Publications by Year: 2003

2003

Kitamura, Tadahiro, Ronald Kahn, and Domenico Accili. (2003) 2003. “Insulin receptor knockout mice”. Annu Rev Physiol 65: 313-32. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.physiol.65.092101.142540.
To examine the role of the insulin receptor in fuel homeostasis, we and others have carried out genetic ablation studies in mice. Mice lacking insulin receptors are born with normal features, but develop early postnatal diabetes and die of ketoacidosis. In contrast, mice lacking insulin receptors in specific cell types as a result of conditional mutagenesis develop mild metabolic and reproductive abnormalities. These experiments have uncovered novel functions of insulin receptors in tissues such as brain and pancreatic beta-cells. Combined knockout studies of insulin and Igf1 receptors indicate that the insulin receptor also promotes embryonic growth. Experimental crosses of mice with insulin receptor haploinsufficiency have been instrumental to the genetic analysis of insulin action by enabling us to assign specific roles to different insulin receptor substrates and identify novel elements in insulin signaling.
Hirashima, Tsuruzoe, Kodama, Igata, Toyonaga, Ueki, Kahn, and Araki. (2003) 2003. “Insulin down-Regulates Insulin Receptor Substrate-2 Expression through the Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase Akt Pathway”. J Endocrinol 179 (2): 253-66.
Insulin receptor substrate (IRS)-1 and IRS-2 are the major substrates that mediate insulin action. Insulin itself regulates the expression of the IRS protein in the liver, but the underlying mechanisms of IRS-1 and IRS-2 regulation are not fully understood. Here we report that insulin suppressed the expression of both IRS-1 and IRS-2 proteins in Fao hepatoma cells. The decrease in IRS-1 protein occurred via proteasomal degradation without any change in IRS-1 mRNA, whereas the insulin-induced suppression of IRS-2 protein was associated with a parallel decrease in IRS-2 mRNA without changing IRS-2 mRNA half-life. The insulin-induced suppression of IRS-2 mRNA and protein was blocked by the phosphatidylinositol (PI) 3-kinase inhibitor, LY294002, but not by the MAP kinase-ERK kinase (MEK) inhibitor, PD098059. Inhibition of Akt by overexpression of dominant-negative Akt also caused complete attenuation of the insulin-induced decrease in IRS-2 protein and partial attenuation of its mRNA down-regulation. Some nuclear proteins bound to the insulin response element (IRE) sequence on the IRS-2 gene in an insulin-dependent manner in vitro, and the binding was also blocked by the PI 3-kinase inhibitor. Reporter gene assay showed that insulin suppressed the activity of both human and rat IRS-2 gene promoters through the IRE in a PI 3-kinase-dependent manner. Our results indicate that insulin regulates IRS-1 and IRS-2 through different mechanisms and that insulin represses IRS-2 gene expression via a PI 3-kinase/Akt pathway.
The painstaking process of generating constitutive and conditional knockout mice has paid off handsomely. The roles of the insulin receptor and its intracellular substrates in insulin action has been established and begun to shed light onto some of the proteins less obvious functions. We have learned how genetic predisposition plays itself out in the oligogenic and heterogeneous pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes and how the balance of proteins can affect the efficiency of signaling both positively and negatively. The IRS knockout mice have taught us how these proteins provide unique and complementary signals in insulin action. From the tissue specific knockouts we have learned that [figure: see text] different tissues contribute uniquely to the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes, but not always in the predicted way; that insulin resistance at different levels in the same tissue may produce different phenotypes; that tissues possess mechanisms of communication such that resistance in one tissue affects insulin signaling or metabolism in others; and that insulin has important effects in tissues not previously considered insulin responsive, including the brain and beta-cells. The result of this work has led us to develop new hypotheses about the nature of the insulin action network.
