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1.
Insulin was found to provoke simultaneous, rapid, biphasic increases in [3H]choline-labeling of phosphatidylcholine and phosphocholine in BC3H-1 myocytes. Phorbol esters increased [3H]choline-labeling of phosphocholine, but not phosphatidylcholine. Both agonists increased diacylglycerol production. These results suggest that: (a) insulin provokes coordinated increases in the synthesis and hydrolysis of PC; and, (b) insulin-induced activation of protein kinase C may activate a PC-specific phospholipase.  相似文献   

2.
Since insulin effects on glucose transport persist in phorbol ester "desensitized" or "down-regulated" BC3H-1 myocytes, we reexamined the evidence for protein kinase C (PKC) depletion. After 24 hrs of 5 microM 12-0-tetradecanoyl phorbol-13-acetate (TPA) treatment, PKC-directed histone phosphorylation and acute TPA effects on glucose transport were lost, but PKC-dependent vinculin phosphorylation was still evident. Hydroxylapatite (HAP) chromatography revealed loss of a type III, but not a type II, PKC-dependent vinculin phosphorylation. Immunoblots of cytosolic preparations of PKC-"depleted" myocytes confirmed the retention of PKC. Our findings indicate that TPA "down-regulated" BC3H-1 myocytes contain immunoreactive and functionally active PKC. The latter may explain the continued effectiveness of both insulin and diacylglycerol (DiC8) for stimulating glucose transport in "down-regulated" cells.  相似文献   

