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

2.
The adaptor protein APS is a substrate of the insulin receptor and couples receptor activation with phosphorylation of Cbl to facilitate glucose uptake. The interaction with the activated insulin receptor is mediated by the Src homology 2 (SH2) domain of APS. Here, we present the crystal structure of the APS SH2 domain in complex with the phosphorylated tyrosine kinase domain of the insulin receptor. The structure reveals a novel dimeric configuration of the APS SH2 domain, wherein the C-terminal half of each protomer is structurally divergent from conventional, monomeric SH2 domains. The APS SH2 dimer engages two kinase molecules, with pTyr-1158 of the kinase activation loop bound in the canonical phosphotyrosine binding pocket of the SH2 domain and a second phosphotyrosine, pTyr-1162, coordinated by two lysine residues in beta strand D. This structure provides a molecular visualization of one of the initial downstream recruitment events following insulin activation of its dimeric receptor.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
The cDNAs encoding the normal human insulin receptor (HIRc) and a receptor that had lysine residue 1018 replaced by alanine (A/K1018) were used to transfect Rat 1 fibroblasts. Lysine 1018 is a critical residue in the ATP binding site of the tyrosine kinase domain in the receptor beta-subunit. Untransfected Rat 1 cells express 1700 endogenous insulin receptors. Expressed HIRc receptors had levels of insulin-stimulable autophosphorylation in vitro comparable to normal receptors, whereas A/K1018 receptors had less than 1% of that activity. Stimulation by insulin of HIRc receptors in situ in intact cells led to phosphorylation of beta-subunit tyrosine residues and activation of tyrosine kinase activity that could be preserved and assayed in vitro after receptor purification. In contrast, A/K1018 receptors showed no such activation, either of autophosphorylation or of kinase activity toward histone. Cells expressing HIRc receptors display enhanced sensitivity to insulin of 2-deoxyglucose transport and glycogen synthase activity. This increased sensitivity was proportional to insulin receptor number at low but not at high levels of receptor expression. A/K1018 receptors were unable to mediate these biologic effects and actually inhibited insulin's ability to stimulate glucose transport and glycogen synthase through the endogenous Rat 1 receptors. Expressed HIRc receptors mediated insulin internalization and degradation, whereas A/K1018 receptors mediated little, if any. Endocytotic uptake of the expressed A/K1018 insulin receptors was also markedly depressed compared to normal receptors. Unlike HIRc receptors, A/K1018 receptors also fail to undergo down-regulation after long (24 h) exposures to high (170 nM) concentrations of insulin. We conclude the following. 1) Normal human insulin receptors expressed in Rat 1 fibroblasts display active tyrosine-specific kinase, normal intracellular itinerary after endocytosis, and normal coupling to insulin's biologic effects. 2) A receptor mutated to alter the ATP binding site in the tyrosine kinase domain had little if any tyrosine kinase activity. 3) This loss of kinase activity was accompanied by a nearly complete lack of both endocytosis and biologic activity.  相似文献   

5.
Following insulin administration to intact rats, the insulin receptor kinase activity of subsequently isolated cell fractions was significantly augmented. Of interest was the observation that the endosomal insulin receptor tyrosine kinase displayed four- to six-fold greater autophosphorylation activity than that of plasma membrane. Surprisingly, the endosomal insulin receptor tyrosine kinase displayed a decrease in beta-subunit phosphotyrosine content compared with that seen in the plasma membrane. These observations prompted the suggestion that insulin receptor tyrosine kinase phosphotyrosine dephosphorylation mediated by an endosome-specific phosphotyrosine phosphatase(s) yields activation of the endosomal insulin receptor tyrosine kinase. In a previous study we examined the effect of subsaturating doses of injected insulin. In this work we evaluated insulin receptor tyrosine kinase activity and phosphotyrosine content in plasma membrane and endosomes after a receptor-saturating pharmacological dose of insulin (150 micrograms/100 g body weight). At this dose the phosphotyrosine content per receptor was reduced compared with that seen earlier at insulin doses of 1.5 and 15 micrograms/100 g body weight. Endosomal insulin receptor tyrosine kinase was greater than that seen at the lower nonsaturating insulin doses. Furthermore, endosomal insulin receptor tyrosine kinase activity exceeded that of the plasma membrane, despite retaining about the same phosphotyrosine content per receptor. These data are consistent with the view that insulin receptor tyrosine kinase activity may be regulated by a particular pattern of phosphotyrosine content on the beta-subunit wherein both activating and inhibitory phosphotyrosine residues play a role.  相似文献   

