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1.
Insulin is able to down-regulate its specific cell surface receptor in cultured human lymphocytes. The effect of vanadate, a known insulinomimetic agent, was examined to determine whether it could mimic insulin to down-regulate the insulin receptor. Exposure of cultured human lymphocytes (IM-9) to vanadate (0-200 microM) resulted in a time- and dose-dependent decrease in cell surface insulin receptors to 60% of control, while insulin (100 nM) down-regulated to 40%. The vanadate effect, in contrast to the rapid effect of insulin, was slow to develop (4-6 h). Surface receptor recovery after 18 h exposure was rapid after vanadate removal (20 min), but it required hours after insulin suggesting the presence of an intracellular (cryptic) pool of receptors after vanadate treatment. Insulin binding to Triton X-100-solubilized whole cells after 18 h treatment revealed that total cell receptors had decreased to 50% of control after insulin but increased to 120 and 189% of control after 100 and 200 microM vanadate, respectively. Furthermore, vanadate inhibited the insulin-mediated loss of total cell receptors from 50 to 28%. Removal of cell surface receptors by trypsin before cell solubilization revealed that 100 microM vanadate increased insulin binding to 321% of control indicating an accumulation of intracellular receptors. Labeling of cell surface proteins with Na125I and lactoperoxidase followed by immunoprecipitation of solubilized receptors with anti-receptor antibody after incubation for various times up to 20 h and quantitation by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed that, while insulin shortened t1/2 from 7.3 to 5.3 h, vanadate prolonged receptor t1/2 to 14 h. No effect of vanadate was detected on insulin receptor tyrosine kinase activity with up to 4 h incubation at the vanadate concentrations used in this study. Furthermore, human growth hormone surface receptors were similarly down-regulated by vanadate. We conclude that 1) vanadate has an apparent insulin-like effect to down-regulate cell surface insulin receptors in cultured human lymphocytes; 2) in contrast to insulin-induced down-regulation which is associated with receptor degradation vanadate causes an accumulation of intracellular (cryptic) receptors and inhibits insulin receptor degradation; and 3) these effects of vanadate may be exerted on other cell surface receptors.  相似文献   

2.
Insulin is known to increase the number of cell surface insulin-like growth factor II (IGF-II) receptors in isolated rat adipose cells through a subcellular redistribution mechanism similar to that for the glucose transporter. The effects of insulin on these two processes, therefore, have now been directly compared in the same cell preparations. 1) Insulin increases the steady state number of cell surface IGF-II receptors by 7-13-fold without affecting receptor affinity; however, insulin stimulates glucose transport activity by 25-40-fold. 2) The insulin concentration required for half-maximal stimulation of cell surface IGF-II receptor number is approximately 30% lower than that for the stimulation of glucose transport activity. 3) The half-time for the achievement of insulin's maximal effect at 37 degrees C is much shorter for IGF-II receptor number (approximately 0.8 min) than for glucose transport activity (approximately 2.6 min). 4) Reversal of insulin's action at 37 degrees C occurs more rapidly for cell surface IGF-II receptors (t1/2 congruent to 2.9 min) than for glucose transport activity (t1/2 congruent to 4.9 min). 5) When the relative subcellular distribution of IGF-II receptors is examined in basal cells, less than 10% of the receptors are localized to the plasma membrane fraction indicating that most of the receptors, like glucose transporters, are localized to an intracellular compartment. However, in response to insulin, the number of plasma membrane IGF-II receptors increases only approximately 1.4-fold while the number of glucose transporters increases approximately 4.5-fold. Thus, while the stimulatory actions of insulin on cell surface IGF-II receptors and glucose transport activity are qualitatively similar, marked quantitative differences suggest that the subcellular cycling of these two integral membrane proteins occurs by distinct processes.  相似文献   