3.
We previously suggested that insulin increases diacylglycerol (DAG) in BC3H-1 myocytes, both by increases in synthesis de novo of phosphatidic acid (PA) and by hydrolysis of non-inositol-containing phospholipids, such as phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). We have now evaluated these insulin effects more thoroughly, and several potential mechanisms for their induction. In studies of the effect on PA synthesis de novo, insulin stimulated [2-3H]glycerol incorporation into PA, DAG, PC/PE and total glycerolipids of BC3H-1 myocytes, regardless of whether insulin was added simultaneously with, or after 2 h or 3 or 10 days of prelabelling with, [2-3H]glycerol. In prelabelled cells, time-related changes in [2-3H]glycerol labelling of DAG correlated well with increases in DAG content: both were maximal in 30-60 s and persisted for 20-30 min. [2-3H]Glycerol labelling of glycerol 3-phosphate, on the other hand, was decreased by insulin, presumably reflecting increased utilization for PA synthesis. Glycerol 3-phosphate concentrations were 0.36 and 0.38 mM before and 1 min after insulin treatment, and insulin effects could not be explained by increases in glycerol 3-phosphate specific radioactivity. In addition to that of [2-3H]glycerol, insulin increased [U-14C]glucose and [1,2,3-3H]glycerol incorporation into DAG and other glycerolipids. Effects of insulin on [2-3H]glycerol incorporation into DAG and other glycerolipids were half-maximal and maximal at 2 nM- and 20 nM-insulin respectively, and were not dependent on glucose concentration in the medium, extracellular Ca2+ or protein synthesis. Despite good correlation between [3H]DAG and DAG content, calculated increases in DAG content from glycerol 3-phosphate specific radioactivity (i.e. via the pathway of PA synthesis de novo) could account for only 15-30% of the observed increases in DAG content. In addition to increases in [3H]glycerol labelling of PC/PE, insulin rapidly (within 30 s) increased PC/PE labelling by [3H]arachidonic acid, [3H]myristic acid, and [14C]choline. Phenylephrine, ionophore A23187 and phorbol esters did not increase [2-3H]glycerol incorporation into DAG or other glycerolipids in 2-h-prelabelling experiments; thus activation of the phospholipase C which hydrolyses phosphatidylinositol, its mono- and bis-phosphate, Ca2+ mobilization, and protein kinase C activation, appear to be ruled out as mechanisms to explain the insulin effect on synthesis de novo of PA, DAG and PC.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Insulin treatment stimulated the activity of the Ca2+- and phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C) in both cytosolic and membrane fractions of BC3H-1 myocytes. Within 60 s of insulin treatment, membrane protein kinase C activity increased 2-fold, diminished toward control levels transiently, and then increased 2-fold again after 15 min. Cytosolic protein kinase C activity increased more gradually and steadily up to 80% over a 20-min period. Increases in protein kinase C activity were dose-dependent and were not simply a result of translocation of cytosolic enzyme (although this may have occurred), as total activity was also increased. The increase in protein kinase C activity was not inhibited by cycloheximide (which also increased protein kinase C activity and 2-deoxyglucose transport) and was still evident following anion exchange chromatography. The insulin effect was decidedly different from those of 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate and phenylephrine using histone III-S as substrate. Phenylephrine decreased cytosolic protein kinase C activity while increasing membrane activity; 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate only decreased cytosolic protein kinase C activity. The early insulin-induced increases in membrane protein kinase C activity may be related to increased diacylglycerol generation from de novo phosphatidic acid synthesis, as there were rapid increases in [3H]glycerol incorporation into diacylglycerol, and transient increases in phospholipid hydrolysis, as there were transient rapid increases in [3H]diacylglycerol in cells prelabeled with [3H]arachidonate. Later, sustained increases in membrane and cytosolic protein kinase C activity may reflect the continuous activation of de novo phospholipid synthesis, as there were associated increases in [3H]glycerol incorporation into diacylglycerol at later, as well as very early time points.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of pertussis toxin (PT) treatment on insulin-stimulated myristoyl-diacylglycerol (DAG) generation, hexose transport, and thymidine incorporation were studied in differentiated BC3H-1 myocytes. Insulin treatment caused a biphasic increase in myristoyl-DAG production which was abolished in myocytes treated with PT. There was no effect of PT treatment on basal (nonstimulated) myristoyl-DAG production. Insulin-stimulated hydrolysis of a membrane phosphatidylinositol glycan was blocked by PT treatment. ADP-ribosylation of BC3H-1 plasma membranes with [32P]NAD revealed a 40-kDa protein as the major PT substrate in vivo and in vitro. The time course and dose dependence of the effects of PT on diacylglycerol generation correlated with the in vivo ADP-ribosylation of the 40-kDa substrate. Pertussis toxin treatment resulted in a 71% attenuation of insulin-stimulated hexose uptake without effect on either basal or phorbol ester-stimulated uptake. The stimulatory effects of insulin and fetal calf serum on [3H]thymidine incorporation into quiescent myocytes were attenuated by 61 and 59%, respectively, when PT was added coincidently with the growth factors. Nonstimulated and EGF-stimulated [3H]thymidine incorporation was unaffected by PT treatment. These data suggest that a PT-sensitive G protein is involved in the cellular signaling mechanisms of insulin.  相似文献   