6.
Osmotic shock can cause insulin resistance in 3T3-L1 adipocytes by inhibiting insulin activation of glucose transport, p70S6 kinase, glycogen synthesis, and lipogenesis. By further investigating the relationship between insulin and hypertonic stress, we have discovered that osmotic shock enhanced by 10-fold the insulin-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation of a 68-kDa protein. Phosphorylation by insulin was maximal after 1 min and was saturated with 50-100 nm insulin. The effect of sorbitol was completely reversible by 2.5 min. pp68 was a peripheral protein that was localized to the detergent insoluble fraction of the low density microsomes but was not associated with the cytoskeleton. Stimulation of the p42/44 and the p38 MAP kinase pathways by osmotic shock had no effect on pp68 phosphorylation. Treatment of adipocytes with the phosphotyrosine phosphatase inhibitor phenylarsine oxide also enhanced insulin-activated tyrosine phosphorylation of pp68 suggesting that osmotic shock may increase pp68 phosphorylation by inhibiting a phosphotyrosine phosphatase. Dissociation of pp68 from the low density microsomes with RNase A indicated that pp68 binds to RNA. Failure to immunoprecipitate pp68 using antibodies directed against known 60-70-kDa tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins suggest that pp68 may be a novel cellular target that lies downstream of the insulin receptor.  相似文献   

7.
Insulin stimulates hexose transport and phosphorylation of the insulin receptor in monolayer cultures of intact 3T3-L1 adipocytes. To assess the phosphorylation state of the receptor in situ, cells were equilibrated with [32P]orthophosphate and then disrupted under denaturing conditions which preserved the phosphorylation state of the receptor established in the cell. The insulin receptor, isolated by lectin adsorption and two-dimensional nonreducing/reducing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, occurred as a single oligomeric species with an apparent alpha 2 beta 2 subunit composition. This oligomeric structure was not altered by treating cells with insulin. Only the beta-subunit of the receptor was phosphorylated; [32P]phosphoserine and [32P] phosphotyrosine were both identified in the beta-subunit from cells in the unstimulated state, but only [32P] phosphotyrosine increased in cells stimulated with insulin. Neither insulin-like growth factors I nor II stimulated insulin receptor beta-subunit phosphorylation, although both activated hexose transport. Upon the addition of insulin, [32P]orthophosphate incorporated into the beta-subunit increased 4.5-fold (7-fold with respect to [32P]tyrosine) and was complete within 1 min (t1/2 = 8 s). Following the removal of insulin from the monolayers, [32P]beta-subunit fell to the basal level (t1/2 = 2.5 min); there was no lag phase before either transition. The tyrosine protein kinase activity, measured in vitro with a model substrate, was higher with immunoaffinity-purified insulin receptor from insulin-stimulated cells than from cells in the basal state. Hexose transport rate, measured using 3-O-[methyl-14C]glucose, was half-maximally stimulated at 2 nM insulin. A 1-min latency period followed insulin addition, after which a 7-fold increase in the steady-state rate of hexose uptake was achieved within 5 min. Upon the removal of insulin, hexose transport continued at the stimulated steady-state rate for 2.5 min and then declined to the basal rate with a half-time of 8 min. These kinetic experiments in situ and protein kinase activity measurements in vitro support the hypothesis that beta-subunit phosphorylation is an intermediate step linking insulin binding to the increased glucose transport rate.  相似文献   

8.
The binding of insulin to its receptor triggers a signaling cascade regulated by protein complexes via tyrosine phosphorylation events on a multitude of associated proteins. To search novel phosphotyrosine proteins or associated proteins involved in insulin signaling pathway, we employed a method in which Rat1 cells stably expressing the human insulin receptor were stimulated with or without insulin and sub-fractionated prior to enrichment of phosphotyrosine proteins by immunoprecipitation and analysis by LC-MS/MS. Bioinformatic analysis and manual confirmation of peptide phosphorylation site assignments led to identification of 35 phosphotyrosine sites derived from 31 protein groups. Over 50% of these proteins were reported for the first time as tyrosine phosphorylated, including gigaxonin, XIAP and CDK10. In addition, we also found that calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein serine kinase (CASK), a key protein in protein-targeting and vesicle transport in neurons, forms a complex with two unidentified phosphotyrosine proteins pp100 and pp95 in response to insulin-stimulation, though CASK is not itself tyrosine phosphorylated. Furthermore, insulin was able to decrease CASK nuclear location, as well as down-regulate the expression of CASK targeted genes. Our results imply CASK as a novel joint knot connecting CASK-mediated pathways with the insulin signaling. Our data provide a wealth of information potentially paving the way to identify new components in the insulin signaling network.  相似文献   