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

4.
We have previously shown in primary cultured rat adipocytes that insulin acts at receptor and multiple postreceptor sites to decrease insulin's subsequent ability to stimulate glucose transport. To examine whether D-glucose can regulate glucose transport activity and whether it has a role in insulin-induced insulin resistance, we cultured cells for 24 h in the absence and presence of various glucose and insulin concentrations. After washing cells and allowing the glucose transport system to deactivate, we measured basal and maximally insulin-stimulated 2-deoxyglucose uptake rates (37 degrees C) and cell surface insulin binding (16 degrees C). Alone, incubation with D-glucose had no effect on basal or maximal glucose transport activity, and incubation with insulin, in the absence of glucose, decreased maximal (but not basal) glucose transport rates only 18% at the highest preincubation concentration (50 ng/ml). However, in combination, D-glucose (1-20 mM) markedly enhanced the long-term ability of insulin (1-50 ng/ml) to decrease glucose transport rates in a dose-responsive manner. For example, at 50 ng/ml preincubation insulin concentration, the maximal glucose transport rate fell from 18 to 63%, and the basal uptake rate fell by 89%, as the preincubation D-glucose level was increased from 0 to 20 mM. Moreover, D-glucose more effectively promoted decreases in basal glucose uptake (Ki = 2.2 +/- 0.4 mM) compared with maximal transport rates (Ki = 4.1 +/- 0.4 mM) at all preincubation insulin concentrations (1-50 ng/ml). Similar results were obtained when initial rates of 3-O-methylglucose uptake were used to measure glucose transport. D-glucose, in contrast, did not influence insulin-induced receptor loss. In other studies, D-mannose and D-glucosamine could substitute for D-glucose to promote the insulin-induced changes in glucose transport, but other substrates such as L-glucose, L-arabinase, D-fructose, pyruvate, and maltose were without effect. Also, non-metabolized substrates which competitively inhibit D-glucose uptake (3-O-methylglucose, cytochalasin B) blocked the D-glucose plus insulin effect.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Isolated rat pancreatic islets were incubated at 3.3 (low) and 16.7 (high) mM glucose with different concentrations of the phosphotyrosine phosphatase (PTP) inhibitor, peroxovanadate (pV). At low glucose, pV stimulated insulin secretion 2- to 4-fold, but it inhibited insulin secretion at 16.7 mM. The latter effect was not due to an inhibition of glucose metabolism, nor was it inhibited by pertussis toxin pretreatment. In addition, pV stimulated insulin secretion approximately 3-fold in depolarized cells at both low and high glucose. pV markedly increased the tyrosine phosphorylation of several proteins, including IRS-1 and -2, and also increased the phosphorylation of the downstream kinases PKB/Akt and MAPK. PKB/Akt, but not MAPK, was also phosphorylated in the absence of pV. Intracellular pV-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation, including that of IRS-2, was generally increased by high glucose suggesting a further inhibition of PTP and/or enhanced tyrosine kinase activity. Thus, these data suggest that intracellular tyrosine and serine (PKB/Akt) phosphorylation are related to insulin secretion but they do not support a unique and direct link between IRS-2 tyrosine phosphorylation and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Primary exposure of Tetrahymena cells to insulin gave rise to hormonal (insulin) imprinting in the offspring generations, as judged from the increase in binding upon reexposure to insulin. Vanadate mimicked the action of insulin, inasmuch as it also induced imprinting for insulin, whereas the other tyrosine kinase activator tested, namely H2O2, had no such effect. However, combined treatment with vanadate+H2O2 + insulin induced a more pronounced imprinting for insulin than either insulin or vanadate on their own. The tyrosine kinase inhibitor genistein, a plant flavonoid, did not change the value for insulin binding significantly relative to the control immediately after exposure, but increased it slightly in the offspring generations after 24 h at high dilution. Upon combination with insulin, 10(-4)M genistein inhibited imprinting by insulin. These experimental observations suggest that there may be a key role for tyrosine kinase activity in the mechanism (development) of imprinting.  相似文献   