6.
M D Bazzi  G L Nelsestuen 《Biochemistry》1989,28(24):9317-9323
The binding of protein kinase C (PKC) to membranes and appearance of kinase activity are separable events. Binding is a two-step process consisting of a reversible calcium-dependent interaction followed by an irreversible interaction that can only be dissociated by detergents. The irreversibly bound PKC is constitutively active, and the second step of binding may be a major mechanism of PKC activation [Bazzi & Nelsestuen (1988) Biochemistry 27, 7589]. This study examined the activity of other forms of membrane-bound PKC and compared the effects of phorbol esters and diacylglycerols. Like the membrane-binding event, activation of PKC was a two-stage process. Diacylglycerols (DAG) participated in forming an active PKC which was reversibly bound to the membrane. In this case, both activity and membrane binding were terminated by addition of calcium chelators. DAG functioned poorly in generating the constitutively active, irreversible PKC-membrane complex. These properties differed markedly from phorbol esters which activated PKC in a reversible complex but also promoted constitutive PKC activation by forming the irreversible PKC-membrane complex. The concentration of phorbol esters needed to generate the irreversible PKC-membrane complex was slightly higher than the concentration needed to activate PKC. In addition, high concentrations of phorbol esters (greater than or equal to 50 nM) activated PKC and induced irreversible PKC-membrane binding in the absence of calcium. Despite these striking differences, DAG prevented binding of phorbol esters to high-affinity sites on the PKC-membrane complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
In BC3H-1 myocytes, insulin has been reported to (a) increase diacyglycerol (DAG) production and provoke increases in protein kinase C enzyme activity of crude or DEAE-Sephacel-purified cytosol and membrane fractions in BC3H-1 myocytes (Cooper et al. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 3633-3739), but (b) decrease cytosolic, and transiently increase membrane, immunoreactive protein kinase C (Acevedo-Duncan et al. (1989) FEBS Lett. 244, 174-176). Presently, we used a Mono-Q column to purify protein kinase C and found that, similar to immunoblot findings, enzyme activity decreased in the cytosol, and increased in the membrane during insulin treatment. Similar differences in protein kinase C activation patterns were observed in rat adipose tissue: insulin stimulated cytosolic protein kinase C enzyme activity as measured after DEAE-Sephacel chromatography, but decreased cytosolic enzyme activity when measured after Mono-Q chromatography or by immunoblotting. We presently evaluated the possibility that insulin-induced increases in endogenous DAG may influence protein kinase C during assay in vitro. Crude cytosol from BC3H-1 myocytes contained 25-35% of total and [3H]glycerol-labelled DAG and insulin increased this DAG. Considerable amounts of [3H]glycerol-labelled DAG were present in insulin-stimulated protein kinase C-containing column fractions following DEAE-Sephacel chromatography of cytosol fractions, whereas lesser amounts were recovered after Mono-Q column chromatography. This difference in recovery of DAG and activation of the enzyme by this endogenous DAG may explain why we were able to discern insulin-induced (presumably translocation 'provoked') decreases in cytosolic protein kinase C in the present Mono-Q column preparations of both BC3H-1 myocytes and rat adipose tissue.  相似文献   

8.
Treatment of BC3H1 myocytes or 3T3-L1 fibroblasts with fluoroaluminate (AlF4-), a direct activator of G proteins, increased the tyrosine phosphorylation of a 42-kDa cytosolic protein. AlF4- induced a parallel increase in protein kinase activity toward myelin basic protein (MBP) in partially purified cell extracts. To test whether AlF4- was activating the 42-kDa MAP (mitogen-activated protein) kinase, extracts from AlF4--treated cells were taken through the chromatographic steps routinely used to purify MAP kinase from growth factor-stimulated cells. Following phenyl-Superose chromatography, a peak of MBP kinase activity eluted at a position characteristic of MAP kinase. Immunoblotting of the active fractions with anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies revealed a single reactive protein band of Mr 42,000. Stimulation of MAP kinase by AlF4- was rapid, peaking within 15 min and persisting for at least 1 h. In contrast, the activation of MAP kinase by insulin was transient, characteristic of its activation by growth factors in other cell types. Although concentrations of sodium fluoride greater than 1 mM also activated MAP kinase, this effect was shown to be dependent upon the simultaneous presence of aluminum ions in the medium. Activation of MAP kinase by AlF4- was not affected by either cellular depletion of protein kinase C or pretreatment of cells with pertussis toxin. Potential sites of action of AlF4- are discussed. These findings suggest that activation of a G protein(s) in intact cells can initiate events that result in tyrosine phosphorylation and activation of MAP kinase.  相似文献   