9.
Insulin causes rapid phosphorylation of the beta subunit (Mr = 95,000) of its receptor in broken cell preparations. This occurs on tyrosine residues and is due to activation of a protein kinase which is contained in the receptor itself. In the intact cell, insulin also stimulates the phosphorylation of the receptor and other cellular proteins on serine and threonine residues. In an attempt to find a protein that might link the receptor tyrosine kinase to these serine/threonine phosphorylation reactions, we have studied the interaction of a partially purified preparation of insulin receptor with purified preparations of serine/threonine kinases known to phosphorylate glycogen synthase. No insulin-dependent phosphorylation was observed when casein kinases I and II, phosphorylase kinase, or glycogen synthase kinase 3 was incubated in vitro with the insulin receptor. These kinases also failed to phosphorylate the receptor. By contrast, the insulin receptor kinase catalyzed the phosphorylation of the calmodulin-dependent kinase and addition of insulin in vitro resulted in a 40% increase in this phosphorylation. In the presence of calmodulin-dependent kinase and the insulin receptor kinase, insulin also stimulated the phosphorylation of calmodulin. Phosphoamino acid analysis showed an increase of phosphotyrosine content in both calmodulin and calmodulin-dependent protein kinase. These data suggest that the insulin receptor kinase may interact directly and specifically with the calmodulin-dependent kinase and calmodulin. Further studies will be required to determine if these phosphorylations modify the action of these regulatory proteins.  相似文献   

10.
Insulin stimulated phosphorylation of tyrosine residues by the insulin receptor kinase may be part of a signalling mechanism associated with insulin's action. We report that indomethacin inhibited the phosphorylation of the -subunit of the solubilized adipocyte insulin receptor. Indomethacin also inhibited several insulin-sensitive processes in intact rat adipocytes. Indomethacin (1 mM) inhibited basal phosphorylation of the -subunit of the solubilized insulin receptor by 6007o and insulin-stimulated phosphorylation by 30%. In adipocytes, indomethacin inhibited basal 3-0-[methyl-14C]-methyl-D glucose transport by 50070 (P < 0.01), D-[6-14C]-glucose oxidation by 5007o (P < 0.01), D-[6-14C]-glucose conversion to lipid by 30010 (P < 0.01), and D-[1-14C]-glucose conversion to lipid by 6007o (P<0.01). Similarly, indomethacin inhibited insulin-stimulated 3-0-[methyl-14C]-methyl-D-glucose transport by 75070 (P<0.01), D-[6-14C]-glucose oxidation by 20% (P<0.05), D-[1-14C]-glucose oxidation by 35070 (P<0.01), D-[6-14C] glucose conversion to lipid by 25010 (P<0.01), and D-[1-14C] glucose conversion to lipid by 4501o (P<0.01). In contrast, insulin binding to its receptor, basal D-[1-14C]-glucose oxidation and both basal and insulin-stimulated activation of glycogen synthase were unaffected by indomethacin. Thus, indomethacin partially inhibited autophosphorylation of the solubilized insulin receptor on tyrosine and partially inhibited some but not all of insulin's actions. This supports the hypothesis that insulin's metabolic effects are linked to activation of the insulin receptor protein kinase and indicates that there may be heterogeneity in the mechanisms of intracellular metabolic control by insulin.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
We studied the phosphorylation of the beta subunit of the insulin receptor in intact freshly isolated rat hepatocytes, labelled with [32P]Pi. Insulin receptors partially purified by wheat-germ agglutinin chromatography were immunoprecipitated with either antibodies to insulin receptor or antibodies to phosphotyrosine. Receptors derived from cells incubated in the absence of insulin contained only phosphoserine. Addition of insulin to hepatocytes led to a dose-dependent increase in receptor beta-subunit phosphorylation, with half-maximal stimulation being observed at 2 nM-insulin. Incubation of cells with 100 nM-insulin showed that, within 1 min of exposure to the hormone, maximal receptor phosphorylation occurred, which was followed by a slight decrease and then a plateau. This insulin-induced stimulation of its receptor phosphorylation was largely accounted for by phosphorylation on tyrosine residues. Sequential immunoprecipitation of receptor with anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies and with anti-receptor antibodies, and phosphoamino acid analysis of the immunoprecipitated receptors, revealed that receptors that failed to undergo tyrosine phosphorylation were phosphorylated on serine residues. The demonstration of a functional hormone-sensitive insulin-receptor kinase in normal cells strongly supports a role for this receptor enzymic activity in mediating biological effects of insulin.  相似文献   