Burcelin, Remy, Valerie Crivelli, Christophe Perrin, Anabela Da Costa, James Mu, Barbara Kahn, Morris Birnbaum, Ronald Kahn, Peter Vollenweider, and Bernard Thorens. (2003) 2003. “GLUT4, AMP kinase, but not the insulin receptor, are required for hepatoportal glucose sensor-stimulated muscle glucose utilization”. J Clin Invest 111 (10): 1555-62. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI16888.
Recent evidence suggests the existence of a hepatoportal vein glucose sensor, whose activation leads to enhanced glucose use in skeletal muscle, heart, and brown adipose tissue. The mechanism leading to this increase in whole body glucose clearance is not known, but previous data suggest that it is insulin independent. Here, we sought to further determine the portal sensor signaling pathway by selectively evaluating its dependence on muscle GLUT4, insulin receptor, and the evolutionarily conserved sensor of metabolic stress, AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK). We demonstrate that the increase in muscle glucose use was suppressed in mice lacking the expression of GLUT4 in the organ muscle. In contrast, glucose use was stimulated normally in mice with muscle-specific inactivation of the insulin receptor gene, confirming independence from insulin-signaling pathways. Most importantly, the muscle glucose use in response to activation of the hepatoportal vein glucose sensor was completely dependent on the activity of AMPK, because enhanced hexose disposal was prevented by expression of a dominant negative AMPK in muscle. These data demonstrate that the portal sensor induces glucose use and development of hypoglycemia independently of insulin action, but by a mechanism that requires activation of the AMPK and the presence of GLUT4.
Hallmann, Daniel, Katja Trümper, Heidi Trusheim, Kohjiro Ueki, Ronald Kahn, Lewis Cantley, David Fruman, and Dieter Hörsch. 2003. “Altered signaling and cell cycle regulation in embryonal stem cells with a disruption of the gene for phosphoinositide 3-kinase regulatory subunit p85alpha”. J Biol Chem 278 (7): 5099-108. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M208451200.
The p85alpha regulatory subunit of class I(A) phosphoinositide 3-kinases (PI3K) is derived from the Pik3r1 gene, which also yields alternatively spliced variants p50alpha and p55alpha. It has been proposed that excess monomeric p85 competes with functional PI3K p85-p110 heterodimers. We examined embryonic stem (ES) cells with heterozygous and homozygous disruptions in the Pik3r gene and found that wild type ES cells express virtually no monomeric p85alpha. Although, IGF-1-stimulated PI3K activity associated with insulin receptor substrates was unaltered in all cell lines, p85alpha-null ES cells showed diminished protein kinase B activation despite increased PI3K activity associated with the p85beta subunit. Furthermore, p85alpha-null cells demonstrated growth retardation, increased frequency of apoptosis, and altered cell cycle regulation with a G(0)/G(1) cell cycle arrest and up-regulation of p27(KIP), whereas signaling through CREB and MAPK was enhanced. These phenotypes were reversed by re-expression of p85alpha via adenoviral gene transfer. Surprisingly, all ES cell lines could be differentiated into adipocytes. In these differentiated ES cells, however, compensatory p85beta signaling was lost in p85alpha-null cells while increased signaling by CREB and MAPK was still observed. Thus, loss of p85alpha in ES cells induced alterations in IGF-1 signaling and regulation of apoptosis and cell cycle but no defects in differentiation. However, differentiated ES cells partially lost their ability for compensatory signaling at the level of PI3K, which may explain some of the defects observed in mice with homozygous deletion of the Pik3r1 gene.
Tai, Yu-Tzu, Klaus Podar, Laurence Catley, Yu-Hua Tseng, Masaharu Akiyama, Reshma Shringarpure, Renate Burger, et al. 2003. “Insulin-Like Growth Factor-1 Induces Adhesion and Migration in Human Multiple Myeloma Cells via Activation of Beta1-Integrin and Phosphatidylinositol 3’-Kinase AKT Signaling”. Cancer Res 63 (18): 5850-8.
Insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-I) is a growth and survival factor in human multiple myeloma (MM) cells. Here we examine the effect of IGF-I on MM cell adhesion and migration, and define the role of beta1 integrin in these processes. IGF-I increases adhesion of MM.1S and OPM6 MM cells to fibronectin (FN) in a time- and dose-dependent manner, as a consequence of IGF-IR activation. Conversely, blocking anti-beta1 integrin monoclonal antibody, RGD peptide, and cytochalasin D inhibit IGF-I-induced cell adhesion to FN. IGF-I rapidly and transiently induces association of IGF-IR and beta1 integrin, with phosphorylation of IGF-IR, IRS-1, and p85(PI3-K). IGF-I also triggers phosphorylation of AKT and ERK significantly. Both IGF-IR and beta1 integrin colocalize to lipid rafts on the plasma membrane after IGF-I stimulation. In addition, IGF-I triggers polymerization of F-actin, induces phosphorylation of p125(FAK) and paxillin, and enhances beta1 integrin interaction with these focal adhesion proteins. Importantly, using pharmacological inhibitors of phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase (PI3-K) (LY294002 and wortmannin) and extracellular signal-regulated kinase (PD98059), we demonstrate that IGF-I-induced MM cell adhesion to FN is achieved only when PI3-K/AKT is activated. IGF-I induces a 1.7-2.2 (MM.1S) and 2-2.5-fold (OPM6) increase in migration, whereas blocking anti-IGF-I and anti-beta1 integrin monoclonal antibodies, PI3-K inhibitors, as well as cytochalasin D abrogate IGF-I-induced MM cell transmigration. Finally, IGF-I induces adhesion of CD138+ patient MM cells. Therefore, these studies suggest a role for IGF-I in trafficking and localization of MM cells in the bone marrow microenvironment. Moreover, they define the functional association of IGF-IR and beta1 integrin in mediating MM cell homing, providing the preclinical rationale for novel treatment strategies targeting IGF-I/IGF-IR in MM.
Kondo, Tatsuya, David Vicent, Kiyoshi Suzuma, Masashi Yanagisawa, George King, Martin Holzenberger, and Ronald Kahn. (2003) 2003. “Knockout of insulin and IGF-1 receptors on vascular endothelial cells protects against retinal neovascularization”. J Clin Invest 111 (12): 1835-42. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI17455.
Both insulin and IGF-1 have been implicated in control of retinal endothelial cell growth, neovascularization, and diabetic retinopathy. To precisely define the role of insulin and IGF-1 signaling in endothelium in these processes, we have used the oxygen-induced retinopathy model to study mice with a vascular endothelial cell-specific knockout of the insulin receptor (VENIRKO) or IGF-1 receptor (VENIFARKO). Following relative hypoxia, VENIRKO mice show a 57% decrease in retinal neovascularization as compared with controls. This is associated with a blunted rise in VEGF, eNOS, and endothelin-1. By contrast, VENIFARKO mice show only a 34% reduction in neovascularization and a very modest reduction in mediator generation. These data indicate that both insulin and IGF-1 signaling in endothelium play a role in retinal neovascularization through the expression of vascular mediators, with the effect of insulin being most important in this process.
Lee, Zhang, Ivanova, Bonnette, Oesterreich, Rosen, Grimm, et al. (2003) 2003. “Developmental and hormonal signals dramatically alter the localization and abundance of insulin receptor substrate proteins in the mammary gland”. Endocrinology 144 (6): 2683-94. https://doi.org/10.1210/en.2002-221103.