9.
The involvement of G-proteins in the insulin signal transduction system has been studied in detail using the murine BC3H-1 myocyte system. Pertussis toxin (PT) treatment, previously shown to attenuate some of the metabolic effects of insulin in this cell line (Luttrell, L.M., Hewlett, E.L., Romero, G., and Rogol, A.D. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 6134-6141), abolished insulin-induced generation of diacylglycerol and inositolglycan mediators with no effects on either the autophosphorylation of the insulin receptor or the phosphorylation of the major endogenous substrates for insulin-stimulated tyrosine kinase activity (pp185 and pp42-45). In vitro ADP-ribosylation and immunoblotting studies suggest that the major PT substrate is a 40-kDa protein of the G alpha family. This protein band did not exhibit detectable tyrosine phosphorylation upon stimulation of either intact cells or cell membranes with insulin. In the presence of low concentrations of GTP, insulin treatment of isolated myocyte plasma membranes resulted in a small (30-40%) but significant stimulation of GTP hydrolysis. This effect was best observed in the presence of small concentrations of sodium dodecyl sulfate. The rate of guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) binding to BC3H-1 membranes was also significantly increased in the presence of insulin. The effects of insulin on GTP hydrolysis and GTP gamma S binding were found to be dependent on the concentration of insulin. These effects were not detected in plasma membranes prepared from PT-pretreated BC3H-1 myocytes. In contrast, pretreatment with the B (inactive) subunit of PT did not alter the response of myocyte membranes to insulin. High affinity binding of [125I]iodoinsulin to myocyte plasma membranes was reduced by 60-70% in the presence of guanine nucleotides. Similar effects on insulin binding were produced by PT pretreatment of the cells. In contrast, adenine nucleotides had no effect on insulin binding. Scatchard analysis of the binding data showed that the observed effects of guanine nucleotides and PT on insulin binding resulted either from a reduction in the number of high affinity insulin binding sites or from a significant reduction of the affinity of insulin for its receptor. Low affinity binding sites did not appear to be affected by either guanine nucleotides nor PT pretreatment. These results provide substantial evidence suggestive of a noncovalent interaction between the insulin receptor and a regulatory G-protein system during the process of insulin signaling.  相似文献   

10.
The mechanism of insulin-induced down-regulation of surface membrane insulin receptors was studied in the muscle cell line BC3H-1. Down-regulation for the differentiated myocytes is dose- and time-dependent with a half-maximum response at 0.5 nM insulin and a maximum decrease of 50% in the number of surface insulin receptors following exposure to 20 nM insulin for 18 h at 37 degrees C, as confirmed by Scatchard analysis. These receptors were fully recoverable upon lysis of the down-regulated myocyte with Triton X-100, demonstrating that down-regulation is mediated solely by insulin-induced receptor internalization without detectable receptor degradation. Phospholipase C treatment of intact down-regulated cells and Triton X-100 treatment after subcellular fractionation showed that no cryptic or masked receptors were detectable within the plasma membrane. Insulin-induced receptor internalization was dependent upon cellular energy production, protein synthesis, and endocytosis, but was insensitive to agents which primarily affect lysosomal, cytoskeletal, or transglutaminase activities. The magnitude of insulin-induced down-regulation and the kinetics of down-regulation and recovery of cell surface receptors indicate that the surface and internal receptor pools are in dynamic equilibrium with each other. The kinetic data are accommodated by separate internalization rate constants for the unoccupied (0.01 h-1) and occupied (0.11 h-1) surface receptors and a single recycling rate constant (0.11 h-1) for the internalized receptors. This model also explains the previous apparently paradoxical finding in several other systems that down-regulation is more sensitive to hormone than hormone-receptor binding under physiologic conditions. Down-regulation in BC3H-1 myocytes, therefore, appears to be mediated solely by an insulin-induced increase in the receptor internalization rate constant and a consequent shift in the dynamic equilibrium between the surface and internalized receptor pools, resulting in a 50% decrease in the number of cell surface receptors. In other systems where the internalized hormone receptor is a substrate for rapid degradation, the essential role of this shift in mediating the down-regulation process may be obscured.  相似文献   

11.
To examine whether glucose has regulatory effects on the expression of Gi-proteins, BC3H-1 myocytes were incubated for 24 hr in the presence of various concentrations of glucose (0-25 mM) and the amount of Gi-proteins was detected by pertussis toxin ADP-ribosylation and immunoblot analysis. Both detection methods showed a progressive decrease in the amount of Gi proteins in cells treated with increasing concentrations of glucose. A maximal reduction of 40% was observed after a 24 hr exposure to 25 mM glucose. The reduction in Gi-proteins correlated with a decrease in insulin-stimulated glucose transport.  相似文献   

