this study was to investigate bacitracin's effect on 125I-labelled insulin-receptor interactions in isolated rat hepatocytes. 1 g/l bacitracin increased cell-associated 125I-labelled insulin at 20, 30 and 37°C (P < 0.001, 0.0005 and 0.0005, respectively). At 5 and 15°C (internalization does not occur), bacitracin did not affect cell-associated 125I-labelled insulin. The bacitracin effect was concentration dependent, increasing to 2 g/l. Scatchard analysis showed that bacitracin did not alter insulin receptor affinity or number. 1 g/l bacitracin abolished the effect of chloroquine. The increased cell-associated radioactivity with bacitracin was surface-bound in nature. 0.5 g/l bacitracin decreased 125I-labelled insulin degradation in hepatocyte suspensions (P < 0.001) and in buffer previously incubated with hepatocytes (P < 0.0005). More 125I-labelled insulin remained associated with cells during dissociation studies at 37°C when the buffer contained 1 g/l bacitracin. Label that appeared in the buffer after 60 min was significantly more intact in the presence of bacitracin (P < 0.025). These results suggest that bacitracin retards the internalization of 125I-labelled insulin in isolated rat hepatocytes.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract: Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) is a neuropeptide that causes neurone excitation in the brain cortex. VIP receptors were studied in subcellular fractions isolated from rat cerebral cortex. The receptor binding of 125I-VIP was greatest in the synaptosomal fraction at membrane protein concentrations of 50–100 μg/ml, a temperature of 37°C, and a pH from 7.4 to 7.7. Under these conditions the concomitant proteolytic degradation of 125I-VIP was approximately 10% after 60 min of incubation. The binding of 60 pmoI/L 125I-VIP reached steady-state after 60 min and was maintained up to 240 min. At steady-state, the receptor-bound 125I-VIP was displaced by unlabelled VIP with half-maximal inhibition (IC50) at a concentration of approximately 3 nmol/L. The binding of 125I-VIP in the concentration range of 10 pmol/L to 6 nmol/L was superimposable on the VIP displacement curve. The Scatchard plot was curvilinear with upward concavity, which can be interpreted to represent two classes of receptors with KD of 2.5 and 125 nmol/L, one class of receptors with negative cooperative interactions, or heterogeneity of the 125I- VIP preparation. The total amount of receptors was 9.5 pmol/mg of membrane protein. Secretin displaced receptor-bound 125I-VIP with an IC50 of 0.3 μmol/L, whereas glucagon snowed no inhibition up to 1 μmol/L. The dissociation of receptor-bound 125I-VIP was biexponential with rate constants (k2) of 4.1 – 10?3 and 0.18 min?1 corresponding to half-times of approximately 170 and 4 min, respectively. The size of the two components was dependent on the duration of the 125I-VIP association period. Initially, both components increased; at steady-state, the rapid component declined, whereas the slow component increased to approximately 70% after 120 min. The association rate constants (k1) were estimated from the initial velocities as 106 and 4. 106 L. mol?1. min?1, and a calculation of the KD as k2/k1 gave values of 4.1 and 45 nmol/L, respectively. In conclusion, the presence of receptors for VIP on synaptosomes from the cerebral cortex supports the role of VIP as a neurotransmitter in the brain. The receptor binding was heterogeneous, suggesting the presence of two classes of receptors. The binding kinetics showed a time-dependent transition of VIP receptors from a low- to a high-affinity state, which may be interpreted as desensitisation of synapses to the action of VIP.  相似文献   

18.
Benzodiazepine receptors were labeled with [3H] diazepam following intravenous injection in rats. Binding of [3H] diazepam in vivo to rat forebrain membranes was displaceable by co-injection of clonazepam or the pharmacologically active enantiomers of two benzodiazepines, B9 and B10, but was not displaced by equal doses of the pharmacologically in-active enantiomers. Binding of [3H] diazepam invivo was bserved in kidney, liver, and abdominal muscle, but was not stereospecifically diplaced in any peripheral tissue studied. The regional distribution of benzodiazepine receptors in brain was uneven, with specific [3H] diazepam binding being highest in the cerebral cortex and lowest in the ponsmedulla. Preliminary studies of the subcellular distribution of [3H] diazepam binding demonstrated highest specific binding to synaptosomal membranes. These data demonstrate the feasibility of labeling benzodiazepine receptors in rat brain invivo.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Effects of trypsin treatment on insulin and concanavalin A binding to, and glucose and proline transport in, dissociated R3230AC mammary adenocarcinoma cells were examined. Reduction of binding of 125I-labelled insulin was dependent on the amount of trypsin used, the temperature and the time of the incubation period. Under conditions that reduced insulin binding by greater than 75%, transport of glucose and proline was reduced by less than 15%. Scatchard analysis of insulin binding after trypsin treatment yielded slopes similar to those from cells not exposed to trypsin, assuming either two classes of receptors or an average affinity, K?e. Dissociation of bound insulin from untreated or trypsin-treated cells was enhanced by addition of excess unlabelled ligand. Insulin added in vitro, which decreased glucose transport in untreated cells, produced a decrease in glucose transport in cells treated with trypsin for 5 min (insulin binding was decreased 35%), but not in cells treated for 45 min (insulin binding was decreased 90%). Binding of the plant lectin concanavalin A was also reduced by trypsin treatment, but to a lesser extent and with a different time-course than for insulin. Scatchard analysis of the binding of concanavalin A in untreated and trypsin-treated cells yielded comparable values for Kd. The insulinomimetic actions of concanavalin A on glucose transport were abolished after brief exposure to trypsin. Pre-treatment of cells with concanavalin A reduced insulin binding and partially protected insulin receptors from trypsin digestion, but the inability to remove all of the concanavalin A precluded its use as a method to protect insulin receptors. Thus, in this rat mammary tumor, the number, but not the affinity or functional activity, of insulin receptors can be reduced by trypsin treatment without significant effects on glucose or A system amino acid transport.  相似文献   

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