13.
The regulation of kinase activity associated with insulin receptor by phosphorylation and dephosphorylation has been examined using partially purified receptor immobilized on insulin-agarose. The immobilized receptor preparation exhibits predominately tyrosine but also serine and threonine kinase activities toward insulin receptor beta subunit and exogenous histone. Phosphorylation of the insulin receptor preparation with increasing concentrations of unlabeled ATP, followed by washing to remove the unreacted ATP, results in a progressive activation of the receptor kinase activity when assayed in the presence of histone and [gamma-32P]ATP. A maximal 4-fold activation is achieved by prior incubation of receptor with concentrations of ATP approaching 1 mM. High pressure liquid chromatographic analysis of tryptic hydrolysates of the 32P-labeled insulin receptor beta subunit reveals three domains of phosphorylation (designated peaks 1, 2, and 3). Phosphotyrosine and phosphoserine residues are present in these three domains while peak 2 contains phosphothreonine as well. Thus, at least seven sites are available for phosphorylation on the beta subunit of the insulin receptor. Incubation of the phosphorylated insulin receptor with alkaline phosphatase at 15 degrees C results in the selective dephosphorylation of the phosphotyrosine residues on the beta subunit of the receptor while the phosphoserine and phosphothreonine contents are not affected. The dephosphorylation of the receptor is accompanied by a marked 65% inhibition of the receptor kinase activity. Almost 90% of the decrease in [32P]phosphate content of the receptor after alkaline phosphatase treatment is accounted for by a decrease in phosphotyrosine content in peak 2, while very small decreases are observed in peaks 1 and 3, respectively. These results demonstrate that the extent of phosphorylation of tyrosine residues in receptor domain 2 closely parallels the receptor kinase activity state, suggesting phosphorylation of this domain may play a key role in regulating the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase.  相似文献   

14.
The possible involvement of a 15-kDa phosphotyrosyl protein, pp15, in insulin action was investigated by using the insulin-mimetic agent, vanadate. Vanadate, a phosphotyrosine phosphatase inhibitor, was found to mimic insulin in 3T3-L1 adipocytes by three criteria. First, kinetic and concentration-dependence studies verified the insulin-like effect of vanadate in activating 2-deoxyglucose uptake. Insulin had an additive activating effect at a submaximal vanadate concentration, but showed no further activation at a saturating vanadate concentration. The trivalent arsenical, phenylarsine oxide (PAO) which forms complexes with vicinal dithiols, markedly inhibited vanadate-activated hexose transport in agreement with our previous studies in which PAO abolished the insulin-activated component of sugar uptake. Second, in situ phosphorylation experiments showed that vanadate activated tyrosine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor's beta-subunit. Exposure of vanadate-treated cells to PAO further increased the level of beta-subunit phosphorylation. The increased level of phosphorylation in the presence of PAO occurred only on tyrosyl residues. Third, vanadate caused the accumulation of a phosphorylated 15-kDa protein in the presence of PAO, but not in its absence. The characteristics of this protein were identical to those of pp15: 1) both proteins behaved identically by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, 2) digestion of both proteins with trypsin gave rise to apparently identical phosphopeptides, and 3) both proteins contained phosphotyrosine as the only phosphoamino acid. The results indicate that both vanadate and insulin stimulate the accumulation of pp15 in the presence of PAO. The dithiol,2,3-dimercaptopropanol, but not a monothiol, reversed the effects of PAO on the inhibition of vanadate-induced hexose transport and the accumulation of pp15, thus implicating a vicinal dithiol in these actions of vanadate and insulin. Our results support the hypothesis that turnover of the phosphoryl group of pp15, a product of insulin receptor tyrosine kinase action, is coupled to signal transmission to the glucose transport system.  相似文献   