12.
Numerous reports have described a phosphoprotein with an apparent molecular mass of 68-87 kDa, often referred to as the 80K protein, which serves as a major specific substrate for protein kinase C in a wide variety of cell types. This protein has been shown to be myristoylated in macrophages, apparently in a stimulus-dependent manner. In the present study, we have defined the kinetics for myristoylation of the 80K protein in BC3H1 myocytes and have examined the subcellular distribution of the [3H]myristate and 32P-labeled forms of the protein before and after activation of protein kinase C by phorbol dibutyrate (PDBu). The 80K protein was identified in BC3H1 myocytes by apparent molecular mass of 68 kDa (consistent with the previously reported size of the murine homologue), isoelectric point of 4.6-4.8, PDBu-inducible phosphorylation, peptide mapping, and labeling with [3H]myristate. Incorporation of [3H]myristate by this protein occurred through an amide linkage and was abolished completely by cycloheximide. Pulse labeling of quiescent cells with [3H]myristate revealed no alteration in myristoylation of the 80K protein in either the crude membrane or soluble fractions after PDBu-induced phosphorylation. The subcellular distribution of this protein (approximately 80% membrane, approximately 20% cytosol) also was the same in control and PDBu-stimulated cells. Phosphorylation of both the membrane-bound and soluble forms was increased approximately 6-fold upon stimulation of cultures with PDBu; the soluble form was phosphorylated to a 4-fold higher stoichiometry than its membrane-bound counterpart. Together, these data demonstrate that the 80K protein is myristoylated cotranslationally in BC3H1 cells and that protein kinase C-dependent phosphorylation of the 80K protein does not alter its subcellular distribution or degree of myristoylation. The fact that 20% of total myristoylated 80K protein resides in the cytosol also indicates that myristoylation alone is not sufficient to target this protein to the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

13.
Recent evidence suggests that insulin induces hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol-glycan (PI-G) and releases inositol-glycan (IG) and diacylglycerol (DAG). These two mediators are speculated to mediate different insulin actions. In this study, we examined metabolic labeling of PI-G in BC3H-1 myocytes with known precursors of PI-G. PI-G was metabolically labeled with [3H]myo-inositol, [3H]glucosamine, [3H]galactose, [3H]glycerol, and [3H]myristic acid. The treatment of 3H-labeled PI-G with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C liberated [3H]myo-inositol, [3H]glucosamine, or [3H]galactosamine-labeled IgGs, and [3H]glycerol or [3H]myristic acid-labeled DAG. In BC3H-1 myocytes, insulin induced phosphodiesteratic hydrolysis of PI-G and stimulated generation of IGs and DAG. Released IGs were labeled with [3H]myo-inositol, [3H]glucosamine, and [3H]galactose. Released DAG was labeled with [3H] glycerol and [3H]myristic acid. The IG had a dose-dependent insulin-like activity on glucose oxidation and lipogenesis without affecting glucose transport in rat adipocytes. Insulin increased 3H radioactivities of IG and insulin-mimicking activities of IG. These results provided further evidence that hydrolysis of PI-G and generation of IGs and DAG might be early steps in some insulin actions.  相似文献   

14.
Insulin-stimulated glucose transport was examined in BC3H-1 myocytes. Insulin treatment lead to a 2.7 +/- 0.3-fold increase in the rate of deoxyglucose transport and, under the same conditions, a 2.1 +/- 0.1-fold increase in the amount of the brain-type glucose transporter (GLUT 1) at the cell surface. It has been shown that some insulin-responsive tissues express a second, immunologically distinct, transporter, namely GLUT 4. We report here that BC3H-1 myocytes and C2 and G8 myotubes express only GLUT 1; in contrast, rat soleus muscle and heart express 3-4 times higher levels of GLUT 4 than GLUT 1. Thus translocation of GLUT 1 can account for most, if not all, of the insulin stimulation of glucose transport in BC3H-1 myocytes. On the other, hand, neither BC3H-1 myocytes nor the other muscle-cell lines are adequate as models for the study of insulin regulation of glucose transport in muscle tissue.  相似文献   