8.
A Shisheva  Y Shechter 《Biochemistry》1992,31(34):8059-8063
We report here that quercetin, a naturally occurring bioflavonoid, is an effective blocker of insulin receptor tyrosine kinase-catalyzed phosphorylation of exogenous substrate. The ID50 was estimated to be 2 +/- 0.2 microM in cell-free experiments, using a partially purified insulin receptor and a random copolymer of glutamic acid and tyrosine as a substrate. Insulin-stimulated autophosphorylation of the receptor itself was not blocked by quercetin (up to 500 microM). In intact rat adipocytes, quercetin inhibited insulin-stimulating effects on glucose transport, oxidation, and its incorporation into lipids. Inhibition of lipogenesis (50%) occurred at 47 +/- 4 microM, whereas full inhibition was evident at 110 +/- 10 microM quercetin. In contrast, the effect of insulin in inhibiting lipolysis remained unaltered in quercetin-treated adipocytes. The inhibitor was devoid of general adverse cell affects. Basal activities and the ability of lipolytic agents to stimulate lipolysis were not affected. Inhibition by quercetin enabled us to evaluate which insulinomimetic agents are dependent on tyrosine phosphorylation of endogenous substrates for stimulating glucose metabolism. Quercetin blocked lipogenesis mediated by insulin, wheat germ agglutinin, and concanavalin A. The lipogenic effect of Zn2+ and Mn2+ was partially blocked, whereas that of vanadate was not affected at all.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell transfectants that expressed human insulin receptors whose glycine 996 was substituted by valine were studied. Receptor processing and insulin binding were unaffected by this mutation; however, this mutant insulin receptor had little or no tyrosine kinase activity. Nevertheless, the Val996 mutant exhibited seryl and threonyl phosphorylation in both the basal and insulin-stimulated state in intact cells. This is in contrast to the Lys----Ala1018 tyrosine kinase deficient mutant (Russell, D. S., Gherzi, R., Johnson, E. L., Chou, C-K., and Rosen, O. M. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 11833-11840). Cells expressing the normal human receptor were 10-fold more sensitive to insulin than the untransfected CHO cells with respect to phosphorylation of a cellular substrate (pp 185) on tyrosyl residues, glucose incorporation into glycogen, thymidine incorporation into DNA, and phosphorylation of ribosomal protein S6. Cells expressing the mutant receptor exhibited the same insulin sensitivity as the untransfected CHO cells. Insulin was rapidly internalized in cells expressing the normal human receptor and the number of receptors expressed on the cell surface was decreased in response to exposure to insulin. However, little insulin was internalized in cells expressing the mutant receptor, and the number of receptors on the cell surface was not significantly diminished in response to exposure to insulin. It is concluded that despite the occurrence of seryl and threonyl phosphorylations, post-receptor effects of insulin described above are not mediated by the tyrosine kinase-deficient receptor, Val996.  相似文献   

10.
Sodium vanadate has several insulin-like effects. To determine whether vanadate acts via the insulin receptor, I investigated the effect of vanadate on glucose transport (2-deoxyglucose uptake) in adipocytes that had been treated to decrease the number of insulin receptors. Trypsin (100 micrograms/ml) caused greater than 95% loss of 125I-insulin binding and rendered glucose transport resistant to both insulin and an anti-insulin-receptor antibody. However, vanadate caused an 8-fold increase in the transport rate [EC50 (concn. giving 50% of maximum effect) 0.2 mM] in both control and trypsin-treated cells, demonstrating that the insulin receptor does not have to be intact for vanadate to stimulate glucose transport. Insulin receptors were depleted by treatment of adipocytes with insulin (100 ng/ml) in the presence of Tris (which blocks receptor recycling). A 2 h treatment caused 60% loss of receptors, and a shift to the right in the dose-response curve for insulin stimulation of glucose transport (EC50 0.3 ng of insulin/ml in controls, 1.2 ng/ml in treated cells). The response to vanadate was again unaffected. Treatment with insulin for 4 h caused a 67% decrease in insulin binding and, in addition to the rightward shift in the insulin dose-response curve, a decrease in basal and maximal transport rates (which cannot be explained by decreased insulin receptor number). The EC50 of vanadate was again equal in control and treated cells, but glucose transport in the presence of a maximally effective concentration of vanadate (1 mM) was decreased. I conclude that the effect of vanadate on glucose transport is independent of the insulin receptor. Induction of a post-receptor defect (which may be a decrease in the total number of cellular glucose transporters) by prolonged exposure to insulin decreases the potency of a maximally effective concentration of vanadate. The findings demonstrate that vanadate stimulates glucose transport by an effect at a level distal to the insulin receptor.  相似文献   

