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A Thiol-sensitive Degradative Process of Liver Uncouples Autophosphorylation of the Insulin Receptor from Insulin Binding

Overview
Journal Biochem J
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 1986 Jun 1
PMID 3092812
Citations 2
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Abstract

Insulin receptors derived from highly purified rat liver plasma membranes and Golgi membranes showed differences in insulin-mediated receptor autophosphorylation, even though their insulin-binding characteristics were similar. This difference was related to the generation of a Mr-84,000 fragment of the Mr-90,000 beta subunit of the plasma-membrane receptor, a fragment that was not present in the receptor from Golgi membranes, in the absence of a change in the insulin-binding alpha subunit. When autophosphorylation activity was based on insulin binding, the activity of the plasma-membrane-derived insulin receptor was decreased to 25-30% that of the Golgi-derived receptor. Endoglycosidase F digestion produced changes in the Mr values for both species, but they were not converted into a single subunit, thereby suggesting differences in the protein component of the two subunits. Although the proteinase inhibitors phenylmethanesulphonyl fluoride, ovomucoid and aprotinin failed to block the formation of the Mr-84,000 fragment, the presence of iodoacetamide or EDTA during liver homogenization markedly inhibited fragment generation and allowed the plasma-membrane insulin receptor to retain an autophosphorylation activity comparable with that present in insulin receptors from Golgi membranes. Thus a thiol-sensitive, cation-dependent, degrading activity has been identified that can uncouple the insulin-binding activity of the plasma-membrane insulin receptor from its tyrosine kinase activity.

Citing Articles

Tyrosine kinase activity of liver insulin receptor is inhibited in rats at term gestation.

Martinez C, Ruiz P, Andres A, Satrustegui J, Carrascosa J Biochem J. 1989; 263(1):267-72.

PMID: 2690816 PMC: 1133418. DOI: 10.1042/bj2630267.


Insulin stimulates proteolysis of the alpha-subunit, but not the beta-subunit, of its receptor at the cell surface in rat liver.

Lipson K, Kolhatkar A, Donner D Biochem J. 1989; 261(2):333-40.

PMID: 2673219 PMC: 1138830. DOI: 10.1042/bj2610333.

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