15.
Anti-peptide antibodies directed against a highly-conserved sequence of the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase domain have been used to study the relationship between this specific region and kinase activation. Antibodies have been prepared by the injection into a rabbit of a synthetic peptide (P2) corresponding to residues 1110-1125 of the proreceptor. The peptide exhibits 88-95% sequence similarity with the corresponding sequence in the v-ros protein and in receptors for epidermal growth factor and for insulin-like growth factor 1. Two antibodies with different specificities could be separated from total antiserum obtained after immunization with P2. One antibody [anti-(P-Tyr)] cross-reacted with phosphotyrosine and immunoprecipitated solely autophosphorylated receptors. This antibody was shown to increase or decrease the receptor tyrosine kinase activity depending on its concentration. In all circumstances receptor autophosphorylation and substrate phosphorylation were modulated in a parallel fashion. The second antibody (anti-P2) failed to immunoprecipitate the insulin receptor, but was found to interact with both the peptide and the receptor by e.l.i.s.a. assay. Using a tyrosine co-polymer we found that anti-P2 activated the insulin receptor kinase leading to substrate phosphorylation at a level similar to that observed with insulin. This effect was additive to the hormonal effect. In contrast, receptor autophosphorylation was not modified by the anti-peptide. The differential effect of this anti-peptide further supports the idea that receptor autophosphorylation and kinase activity towards exogenous substrates might be independently regulated. Finally, our data suggest that conformational changes in the receptor tyrosine kinase domain may be sufficient for activation of its enzymic activity.  相似文献   

16.
Insulin rapidly stimulates the tyrosine kinase activity of its receptor, resulting in the phosphorylation of insulin receptor substrates (IRS), which in turn associates and activates PI 3-kinase, leading to an increase in glucose uptake. Phosphorylation of IRS proteins and activation of downstream kinases by insulin are transient and the mechanisms for the subsequent downregulation of their activity are largely unknown. We report here that the insulin-induced IRS-1 tyrosine phosphorylation and PI 3-kinase association to IRS-1 were strongly sustained by the proteasome inhibitors, MG132 and lactacystin. In contrast, no effect was detected on the insulin receptor and IRS-2 tyrosine phosphorylation. Interestingly, lactacystin also preserved PKB activation and insulin-induced glucose uptake. In contrast, calpeptin, a calpain inhibitor, was ineffective. Tyrosine phosphatase assays were also performed, showing that lactacystin was not functioning directly as a tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor "in vitro." In conclusion, proteasome inhibitors can regulate the tyrosine phosphorylation of IRS-1 and the downstream insulin signaling pathway, leading to glucose transport.  相似文献   

17.
Xenopus oocytes carry IGF-I receptors, and undergo meiotic maturation in response to binding of IGF-I or insulin to the IGF-I receptor. Maturation is initiated upon activation of the IGF-I receptor tyrosine kinase and requires tyrosine dephosphorylation of p34cdc2, the kinase component of maturation promoting factor (MPF). To further evaluate the role of tyrosine phosphorylation in the signalling pathway triggered by insulin/IGF-I, we have injected antibodies to phosphotyrosine into oocytes and examined their effects on oocyte maturation. Antibodies at a low concentration (40 ng/oocyte, corresponding to a concentration of 40 micrograms/ml), enhanced specifically insulin-, but not progesterone-induced maturation. In contrast, at 150 ng/oocyte, the same antibodies decreased maturation induced by insulin, progesterone, or microinjected MPF. In cell-free systems, antibodies to phosphotyrosine recognized the oocyte IGF-I receptor and modulated its ligand-induced tyrosine kinase activity in a biphasic manner, with a stimulation at 40 micrograms/ml and an inhibition at higher concentrations. Moreover, antibodies at 150 ng/oocyte neutralized the kinase activity of a crude MPF extract. This neutralization was not accompanied by a rephosphorylation of p34cdc2, but by a decrease in tyrosine phosphorylation of a 60-kDa protein, which was present in M phase extracts and undetectable in G2-arrested oocytes. Taken together, these results point to at least two levels of anti-phosphotyrosine antibody action: (i) the IGF-I receptor signalling system, and (ii) a regulatory step of MPF activation, which might be distinct of the well-documented inactivating phosphorylation of p34cdc2.  相似文献   

