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1.
We have studied a series of insulin receptor molecules in which the 3 tyrosine residues which undergo autophosphorylation in the kinase domain of the beta-subunit (Tyr1158, Tyr1162, and Tyr1163) were replaced individually, in pairs, or all together with phenylalanine or serine by in vitro mutagenesis. A single-Phe replacement at each of these three positions reduced insulin-stimulated autophosphorylation of solubilized receptor by 45-60% of that observed with wild-type receptor. The double-Phe replacements showed a 60-70% reduction, and substitution of all 3 tyrosine residues with Phe or Ser reduced insulin-stimulated tyrosine autophosphorylation by greater than 80%. Phosphopeptide mapping each mutant revealed that all remaining tyrosine autophosphorylation sites were phosphorylated normally following insulin stimulation, and no new sites appeared. The single-Phe mutants showed insulin-stimulated kinase activity toward a synthetic peptide substrate of 50-75% when compared with wild-type receptor kinase activity. Insulin-stimulated kinase activity was further reduced in the double-Phe mutants and barely detectable in the triple-Phe mutants. In contrast to the wild-type receptor, all of the mutant receptor kinases showed a significant reduction in activation following in vitro insulin-stimulated autophosphorylation. When studied in intact Chinese hamster ovary cells, insulin-stimulated receptor autophosphorylation and tyrosine phosphorylation of the cellular substrate pp185 in the single-Phe and double-Phe mutants was progressively lower with increased tyrosine replacement and did not exceed the basal levels in the triple-Phe mutants. However, all the mutant receptors, including the triple-Phe mutant, retained the ability to undergo insulin-stimulated Ser and Thr phosphorylation. Thus, full activation of the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase is dependent on insulin-stimulated Tris phosphorylation of the kinase domain, and the level of autophosphorylation in the kinase domain provides a mechanism for modulating insulin receptor kinase activity following insulin stimulation. By contrast, insulin stimulation of receptor phosphorylation on Ser and Thr residues by cellular serine/threonine kinases can occur despite markedly reduced tyrosine autophosphorylation.  相似文献   

2.
To approach the question of why insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) and insulin have different physiological actions, we developed antibodies directed against cytoplasmic regions of the IGF-I receptor exhibiting a low degree of homology with the corresponding sequences of the insulin receptor. We found that an antipeptide antibody directed against the beta-subunit carboxyl-terminal sequence (1232-1246) of the IGF-I receptor significantly reduced the in vitro receptor autophosphorylation. The ability of the synthetic peptide corresponding to the IGF-I receptor sequence 1232-1246 to abolish this inhibitory effect reflects the specific nature of the antibody interaction with the targeted domain in the receptor. Antipeptide antibody to IGF-I receptor sequence 1232-1246 also decreased receptor phosphorylation activity toward the exogenous substrate poly(Glu/Tyr). The reduction in poly(Glu/Tyr) phosphorylation was seen even when the antibody was incubated with a receptor previously activated and phosphorylated. Therefore, the inhibitory action on substrate phosphorylation is likely to be unrelated to the antibody reduction of receptor autophosphorylation but rather results from a global decrease in receptor enzymatic activity. The effect of the antipeptide antibody on receptor tyrosine kinase cannot be accounted for by a lowering of the receptor Km for ATP or of its affinity for the substrate poly(Glu/Tyr). Moreover, the interaction of the antibody with the receptor had no repercussion on the ligand binding site as shown by the unaltered IGF-I binding. Taken together our data suggest that the beta-subunit carboxyl-terminal domain of the IGF-I receptor plays a key role in regulating its kinase activity and that the particular sequence recognized by our antipeptide antibody could be involved in negative regulation of receptor functioning.  相似文献   