11.
Insulin receptor cycling and insulin action in the rat adipocyte   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The possibility that the insulin receptor of adipocytes undergoes cycling was examined by a method involving pronase digestion at 12 degrees C, followed by insulin binding studies to determine receptor location and quantity. In the absence of insulin treatment, the amount of internal receptors (i.e. protected from pronase) was 10% of total receptor content. Following a 30-min insulin treatment (0.1 microM) at 37 degrees C, the internal receptor content increased 2-fold (206 +/- 12% of control, 100%). This effect was rapid, and maximum internalization was approached by 5 min of insulin treatment. Warming pronase-digested cells to 37 degrees C allowed the internal receptors to move to the cell surface. This movement was rapid also, and expansion of the internal pool by insulin pretreatment provided a 2.4-fold increase in the reinsertion of cell-surface receptors (238 +/- 28% of nontreated cells, 100%). Insulin-pretreated and nontreated cells had approximately 13 and 6%, respectively, of their original cell-surface receptor content, i.e. their content before pronase digestion. These receptors appeared intact after the cycling process, as judged by affinity labeling and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the receptor and its binding subunit. The ability of the recycled receptor to respond to insulin was examined by studies of glucose incorporation into lipids and the inhibition of isoproterenol-stimulated lipolysis. Cells pretreated with insulin and allowed to recycle (e.g. 13% of normal receptor content) were 2-3-fold more responsive and 7-fold more sensitive to subsequent insulin stimulation than nontreated cells (e.g. 6% of normal receptor content), indicating that the recycled receptors are biologically active and coupled to cellular effector systems.  相似文献   

12.
We have studied the phosphorylation state of the insulin receptor during receptor-mediated endocytosis in the well-differentiated rat hepatoma cell line Fao. Insulin induced the rapid internalization of surface-iodinated insulin receptors into a trypsin-resistant compartment, with a 3-fold increase in the internalization rate over that seen in the absence of insulin. Within 20 min of insulin stimulation, 30-35% of surface receptors were located inside the cell. This redistribution was half-maximal by 10.5 min. Similar results were obtained when the loss of surface receptors was measured by 125I-insulin binding. Tyrosyl phosphorylation of internalized insulin receptors was measured by immunoprecipitation with antiphosphotyrosine antibody. Immediately after insulin stimulation, 70-80% of internalized receptors were tyrosine phosphorylated. Internalized receptors persisted in a phosphorylated state after the dissociation of insulin but were dephosphorylated prior to their return to the plasma membrane. After 45-60 min of insulin stimulation, the tyrosine phosphorylation of the internal receptor pool decreased by 45%, whereas the phosphorylation of surface receptors was unchanged. These data suggest that insulin induces the internalization of phosphorylated insulin receptors into the cell and that the phosphorylation state of the internal receptor pool may be regulated by insulin.  相似文献   