Insulin receptor substrates (IRS) are central integrators of hormone, cytokine, and growth factor signaling. IRS proteins can be phosphorylated by a number of signaling pathways critical to normal mammary gland development. Studies in transgenic mice that overexpress IGF-I in the mammary gland suggested that IRS expression is important in the regulation of normal postlactational mammary involution. The goal of these studies was to examine IRS expression in the mouse mammary gland and determine the importance of IRS-1 to mammary development in the virgin mouse. IRS-1 and -2 show distinct patterns of protein expression in the virgin mouse mammary gland, and protein abundance is dramatically increased during pregnancy and lactation, but rapidly lost during involution. Consistent with hormone regulation, IRS-1 protein levels are reduced by ovariectomy, induced by combined treatment with estrogen and progesterone, and vary considerably throughout the estrous cycle. These changes occur without similar changes in mRNA levels, suggesting posttranscriptional control. Mammary glands from IRS-1 null mice have smaller fat pads than wild-type controls, but this reduction is proportional to the overall reduction in body size. Development of the mammary duct (terminal endbuds and branch points) is not altered by the loss of IRS-1, and pregnancy-induced proliferation is not changed. These data indicate that IRS undergo complex developmental and hormonal regulation in the mammary gland, and that IRS-1 is more likely to regulate mammary function in lactating mice than in virgin or pregnant mice.
Rosen, Evan, Rohit Kulkarni, Pasha Sarraf, Umut Ozcan, Terumasa Okada, Chung-Hsin Hsu, Daniel Eisenman, et al. (2003) 2003. “Targeted elimination of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma in beta cells leads to abnormalities in islet mass without compromising glucose homeostasis”. Mol Cell Biol 23 (20): 7222-9.
The nuclear hormone receptor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPAR gamma) is an important regulator of lipid and glucose homeostasis and cellular differentiation. Studies of many cell types in vitro and in vivo have demonstrated that activation of PPAR gamma can reduce cellular proliferation. We show here that activation of PPAR gamma is sufficient to reduce the proliferation of cultured insulinoma cell lines. We created a model with mice in which the expression of the PPARG gene in beta cells was eliminated (beta gamma KO mice), and these mice were found to have significant islet hyperplasia on a chow diet. Interestingly, the normal expansion of beta-cell mass that occurs in control mice in response to high-fat feeding is markedly blunted in these animals. Despite this alteration in beta-cell mass, no effect on glucose homeostasis in beta gamma KO mice was noted. Additionally, while thiazolidinediones enhanced insulin secretion from cultured wild-type islets, administration of rosiglitazone to insulin-resistant control and beta gamma KO mice revealed that PPAR gamma in beta cells is not required for the antidiabetic actions of these compounds. These data demonstrate a critical physiological role for PPAR gamma function in beta-cell proliferation and also indicate that the mechanisms controlling beta-cell hyperplasia in obesity are different from those that regulate baseline cell mass in the islet.
Entingh, Amelia, Cullen Taniguchi, and Ronald Kahn. 2003. “Bi-directional regulation of brown fat adipogenesis by the insulin receptor”. J Biol Chem 278 (35): 33377-83. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M303056200.
Insulin is a potent inducer of adipogenesis, and differentiation of adipocytes requires many components of the insulin signaling pathway, including the insulin receptor substrate IRS-1 and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K). Brown pre-adipocytes in culture exhibit low levels of insulin receptor (IR), and during differentiation there is both an increase in total IR levels and a shift in the alternatively spliced forms of IR from the A isoform (-exon 11) to the B isoform (+exon 11). Brown pre-adipocyte cell lines from insulin receptor-deficient mice exhibit dramatically impaired differentiation and an inability to regulate alternative splicing of the insulin receptor. Surprisingly, re-expression of either splice isoform of IR in the IR-deficient cells fails to rescue differentiation in these cells. Likewise, overexpression of IR in control IRlox cells also results in inhibition of differentiation and a failure to accumulate expression of the adipogenic markers peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma, Glut4, and fatty acid synthase, although cells overexpressing IR retain the ability to activate PI3K and down-regulate mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) phosphorylation. Thus, differentiation of brown adipocytes requires a timed and regulated expression of IR, and either the absence or overabundance of insulin receptors in these cells dramatically inhibits differentiation.