3.
Chemical degradation and antipeptide antibodies were used to study alterations in the structure and function of the human placental insulin receptor following autophosphorylation in vitro. Antibodies elicited to residues 1143-1162 (P2) of the human insulin proreceptor immunoprecipitated the native, phosphorylated receptor but not the unphosphorylated receptor. Since this antibody recognizes both forms of the receptor on immunoblots, it was concluded that the accessibility of the P2 domain to the antibody is increased by in vitro autophosphorylation. Chemical cleavage at either tryptophan or methionine residues followed by immunoprecipitation with antipeptide antibodies was used to map the in vitro autophosphorylation sites of the beta subunit of the insulin receptor. Two phosphorylated fragments were resolved. One, recognized by antibody elicited to amino acid residues 1328-1343 (P5), is derived from the carboxyl terminus of the beta subunit and includes tyrosine 1316. The other, recognized by antibody to P2, is located in a domain that includes tyrosine 1150. The rate of phosphorylation of this latter site correlates with the rate of activation of the insulin receptor kinase during in vitro autophosphorylation. The results support the following conclusions: autophosphorylation alters the conformation of the beta subunit of the insulin receptor; autophosphorylation in vitro leads to phosphorylation of tyrosine residues near the carboxyl terminus of the protein and in the P2 domain that includes tyrosine 1150; activation of the insulin receptor kinase correlates with autophosphorylation of the domain containing tyrosine 1150.  相似文献   

4.
We studied the inhibitory effect of non-phosphorylated and triphosphorylated synthetic peptides, corresponding to amino acids 1143-1155 of the insulin proreceptor (domain 1151) on autophosphorylation and kinase of the insulin receptor. Tyrosine-phosphorylated peptides were synthesized using the N-(9-fluorenylmethoxycarbonyl)-O-dibenzylphosphono-L- tyrosine. The triphosphorylated peptide (1151-P3) and the non-phosphorylated peptide (1151-NP), respectively, inhibited insulin receptor autophosphorylation by 65% and 70%, in a dose-dependent and additive manner. When the receptor was pre-phosphorylated for 1 min with [gamma-32P]ATP, 1151-P3 decreased autophosphorylation to 60% of maximum, whereas 1151-NP had no further effect. In both non-activated and preactivated receptors, 1151-P3 inhibition of receptor autophosphorylation was prevented by adding 2 mM vanadate. Kinase activity towards exogenous substrate poly(Glu4, Tyr) was dose-dependently inhibited by both analogues. This effect was independent of the state of receptor phosphorylation or the addition of vanadate. Since 1151-P3 inhibited the exogenous kinase without altering receptor endogenous autophosphorylation after the addition of vanadate, we investigated 1151-NP and 1151-P3 competition for the phosphorylation of a resin-immobilized 1151 peptide. While 1151-NP (at 2 mM) was highly competitive, inhibiting phosphate incorporation by 70%, 1151-P3 caused a four-fold increase in the phosphorylation of 1151-NP--resin. The receptor underwent conformational changes during autophosphorylation and an antibody directed against a peptide corresponding to amino acids 1314-1330 of the proreceptor (1322Ab) was previously shown to immunoprecipitate specifically the non-phosphorylated receptor forms. Nevertheless, the 1322Ab immunoprecipitated a fully autophosphorylated receptor in the presence of 1151-NP, but not of 1151-P3, thus suggesting a conformational change induced by the non-phosphorylated peptide. In conclusion, kinase inhibition was still observed after the addition of phosphate groups to three 1151-peptide tyrosines, but the peptide effect on receptor autophosphorylation, phosphorylation of homologous 1151-NP--resin and conformational changes induced in the receptor was altered dramatically. These data may provide a basis for further understanding the role of tyrosine phosphorylation in insulin receptor kinase activation or regulation.  相似文献   