13.
Treatment of primary cultured adipocytes with 20 mM glucose resulted in a progressive increase in specific 125I-insulin binding that began almost immediately (no lag period) and culminated in a 60% increase by 24 h. This effect was dose-dependent (glucose ED50 of 4.6 mM) and mediated by an increase in insulin receptor affinity. Moreover, it appears that glucose modulates insulin receptor affinity through de novo protein synthesis rather than through covalent modification of receptors, since cycloheximide selectively inhibited the glucose-induced increase in insulin binding capacity (ED50 of 360 ng/ml) and restored receptor affinity to control values. Importantly, insulin sensitivity of the glucose transport system was increased by glucose treatment (63%) to an extent comparable with the enhancement in receptor affinity, thus indicating a functional coupling between insulin binding and insulin action. When the long term effects of insulin were assessed (24 h), we found that insulin treatment reduced 125I-insulin binding by greater than 60% by down-regulating the number of cell surface receptors in a dose-dependent manner (insulin ED50 of 7.4 ng/ml). On the basis of these studies, we conclude that 1) insulin binding is subject to dual regulation (glucose controls insulin action by enhancing receptor affinity, whereas insulin controls the number of cell surface receptors); and 2) glucose appears to modulate insulin receptor affinity through the rapid biosynthesis of an affinity regulatory protein.  相似文献   

14.
The distribution of glucose transporters and of insulin receptors on the surface membranes of skeletal muscle was studied, using isolated plasma membranes and transverse tubule preparations. (i) Plasma membranes from rabbit skeletal muscle were prepared according to Seiler and Fleischer (1982, J. Biol. Chem. 257, 13862-13871), and transverse tubules from rabbit skeletal muscle were prepared according to Rosemblatt et al. (1981, J. Biol. Chem. 256, 8140-8148) as modified by Hidalgo et al. (1983, J. Biol. Chem. 258, 13937-13945). The membranes were identified by the abundance of nitrendipine receptors in the transverse tubules, and their relative absence from the plasma membranes. (ii) Plasma membranes and transverse tubules were also isolated from rat skeletal muscle, according to a novel procedure that isolates both fractions from the same common homogenate. (iii) Glucose transporters were detected by D-glucose protectable binding of the specific inhibitor [3H]cytochalasin B, and insulin receptors were detected by saturable binding of 125I-insulin. The concentration of glucose transporters was about threefold (rabbit) or fivefold (rat) higher in the transverse tubule membrane compared to the plasma membrane, whereas the insulin receptor concentration was about the same in both membranes. These results indicate that the glucose transporters on the surface of the muscle are preferentially segregated to the transverse tubules, and this poses interesting consequences on the functional response of glucose transport to insulin in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

15.
Autophosphorylation of the insulin receptor on tyrosine residues and activation of the endogenous insulin receptor kinase is postulated to be a critical step in the mechanism of action of insulin. To investigate this hypothesis, the insulin-mimicking effects of vanadate (sodium orthovanadate) and H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide) alone and in combination were examined in freshly isolated rat adipocytes. Vanadate and H2O2 stimulated the translocation of insulin-like growth factor II (IGF-II) receptors to the plasma membrane of rat adipocytes in a manner analogous to insulin. IGF-II binding was increased by maximally effective doses of vanadate (1 mM), H2O2 (1 mM), and insulin (10 ng/ml) to 172 +/- 10, 138 +/- 12, and 289 +/- 16% of control, respectively. Previously (Kadota, S., Fantus, I. G., Hersh, B., and Posner, B. I. (1986) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 138, 174-178), we showed that the combination of these concentrations of vanadate plus insulin was not more potent than insulin alone. In this study, similar results were found with H2O2 plus insulin. In contrast, the combination of vanadate plus H2O2 was synergistic, effecting an increase of IGF-II binding to 488 +/- 23% of control. Amiloride inhibited the effects of vanadate, H2O2, and insulin. Adipocyte insulin receptors purified by wheat germ agglutinin chromatography were assayed for tyrosine kinase activity using the synthetic substrate poly(Glu,Tyr) (4:1). Basal activity (no in vitro insulin) was stimulated by exposure of intact cells to vanadate, H2O2, insulin, and vanadate + H2O2 to 147.7 +/- 4.3, 178.2 +/- 43.4, 495.0 +/- 67.1, and 913.2 +/- 92.0% of control, respectively. The stimulation of tyrosine kinase activity by these agents was accounted for by the insulin receptor as the augmented activity was completely immunoprecipitated with insulin receptor antibody. In these studies, the increase in IGF-II binding correlated significantly with the activation of the insulin receptor-tyrosine kinase (r = 0.927, p less than 0.001). These data support the hypothesis that activation of the insulin receptor kinase is linked to insulin action.  相似文献   