15.
A tumor-promoting phorbol ester, [3H]phorbol-12,13-dibutyrate, may bind to a homogeneous preparation of Ca2+-activated, phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C) in the simultaneous presence of Ca2+ and phospholipid. This tumor promoter does not bind simply to phospholipid nor to the enzyme per se irrespective of the presence and absence of Ca2+. All four components mentioned above appear to be bound together, and the quaternary complex thus produced is enzymatically fully active for protein phosphorylation. Phosphatidylserine is most effective. Various other phorbol derivatives which are active in tumor promotion compete with [3H]phorbol-12,13-dibutyrate for the binding, and an apparent dissociation binding constant of the tumor promoter is 8 nM. This value is identical with the activation constant for protein kinase C and remarkably similar to the dissociation binding constant that is described for intact cell surface receptors. The binding of the phorbol ester is prevented specifically by the addition of diacylglycerol, which serves as activator of protein kinase C under physiological conditions. Scatchard analysis suggests that one molecule of the tumor promoter may bind to every molecule of protein kinase C in the presence of Ca2+ and excess phospholipid. It is suggestive that protein kinase C is a phorbol ester-receptive protein, and the results presented seem to provide clues for clarifying the mechanism of tumor promotion.  相似文献   

16.
Effect of phorbol esters on protein kinase C-zeta.   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Protein kinase C-zeta (PKC-zeta) is a member of the protein kinase C gene family which using in vitro preparations has been described as being resistant to activation by phorbol esters. PKC-zeta was found to be expressed in several cell types as an 80-kDa protein. In vitro translation of a full-length PKC-zeta construct also yielded as a primary translation product an 80-kDa protein. In the U937 cell, PKC-zeta was slightly more abundant in the cytosol than in the particulate fraction. Acute exposure of U937 cells to tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA), phorbol dibutyrate, mezerin, or diacylglycerol derivatives did not induce translocation of this isoform to the particulate fraction. Chronic exposure to 1 microM TPA failed to translocate or down-regulate PKC-zeta in U937, HL-60, COS, or HeLa-fibroblast fusion cells. To examine whether PKC-zeta was activated by TPA, PKC activity was evaluated in COS cells transiently over-expressing this isoform. In non-transfected cells, two peaks of phospholipid- and TPA-dependent kinase activity were observed. Eluting at a lower salt concentration was a peak of activity associated with PKC-alpha. PKC-zeta eluted with the second peak of activity and at a higher salt concentration. In transfected cells which expressed PKC-zeta at 4-10-fold over endogenous levels, there was only a slight increase in activity associated with the second peak. The activity and quantity of PKC-zeta did not strictly correlate. Treatment with TPA under conditions that did not alter PKC-zeta content abolished detection of the second peak of PKC activity eluting from the Mono Q column. Thus, PKC-zeta does not translocate or down-regulate in response to phorbol esters or diacylglycerol derivatives. However, for reasons discussed these studies do not resolve the issue of whether this isoform is activated by TPA.  相似文献   