5.
The ability of insulin to activate the insulin receptor protein kinase is shown to be completely dependent on prior beta subunit tyrosine autophosphorylation. Autophosphorylation in the presence of insulin is a highly concerted reaction; tryptic digestion of insulin receptor beta subunits derived from preparations whose kinase activation ranges from under 5% to 100% of maximal yields the same array of [32P]Tyr(P)-containing peptides over the entire range. Of special note is the significant contribution of multiply phosphorylated forms of tryptic peptides corresponding to proreceptor residues 1144-1152 (from the "tyrosine kinase" domain) and 1314-1329 (near the carboxyl terminus) to overall beta subunit phosphorylation at kinase activations of 5% and under. Thus, partially activated/autophosphorylated receptor preparations consist of mixtures of unactivated unphosphorylated receptors and activated fully (or nearly fully) phosphorylated receptors. The latter can be selectively removed by adsorption to antiphosphotyrosine antibodies. This abrupt multiple phosphorylation of individual receptor molecules explains why, in the presence of insulin, overall beta subunit tyrosine phosphorylation tracks closely with kinase, up to approximately 90% activation. Insulin stimulates phosphorylation into all domains (involving at least 6 of the 13 tyrosines on the intracellular portion of the beta subunit) but does not cause the appearance of "new" 32P-labeled species. Rather, insulin directs 32P incorporation preferentially into those domains most productive of kinase activation. Phosphorylation of the tyrosine residues at 1146, 1150, and 1151 correlates most closely with kinase activation. These residues show the largest 32P incorporation during rapid kinase activation; moreover, in comparisons of receptors with similar overall autophosphorylation but very different activations (or similar activations but different extents of autophosphorylation), achieved by omitting insulin or varying [ATP], the phosphorylation of peptide 1144-1152 tracks closely with kinase activation, and phosphorylation of sites and Mr 4000-5000 tryptic peptide (presumably Tyr 953 and/or 960) tract nearly as well. By contrast the extent of phosphorylation of the carboxy-terminal peptide is frequently dissociated from the extent of kinase activation. Phosphorylation of this latter domain probably underlies a beta subunit function other than tyrosine kinase activity.  相似文献   

6.
The receptors for insulin and epidermal growth factor undergo tyrosine autophosphorylation in response to ligand stimulation, while pp60v-src is an unregulated tyrosine kinase. In this report we show that each of the kinases phosphorylates an exogenous peptide that corresponds to the insulin proreceptor sequence 1142-1153. When the kinases were pre-phosphorylated, saturable Michaelis-Menten kinetics were observed. However, when the kinases had not been pre-phosphorylated biphasic kinetics were observed; at progressively higher substrate concentrations (greater than Km) less substrate phosphorylation was seen. Furthermore, when the kinases had not been pre-phosphorylated kinase autophosphorylation was inhibited at high substrate concentrations. On this basis we postulated that the substrate inhibition of substrate phosphorylation resulted directly from substrate inhibition of kinase autophosphorylation. To test this we designed additional peptides to function specifically as inhibitors of the kinases. Each of the 3 tyrosine residues within the substrate sequence were replaced either by 4-methoxyphenylalanine or phenylalanine, residues structurally similar to tyrosine but unable to accept phosphoryl transfer. Both analogs inhibited insulin and epidermal growth factor receptor autophosphorylation, whereas only the Phe-substituted analog inhibited pp60v-src phosphorylation. These data suggest that autophosphorylation of tyrosine residues near the kinase active site is a generalized mechanism for tyrosine kinase activation and that activation can be selectively blocked by substrates and nonphosphorylatable analogs.  相似文献   