16.
Differentiating (3T3-L1) and nondifferentiating (3T3-C2) fibroblastic cell lines possess two classes of insulin receptors, high affinity (KD = 1.0 to 3.7 X 10(-9) M) and low affinity (KD = 2.0 to 3.6 X 10(-8) M). Confluent cultures of 3T3-L1 cells induced to differentiate by insulin (1.74 x 10(-6) M) or indomethacin (1.25 x 10(-4) M) exhibit a 3-fold increase in the number of high affinity and low affinity receptors per cell or a 1.5- to 1.8-fold increase in the number of receptors per micron2 of surface area. In contrast, nondifferentiating 3T3-C2 cells treated with insulin or indomethacin lose almost completely the high affinity insulin receptors while retaining the same levels of low affinity receptors. The loss of high affinity receptors of the 3T3-C2 cells is accompanied by the disappearance of the stimulatory effect of insulin on the production of CO2 from glucose and on the uptake of aminoisobutyrate. The levels of high affinity insulin receptors appear to be regulated by different mechanisms in the differentiating (3T3-L1) and nondifferentiating (3T3-C2) cell lines. The mode of this regulation may have a bearing on the ability of a particular cell line to differentiate.  相似文献   

17.
Binding of D-glucose to insulin has been studied by equilibrium dialysis. The binding is not very specific and probably takes place in two steps. The average amount of glucose molecules bound per insulin molecule is eight, two molecules in the first and six during the second step of binding. The intrinsic binding constants for both steps are almost the same (6-10-2 M-minus 1 and 1-10-3 M-minus 1) which can be explained by assuming: (1) that after binding of the first two molecules a conformational change of insulin occurs which facilitates the binding of the next six molecules of D-glucose; or (2) that in the second step of binding the glucose binds to hydrophobic regions which are unmasked by dissociation of the insulin dimer. Using a three-dimensional model of the insulin molecule areas of the protein molecule where binding of glucose can occur were selected. The glucose-binding site very probably involves the area at the insulin surface where most of the invariant and modification-selective residues are present.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of pre-incubation with isoprenaline and noradrenaline on insulin binding and insulin stimulation of D-glucose transport in isolated rat adipocytes are reported. (1) Pre-incubation of the cells with isoprenaline (0.1-10 microM) in Krebs-Ringer-Hepes [4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazine-ethanesulphonic acid] buffer (30 min, 37 degrees C) at D-glucose concentrations of 16 mM, in which normal ATP levels were maintained, caused a rightward-shift in sensitivity of D-glucose transport to insulin stimulation by 50% and a decrease in maximal responsiveness by 30% (2) [A14-125I]insulin binding was reduced significantly by 35% at insulin concentrations less than 100 mu-units/ml and Scatchard analysis showed that this consisted mainly of a decrease in high-affinity binding. (3) Pre-incubation with catecholamines under the same conditions but at low glucose concentrations (0-5 mM) caused a fall in intracellular ATP levels of 65 and 45% respectively. (4) The fall in ATP additionally lowered insulin binding by 50% at all insulin concentrations and a parallel shift of the binding curves in the Scatchard plot showed that this was due to a decrease in the number of receptors. (5) At low and high ATP concentrations the insulin stimulation of D-glucose transport was inhibited to a similar extent. (6) Pre-incubation with catecholamines thus inhibited insulin stimulation of D-glucose transport in rat adipocytes mainly by a decrease in high-affinity binding of insulin, which was not mediated by low ATP levels. This mechanism may play a role in the pathogenesis of catecholamine-induced insulin resistance in vivo.  相似文献   