18.
The signal transduction pathway by which insulin stimulates glucose transport is largely unknown, but a role for tyrosine and serine/threonine kinases has been proposed. Since mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase is activated by insulin through phosphorylation on both tyrosine and threonine residues, we investigated whether MAP kinase and its upstream regulator, p21ras, are involved in insulin-mediated glucose transport. We did this by examining the time- and dose-dependent stimulation of glucose uptake in relation to the activation of Ras-GTP formation and MAP kinase by thrombin, epidermal growth factor (EGF), and insulin in 3T3-L1 adipocytes. Ras-GTP formation was stimulated transiently by all three agonists, with a peak at 5 to 10 min. Thrombin induced a second peak at approximately 30 min. The activation of p21ras was paralleled by both the phosphorylation and the activation of MAP kinase: transient for insulin and EGF and biphasic for thrombin. However, despite the strong activation of Ras-GTP formation and MAP kinase by EGF and thrombin, glucose uptake was not stimulated by these agonists, in contrast to the eightfold stimulation of 2-deoxy-D-[14C]glucose uptake by insulin. In addition, insulin-mediated glucose transport was not potentiated by thrombin or EGF. Although these results cannot exclude the possibility that p21ras and/or MAP kinase is needed in conjunction with other signaling molecules that are activated by insulin and not by thrombin or EGF, they show that the Ras/MAP kinase signaling pathway alone is not sufficient to induce insulin-mediated glucose transport.  相似文献   

19.
Inducible nitric oxide synthetase plays an essential role in insulin resistance induced by a high-fat diet. The reaction of nitric oxide with superoxide leads to the formation of peroxynitrite (ONOO-), which can modify several proteins. In this study, we investigated whether peroxynitrite impairs insulin-signalling pathway. Our experiments showed that 3-(4-morpholinyl)sydnonimine hydrochloride (SIN-1), a constitutive producer of peroxynitrite, dose-dependently inhibited insulin-stimulated glucose uptake. While SIN-1 did not affect the insulin receptor protein level and tyrosine phosphorylation, it reduced the insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) protein level, and IRS-1 associated phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase (PI-3 kinase) activity. Although SIN-1 did not induce Ser307 phosphorylation of IRS-1, tyrosine nitration of IRS-1 was detected in SIN-1-treated-Rat1 fibroblasts expressing human insulin receptors. Mass spectrometry showed that peroxynitrite induced at least four nitrated tyrosine residues in rat IRS-1, including Tyr939, which is critical for association of IRS-1 with the p85 subunit of PI-3 kinase. Our results suggest that peroxynitrite reduces the IRS-1 protein level and decreases phosphorylation of IRS-1 concurrent with nitration of its tyrosine residues.  相似文献   

20.
Elevation of plasma lactate levels induces peripheral insulin resistance, but the underlying mechanisms are unclear. We examined whether lactate infusion in rats suppresses glycolysis preceding insulin resistance and whether lactate-induced insulin resistance is accompanied by altered insulin signaling and/or insulin-stimulated glucose transport in skeletal muscle. Hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamps were conducted for 6 h in conscious, overnight-fasted rats with or without lactate infusion (120 micromol x kg(-1) x min(-1)) during the final 3.5 h. Lactate infusion increased plasma lactate levels about fourfold. The elevation of plasma lactate had rapid effects to suppress insulin-stimulated glycolysis, which clearly preceded its effect to decrease insulin-stimulated glucose uptake. Both submaximal and maximal insulin-stimulated glucose transport decreased 25-30% (P < 0.05) in soleus but not in epitrochlearis muscles of lactate-infused rats. Lactate infusion did not alter insulin's ability to phosphorylate the insulin receptor, the insulin receptor substrate (IRS)-1, or IRS-2 but decreased insulin's ability to stimulate IRS-1- and IRS-2-associated phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase activities and Akt/protein kinase B activity by 47, 75, and 55%, respectively (P < 0.05 for all). In conclusion, elevation of plasma lactate suppressed glycolysis before its effect on insulin-stimulated glucose uptake, consistent with the hypothesis that suppression of glucose metabolism could precede and cause insulin resistance. In addition, lactate-induced insulin resistance was associated with impaired insulin signaling and decreased insulin-stimulated glucose transport in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

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