7.
The insulin receptor is a complex membrane-spanning glycoprotein composed of two alpha-subunits and two beta-subunits connected to form an alpha 2 beta 2 holoreceptor. Insulin binding to the extracellular alpha-subunits activates intracellular beta-subunit autophosphorylation and substrate kinase activity. The current study was designed to differentiate mechanisms of transmembrane signaling by the insulin receptor, specifically whether individual beta-subunits undergo cis- or trans-phosphorylation. We compared relative kinase activities of trypsin-truncated receptors, alpha beta-half receptors, and alpha 2 beta 2 holoreceptors under conditions that allowed us to differentiate intermolecular and intramolecular events. Compared to the insulin-stimulated holoreceptors, the trypsin-truncated receptor undergoes autophosphorylation at similar tyrosine residues and catalyzes substrate phosphorylation in the absence of insulin at a comparable rate. The truncated receptor sediments on a sucrose gradient at a position consistent with a structure comprising a single beta-subunit attached to a fragment of the alpha-subunit and undergoes autophosphorylation in this form in the absence of insulin. Autophosphorylation of the truncated insulin receptor is independent of receptor concentration, and immobilization of the truncated receptor on a matrix composed of an anti-receptor antibody bound to protein A-Sepharose diminishes neither autophosphorylation nor receptor-catalyzed substrate phosphorylation. Therefore, true intramolecular (cis) phosphorylations, which occur within individual beta-subunits derived from trypsin-truncated receptors, lead to kinase activation. However, insulin-stimulated autophosphorylation of insulin receptor alpha beta heterodimers is concentration-dependent, and both autophosphorylation and kinase activity are markedly reduced following immobilization.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The effects of species-specific monoclonal antibodies to the human insulin receptor on ribosomal protein S6 phosphorylation were studied in rodent cell lines transfected with human insulin receptors. First, Swiss mouse 3T3 fibroblasts expressing normal human insulin receptors (3T3/HIR cells) were studied. Three monoclonal antibodies, MA-5, MA-20, and MA-51, activated S6 kinase in these cells but had no effects in untransfected 3T3 cells. Both insulin and MA-5, the most potent antibody, activated S6 kinase in a similar time- and dose-dependent manner. To measure S6 phosphorylation in vivo, 3T3/HIR cells were preincubated with [32P]Pi and treated with insulin and MA-5. Both agents increased S6 phosphorylation, and their tryptic phosphopeptide maps were similar. MA-5 and the other monoclonal antibodies, unlike insulin, failed to stimulate insulin receptor tyrosine kinase activity either in vitro or in vivo. Moreover, unlike insulin, they failed to increase the tyrosine phosphorylation of the endogenous cytoplasmic protein, pp 185. Next, HTC rat hepatoma cells, expressing a human insulin receptor mutant that had three key tyrosine autophosphorylation sites in the beta-subunit changed to phenylalanines (HTC-IR-F3 cells), were studied. In this cell line but not in untransfected HTC cells, monoclonal antibodies activated S6 kinase without stimulating either insulin receptor autophosphorylation or the tyrosine phosphorylation of pp 185. These data indicate, therefore, that monoclonal antibodies can activate S6 kinase and then increase S6 phosphorylation. Moreover, they suggest that activation of receptor tyrosine kinase and subsequent tyrosine phosphorylation of cellular proteins may not be crucial for activation of S6 kinase by the insulin receptor.  相似文献   

9.
This paper describes the properties of rabbit polyclonal antibodies directed against purified human insulin receptor which strongly stimulate the intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity. The stimulatory effect of the antibodies on the kinase activity was obtained on the insulin receptor autophosphorylation as well as on the kinase activity towards a synthetic substrate. This stimulation is additive to that induced by insulin. Moreover, rabbit antibodies do not impair insulin binding. These data strongly suggest that antibodies and insulin act through separate pathways. This conclusion is reinforced by the differences observed on the phosphopeptide maps of the receptor's beta subunit whose phosphorylation was performed either in the presence of insulin or rabbit antibodies. Interestingly, these polyclonal antibodies can also induce an activation of the receptor autophosphorylation by interacting only with extracellular determinants. The anti-insulin receptor antibodies mimic insulin in their stimulatory effect on amino acid (AIB) uptake, but they have a different effect to that found on the kinase activity; the simultaneous addition of the antiserum and insulin failed to stimulate this amino acid transport over the level induced by a saturating concentration of hormone.  相似文献   

10.
Competitive hormone binding studies with membrane and partially purified receptors from Xenopus laevis oocytes revealed that the oocyte possesses high affinity (KD = 1-3 nM) binding sites for both insulin growth factors 1 and 2 (IGF-1 and IGF-2), but not for insulin. Consistent with these findings, IGF-1 activates hexose uptake by Xenopus oocytes with a KA (3 nM) identical with its KD, while IGF-2 and insulin activate hexose uptake with KA values of 50 nM and 200-250 nM, respectively, suggesting activation mediated through an IGF-1 receptor. Both IGF-1 and insulin activate receptor beta-subunit autophosphorylation and, thereby, protein substrate (reduced and carboxyamidomethylated lysozyme, i.e. RCAM-lysozyme) phosphorylation with KA values comparable to their respective KD values for ligand binding and KA values for activation of hexose uptake. The autophosphorylated beta-subunit(s) of the receptor were resolved into two discrete components, beta 1 and beta 2 (108 kDa and 94 kDa, respectively), which were phosphorylated exclusively on tyrosine and which exhibited similar extents of IGF-1-activated autophosphorylation. When added prior to autophosphorylation, RCAM-lysozyme blocks IGF-1-activated autophosphorylation and, thereby, IGF-1-activated protein substrate (RCAM-lysozyme) phosphorylation. Based on these findings, we conclude that IGF-1-stimulated autophosphorylation of its receptor is a prerequisite for catalysis of protein substrate phosphorylation by the receptor's tyrosine-specific protein kinase. The IGF-1 receptor kinase is implicated in signal transmission from the receptor, since anti-tyrosine kinase domain antibody blocks IGF-1-stimulated kinase activity in vitro and, when microinjected into intact oocytes, prevents IGF-1-stimulated hexose uptake.  相似文献   