17.
We have previously demonstrated that insulin stimulates glycerolipid synthesis and phospholipid hydrolysis in BC3H-1 myocytes, resulting in the generation of membrane diacylglycerol, a known cellular mediator. This led us to the original proposal that diacylglycerol may contribute to the mediation of insulin action, especially stimulation of glucose transport. The fact that agents such as phenylephrine and phorbol esters, which increase or act as membrane diacylglycerols, are fully active in stimulating glucose transport in this tissue lent further support to this proposal. In this paper, we demonstrate that the diacylglycerol analogues PMA (4 beta-phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate) and mezerein (both possessing 12 beta- and 13 alpha-O-linked substituents as well as a 4 beta-hydroxyl group) each increase the Vmax of the glucose transporter as does insulin. Diacylglycerol generated by the addition of phospholipase C also stimulates glucose uptake to a maximum which is equal and nonadditive to that of insulin, while addition of the narrowly active phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C which generates the putative phosphoinositol-glycan mediator of Saltiel et al. (Saltiel, A., Fox, J., She Lin, P., and Cutrecasas, P. (1986) Science 233, 967-972) stimulates pyruvate dehydrogenase in these cells without any effect on glucose uptake. Pretreatment of the myocytes with PMA resulted in desensitization of subsequent glucose uptake to stimulation by phenylephrine, but had no effect on stimulation of glucose uptake by phospholipase C or by insulin, indicating that PMA pretreatment primarily desensitizes agonist-induced polyphosphoinositide hydrolysis which, as we have previously shown, is not involved in the insulin-induced generation of diacylglycerol. This was confirmed by the absence of intracellular Ca2+ mobilization during insulin administration, as measured by the sensitive fluorescent probe fura-2 in attached monolayer BC3H-1 myocytes. Furthermore, we have shown that insulin-generated diacylglycerol satisfies several criteria for a mediator of insulin action, including the demonstration that insulin-stimulated endogenous diacylglycerol generation is antecedent to glucose transport and has an identical insulin dose-response curve and moreover that the magnitude and time course of subsequent stimulation of glucose transport is reproduced by the addition of the simple exogenous diacylglyerol, dioctanoylglycerol, in the complete absence of the hormone. These results establish a central role for insulin-induced glycerolipid metabolism in mediating insulin-stimulated glucose transport in BC3H-1 myocytes.  相似文献   

18.
Epidermal growth factor (EGF) and insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) were found to provoke increases in [3H]2-deoxyglucose uptake, diacylglycerol (DAG) generation and membrane-bound protein kinase C activity in BC3H-1 myocytes. These effects were similar to those provoked by insulin. The increases in DAG did not appear to be derived from hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) or phosphatidylinositol, but may have been derived from synthesis of phosphatidic acid de novo, and hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine, as revealed by studies with [3H]glycerol and [3H]choline respectively. Accordingly, both EGF and IGF-I increased acute [3H]glycerol labelling of DAG (and other lipids) and [3H]choline labelling of phosphocholine. These labelling responses were similar in time course, suggesting that they are closely coupled. Our findings suggest that EGF and IGF-I, like insulin, increase DAG-protein kinase C signalling, apparently by activating co-ordinated lipid-synthesis and -hydrolysis responses, which are distinctly different from the PIP2-hydrolysis response.  相似文献   

19.
BC3H-1 myocytes were cultured with 32PO4 for 3 days to label phospholipids to constant specific activity. Subsequent treatment with physiological concentrations of insulin provoked 40-70% increases in 32PO4 levels (reflecting increases in mass) in phosphatidic acid, phosphatidylinositol, and polyphosphoinositides, and, lesser, 20-25% increases in phosphatidylserine and the combined chromatographic area containing phosphatidylethanolamine plus phosphatidylcholine plus phosphatidylcholine. Insulin-induced increases in phospholipids were significant within 5 min and near-maximal at 15-30 min. Comparable rapid insulin-induced increases in [3H]phosphatidylinositol were observed in myocytes prelabeled with [3H]inositol. These insulin effects (as per prolonged pulse-chase experiments) were due to increase phospholipid synthesis rather than decreased phospholipid degradation. Cycloheximide (and puromycin) pretreatment prevented insulin-induced increases in phospholipids and rapidly reversed ongoing insulin effects on phospholipids and pyruvate dehydrogenase activity. Insulin also rapidly increased diacylglycerol levels. These findings suggest that: (a) insulin provokes rapid increases in de novo synthesis of phosphatidic acid and its derivatives, e.g. phosphoinositides and diacylglycerol; (b) protein synthesis inhibitors diminish phospholipid levels in insulin-treated (but not control) tissues by increasing phospholipid degradation (?phospholipase(s) activation); and (c) changes in phospholipids and diacylglycerol may be important for changes in pyruvate dehydrogenase and other enzymatic activities during treatment with insulin and/or protein synthesis inhibitors.  相似文献   

20.
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