19.
Insulin receptors and insulin effects on type II alveolar epithelial cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Type II alveolar epithelial cells (pneumocytes) were isolated to purity from adult rabbits and analyzed for the presence of cell surface insulin receptors and for effects of insulin on cells. Assays were performed on cells cultured for 24 h in Eagle's minimum essential medium. Insulin binding to cells in culture approached a steady-state level by 180 min at 15 degrees C and remained constant for at least 1 h. Competition experiments using native insulin, proinsulin and desoctapeptide supported specificity of binding. Scatchard analysis of binding revealed a class of high-affinity receptors with Kd = 1.5 X 10(-10) M and a low-affinity component with Kd = 4 X 10(-9) M. The number of receptors was estimated at 2000-4000/cell. Insulin added to cell cultures of type II pneumocytes in concentrations from 5 X 10(-11) to 5 X 10(-8) M resulted in a dose-related increase in uptake of 2-deoxyglucose by cells. Insulin also stimulated the incorporation of choline and glucose into phosphatidylcholine and disaturated phosphatidylcholine.  相似文献   

20.
Regulation of the insulin receptor kinase by hyperinsulinism   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
A murine fibroblast cell line transfected with human insulin receptor cDNA, NIH 3T3 HIR3.5, was observed to display insulin-induced down-regulation of insulin-binding activity in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. Maximal inhibition of insulin-binding activity (54%) occurred within 16 h of exposure to 100 nM insulin in vivo, where in vivo refers to intact cells in tissue culture. The decrease in cellular insulin-binding activity was the consequence of a decrease in the number of cell-associated insulin receptors as determined by Scatchard analysis of insulin binding, 125I-insulin affinity cross-linking, and Western blotting of the insulin receptor beta subunit. Acute insulin treatment in vivo (1-60 min) resulted in the activation of the insulin receptor protein tyrosine kinase as determined by in vitro phosphorylation of glutamic acid:tyrosine (4:1), where in vitro refers to broken cell preparations. This acute in vivo insulin activation of the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase resulted in a greater stimulation (1.4-1.9-fold) of tyrosine kinase activity in the glutamic acid:tyrosine (4:1) assay than the maximal stimulation produced by insulin treatment in vitro. In contrast, long term (24 h) insulin treatment in vivo resulted in a 50-70% decrease in intrinsic protein tyrosine kinase activity of the insulin receptors compared with that of acutely activated (1 min) insulin receptors. Under these conditions, the insulin receptor protein kinase activity remained insulin independent in the in vitro substrate kinase assay. Surprisingly, the insulin-independent activated (1 min in vivo insulin-treated) and uncoupled (24 h in vivo insulin-treated) insulin receptors displayed similar stoichiometries of 32P incorporation into the beta subunit by in vitro autophosphorylation when compared with the control insulin receptors, ranging from 1.5 to 1.8 mol of phosphate incorporated/mol of insulin receptor. Phosphoamino acid analysis demonstrated that the phosphoserine/phosphothreonine content of in vivo 32P-labeled insulin receptors increased markedly within a 1-h exposure to insulin in vivo, whereas insulin-induced receptor desensitization was not apparent until 10-24 h after exposure to insulin. These data suggest that insulin treatment in vivo results initially in the activation of the insulin receptor kinase followed by a subsequent uncoupling of protein kinase activity. This insulin-induced desensitization of the insulin receptor kinase does not correlate with the extent of beta subunit serine/threonine phosphorylation.  相似文献   

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