11.
To investigate the functions of key domains of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), various EGFR-derived peptide sequences were expressed in Escherichia coli as glutathione S-transferase (GST) fusion proteins. The purified fusion proteins (GST-TK0-8) were tested as substrates for the tyrosine kinase activities of the EGFR and c-src. Both the GST-TK4 fusion protein, which contains the major C-terminal tyrosine autophosphorylation sites of the EGFR, and GST-TK7, which contains the connecting sequence between the EGFR kinase domain and the C-terminal autophosphorylation domain, were strongly phosphorylated by the EGFR and c-src. Hence the candidate tyrosine phosphorylation sites present in the connecting sequences of the EGFR, as well as the known autophosphorylation sites of the EGFR, can be phosphorylated by the two tyrosine kinases. The protein GST-TK7 was phosphorylated by c-src with a KM of 5-10 microM, which indicated a potential interaction between the connecting segment of the EGFR and the c-src kinase. The GST fusion proteins were also used to map the sites recognized by two anti-EGFR monoclonal antibodies and a polyclonal serum raised against an EGFR tyrosine kinase domain fragment. The recognition site of one monoclonal antibody was determined to be in a short sequence surrounding tyr1068, a primary site of autophosphorylation in the C-terminal domain of the receptor. The anti-peptide polyclonal serum recognized only sequences in the GST-TK7 fusion protein, and hence binds to the connecting sequence between the kinase core and the C-terminal domain. These antibodies will therefore be useful reagents for studying the function of two key structural elements of the EGFR tyrosine kinase. The GST-TK fusion proteins should have many other applications in the study of EGFR catalysis and mitogenic signalling.  相似文献   

12.
We have tested the hypothesis that activation of the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase is due to autophosphorylation of tyrosines 1146, 1150 and 1151 within a putative autoinhibitory domain. A synthetic peptide corresponding to residues 1134–1162, with tyrosines substituted by alanine or phenylalanine, of the insulin receptor subunit was tested for its inhibitory potency and specificity towards the tyrosine kinase activity. This synthetic peptide gave inhibition of the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase autophosphorylation and phosphorylation of the exogenous substrate poly(Glu, Tyr) with an approximate IC50 of 100 M. Inhibition appeared to be independent of the concentrations of insulin or the substrate poly(Glu, Tyr) but was decreased by increasing concentrations of ATP. This same peptide also inhibited the EGF receptor tyrosine kinase but not a serine/threonine protein kinase. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that this autophosphorylation domain contains an autoinhibitory sequence. (Mol Cell Biochem120: 103–110, 1993)Abbreviations IR Insulin Receptor - SDS/PAGE Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis - CaM Calmodulin - HEPES 4-(2-Hydroxyethyl)-Piperazineethane-Sulfonic Acid - DMEM Dulbecco's Modified Eagle' Medium - PMSF Phenylmethyl-Sulfonyl Fluoride - HPLC High Performance Liquid Chromatography - PKC Protein Kinase C - PKI Inhibitory Peptide for cAMP-Kinase - CaMK II Ca2+/Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase II - CaN A A Subunit of Calcineurin  相似文献   

13.
In response to insulin, tyrosine kinase activity of the insulin receptor is stimulated, leading to autophosphorylation and tyrosine phosphorylation of proteins including insulin receptor subunit (IRS)-1, IRS-2, and Shc. Phosphorylation of these proteins leads to activation of downstream events that mediate insulin action. Insulin receptor kinase activity is requisite for the biological effects of insulin, and understanding regulation of insulin receptor phosphorylation and kinase activity is essential to understanding insulin action. Receptor tyrosine kinase activity may be altered by direct changes in tyrosine kinase activity, itself, or by dephosphorylation of the insulin receptor by protein-tyrosine phosphatases. After 1 min of insulin stimulation, the insulin receptor was tyrosine phosphorylated 8-fold more and Shc was phosphorylated 50% less in 32D cells containing both IRS-1 and insulin receptors (32D/IR+IRS-1) than in 32D cells containing only insulin receptors (32D/IR), insulin receptors and IRS-2 (32D/IR+IRS-2), or insulin receptors and a form of IRS-1 that cannot be phosphorylated on tyrosine residues (32D/IR+IRS-1F18). Therefore, IRS-1 and IRS-2 appeared to have different effects on insulin receptor phosphorylation and downstream signaling. Preincubation of cells with pervanadate greatly decreased protein-tyrosine phosphatase activity in all four cell lines. After pervanadate treatment, tyrosine phosphorylation of insulin receptors in insulin-treated 32D/IR, 32D/ IR+IRS-2, and 32D/IR+IRS-1F18 cells was markedly increased, but pervanadate had no effect on insulin receptor phosphorylation in 32D/IR+IRS-1 cells. The presence of tyrosine-phosphorylated IRS-1 appears to increase insulin receptor tyrosine phosphorylation and potentially tyrosine kinase activity via inhibition of protein-tyrosine phosphatase(s). This effect of IRS-1 on insulin receptor phosphorylation is unique to IRS-1, as IRS-2 had no effect on insulin receptor tyrosine phosphorylation. Therefore, IRS-1 and IRS-2 appear to function differently in their effects on signaling downstream of the insulin receptor. IRS-1 may play a major role in regulating insulin receptor phosphorylation and enhancing downstream signaling after insulin stimulation.  相似文献   

14.
The role of specific tyrosine autophosphorylation sites in the human insulin receptor kinase domain (Tyr1158, Tyr1162, and Tyr1163) was analyzed using in vitro mutagenesis to replace tyrosine residues individually or in combination. Each of the three single-Phe, the three possible double-Phe a triple-Phe and a triple-Ser mutant receptors, stably expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells, were compared with the wild-type receptor in their ability to mediate stimulation of receptor kinase activity, glycogen synthesis, and DNA synthesis by insulin or the human-specific anti-receptor monoclonal antibody 83-14. At a concentration of 0.1 nM insulin which produced approximately half-maximal responses with wild-type receptor, DNA synthesis and glycogen synthesis mediated by the three single-Phe mutants ranged from 52 to 88% and from 32 to 79% of the wild-type receptor, respectively. The corresponding figures for the double-Phe mutants averaged 15 and 6%, whereas the triple-mutants were unresponsive in both assays. The level of biological function approximately paralleled the insulin-stimulated tyrosine kinase activity in the intact cell as estimated by tyrosine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor and its endogenous substrate pp 185/IRS-1. Interestingly, all mutants showed a marked decrease in insulin-stimulated receptor internalization. Anti-receptor antibody stimulated receptor kinase activity and mimicked insulin action in these cells. In general, the impairment of the metabolic response was greater and impairment of the growth response was less when antibody was the stimulus. These experiments show that the level and specific sites of autophosphorylation are critical determinants of receptor function. The data are consistent with a requirement for the receptor tyrosine kinase either as an obligatory step or a modulator, in both metabolic and growth responses, and demonstrate the important role of the level of insulin receptor kinase domain autophosphorylation in regulating insulin sensitivity.  相似文献   

15.
Genistein, an isoflavone putative tyrosine kinase inhibitor, was used to investigate the coupling of insulin receptor tyrosine kinase activation to four metabolic effects of insulin in the isolated rat adipocyte. Genistein inhibited insulin-stimulated glucose oxidation in a concentration-dependent manner with an ID50 of 25 micrograms/ml and complete inhibition at 100 micrograms/ml. Genistein also prevented insulin's (10(-9) M) inhibition of isoproterenol-stimulated lipolysis with an ID50 of 15 micrograms/ml and a complete effect at 50 micrograms/ml. The effect of genistein (25 micrograms/ml) was not reversed by supraphysiological (10(-7) M) insulin levels. In contrast, genistein up to 100 micrograms/ml had no effect on insulin's (10(-9) M) stimulation of either pyruvate dehydrogenase or glycogen synthase activity. We determined whether genistein influenced insulin receptor beta-subunit autophosphorylation or tyrosine kinase substrate phosphorylation either in vivo or in vitro by anti-phosphotyrosine immunoblotting. Genistein at 100 micrograms/ml did not inhibit insulin's (10(-7) M) stimulation of insulin receptor tyrosine autophosphorylation or tyrosine phosphorylation of the cellular substrates pp185 and pp60. Also, genistein did not prevent insulin-stimulated autophosphorylation of partially purified human insulin receptors from NIH 3T3/HIR 3.5 cells or the phosphorylation of histones by the activated receptor tyrosine kinase. In control experiments using either NIH 3T3 fibroblasts or partially purified membranes from these cells, genistein did inhibit platelet-derived growth factor's stimulation of its receptor autophosphorylation. These findings indicate the following: (a) Genistein can inhibit certain responses to insulin without blocking insulin's stimulation of its receptor tyrosine autophosphorylation or of the receptor kinase substrate tyrosine phosphorylation. (b) In adipocytes genistein must block the stimulation of glucose oxidation and the antilipolytic effects of insulin at site(s) downstream from the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase. (c) The inhibitory effects of genistein on hormonal signal transduction cannot necessarily be attributed to inhibition of tyrosine kinase activity, unless specifically demonstrated.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
The tyrosine kinase activity of a chimeric insulin receptor composed of the extracellular domain of the human insulin receptor (IR) and the intracellular domain of the chicken IR was compared with wild-type human IR. The degrees of autophosphorylation, phosphorylation of IRS-1, and in vitro phosphorylation of an exogenous substrate after stimulation by human insulin were similar to that seen with the human IR. We conclude that the insulin resistance of chickens is not attributable to a lower level of intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity of IR.  相似文献   

18.
R M O''''Brien  M A Soos    K Siddle 《The EMBO journal》1987,6(13):4003-4010
The effect of monoclonal anti-insulin receptor antibodies on the intrinsic kinase activity of solubilized receptor was investigated. Antibodies for six distinct epitopes stimulated receptor autophosphorylation and kinase activity towards exogenous substrates. This effect of antibodies was seen only within a narrow concentration range and monovalent antibody fragments were ineffective. Evidence was obtained by sucrose density-gradient centrifugation for the formation of antibody-receptor complexes which involved both inter- and intra-molecular cross-linking, although stimulation of autophosphorylation appeared to be preferentially associated with the latter. There was partial additivity between the effects of insulin and antibodies in stimulating autophosphorylation, although the sites of phosphorylation appeared identical on two-dimensional peptide maps. Antibodies for two further epitopes failed to activate receptor kinase, but inhibited its stimulation by insulin. The effects of antibodies on kinase activity paralleled their metabolic effects on adipocytes, except for one antibody which was potently insulin-like in its metabolic effects, but which antagonized insulin stimulation of kinase activity. It is concluded that antibodies activate the receptor by cross-linking subunits rather than by reacting at specific epitopes. The ability of some antibodies to activate receptor may depend on receptor environment as well as the disposition of epitopes.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Three peptides were synthesized corresponding to potential autophosphorylation sites of the beta subunit of the human insulin receptor. These were peptide 1150 corresponding to amino acids 1142-1153 of the pro-receptor, peptide 960 corresponding to amino acids 952-961 of the proreceptor, and peptide 1316 corresponding to amino acids 1313-1329 of the proreceptor. Peptide 1150 served as a better substrate for the insulin receptor tyrosine protein kinase than either of the other peptides or than the Src peptide (corresponding to the sequence surrounding the autophosphorylation site at Tyr-416). Microsequencing of the phosphorylated peptide 1150 indicated that Tyr-1150 rather than Tyr-1146 or Tyr-1151 was phosphorylated in the in vitro reaction. The insulin receptor was then isolated from 32P-labeled IM-9 cells that had been exposed to insulin. Tryptic digestion of the beta subunit revealed one peptide whose phosphorylation was dependent upon insulin and occurred exclusively on Tyr. This peptide was selectively immunoprecipitated by an antipeptide antibody directed to the Tyr-1150-containing sequence. We conclude that Tyr-1150 is preferentially phosphorylated by the purified receptor kinase and that one of the autophosphorylation reactions elicited by insulin in intact cells occurs in a sequence that contains this residue.  相似文献   

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