Publications

1993

Folli, Saad, Backer, and Kahn. (1993) 1993. “Regulation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase activity in liver and muscle of animal models of insulin-resistant and insulin-deficient diabetes mellitus”. J Clin Invest 92 (4): 1787-94. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI116768.
Insulin stimulates tyrosine phosphorylation of insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS-1), which in turn binds to and activates phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase). In the present study, we have examined these processes in animal models of insulin-resistant and insulin-deficient diabetes mellitus. After in vivo insulin stimulation, there was a 60-80% decrease in IRS-1 phosphorylation in liver and muscle of the ob/ob mouse. There was no insulin stimulation of PI 3-kinase (85 kD subunit) association with IRS-1, and IRS-1-associated PI 3-kinase activity was reduced 90%. Insulin-stimulated total PI 3-kinase activity was also absent in both tissues of the ob/ob mouse. By contrast, in the streptozotocin diabetic rat, IRS-1 phosphorylation increased 50% in muscle, IRS-1-associated PI 3-kinase activity was increased two- to threefold in liver and muscle, and there was a 50% increase in the p85 associated with IRS-1 after insulin stimulation in muscle. In conclusion, (a) IRS-1-associated PI 3-kinase activity is differentially regulated in hyperinsulinemic and hypoinsulinemic diabetic states; (b) PI 3-kinase activation closely correlates with IRS-1 phosphorylation; and (c) reduced PI 3-kinase activity may play a role in the pathophysiology of insulin resistant diabetic states, such as that seen in the ob/ob mouse.
Carpentier, Paccaud, Backer, Gilbert, Orci, Kahn, and Baecker J [corrected to Backer. (1993) 1993. “Two steps of insulin receptor internalization depend on different domains of the beta-subunit”. J Cell Biol 122 (6): 1243-52.
The internalization of signaling receptors such as the insulin receptor is a complex, multi-step process. The aim of the present work was to determine the various steps in internalization of the insulin receptor and to establish which receptor domains are implicated in each of these by the use of receptors possessing in vitro mutations. We find that kinase activation and autophosphorylation of all three regulatory tyrosines 1146, 1150, and 1151, but not tyrosines 1316 and 1322 in the COOH-terminal domain, are required for the ligand-specific stage of the internalization process; i.e., the surface redistribution of the receptor from microvilli where initial binding occurs to the nonvillous domain of the cell. Early intracellular steps in insulin signal transduction involving the activation of phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase are not required for this redistribution. The second step of internalization consists in the anchoring of the receptors in clathrin-coated pits. In contrast to the first ligand specific step, this step is common to many receptors including those for transport proteins and occurs in the absence of kinase activation and receptor autophosphorylation, but requires a juxta-membrane cytoplasmic segment of the beta-subunit of the receptor including a NPXY sequence. Thus, there are two independent mechanisms controlling insulin receptor internalization which depend on different domains of the beta-subunit.
The mechanism through which insulin binding to the extracellular domain of the insulin receptor activates the intrinsic tyrosine kinase in the intracellular domain of the protein is unknown. For the c-neu/erbB-2 (c-erbB-2) protooncogene, a single point mutation within the transmembrane (TM) domain converting Val-664 to Glu (erbB-2V-->E) results in elevated levels of tyrosine kinase activity and cellular transformation. We report the construction of a chimeric insulin receptor in which the TM domain of the receptor has been substituted with that encoded by erbB-2V-->E. When expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells this chimeric receptor displays maximal levels of autophosphorylation and kinase activity in the absence of insulin. This activity results in an increase in the level of insulin-receptor substrate 1 phosphorylation but a down-regulation in insulin-receptor substrate 1 protein and desensitization to insulin stimulation of glycogen synthesis. By contrast, basal levels of DNA synthesis are elevated to levels approximately 60% of those observed in serum-stimulated cells. Over-expression of chimeric insulin receptors containing the c-erbB-2 TM domain or a single point mutation in the insulin receptor TM domain of Val-938-->Asp, on the other hand, shows none of these alterations. Thus, the TM domain encoded by erbB-2V-->E contains structural features that can confer ligand-independent activation in a heterologous protein. Constitutive activation of the insulin receptor results in a relative increase in basal levels of DNA synthesis, but an apparent resistance to the metabolic effects of insulin.
Araki, Sun, Haag, Chuang, Y. Zhang, Yang-Feng, White, and Kahn. (1993) 1993. “Human skeletal muscle insulin receptor substrate-1. Characterization of the cDNA, gene, and chromosomal localization”. Diabetes 42 (7): 1041-54.
Insulin receptor substrate-1 is a major substrate of insulin receptor Tyr kinase. We have now cloned the IRS-1 cDNA from human skeletal muscle, one of the most important target tissues of insulin action, localized and cloned the human IRS-1 gene, and studied the expression of the protein in Chinese hamster ovary cells. Human IRS-1 cDNA encodes a 1242 amino acid sequence that is 88% identical with rat liver IRS-1. The 14 potential Tyr phosphorylation sites include 6 Tyr-Met-X-Met motifs and 3 Tyr-X-X-Met motifs that are completely conserved in human IRS-1. Human IRS-1 has > 50 possible Ser/Thr phosphorylation sites and one potential ATP-binding site close to the NH2-terminal. The human IRS-1 gene contains the entire 5'-untranslated region and protein coding region in a single exon and was localized on chromosome 2 q36-37 by in situ hybridization. By Northern blot analysis, IRS-1 mRNA is rare and consists of two species of 6.9 and 6 kilobase. By using quantitative polymerase chain reaction after reverse transcription of total RNA from human fetal tissues, IRS-1 mRNA could be identified in all tissues. When human IRS-1 cDNA was expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells, the protein migrated between 170,000-180,000 M(r) in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and was rapidly Tyr phosphorylated upon insulin stimulation. Thus, IRS-1 is widely expressed and highly conserved across species and tissues.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Goncalves, Yamada, Thatte, Backer, Golan, Kahn, and Shoelson. 1993. “Optimizing transmembrane domain helicity accelerates insulin receptor internalization and lateral mobility”. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 90 (12): 5762-6.
Transmembrane (TM) domains of integral membrane proteins are generally thought to be helical. However, a Gly-Pro sequence within the TM domain of the insulin receptor is predicted to act as a helix breaker. CD analyses of model TM peptides in a lipid-like environment show that substitution of Gly and Pro by Ala enhances helicity. On this basis, Gly933 and Pro934 within the TM domain of the intact human insulin receptor were mutated to Ala (G-->A, P-->A, GP-->AA) to assess effects of altered helicity on receptor functions. Mutated and wild-type receptors, expressed stably in cultured CHO cells at equivalent levels, were properly assembled, biosynthetically processed, and exhibited similar affinities for insulin. Receptor autophosphorylation and substrate kinase activity in intact cells and soluble receptor preparations were indistinguishable. In contrast, insulin-stimulated receptor internalization was accelerated 2-fold for the GP-->AA mutant, compared to a wild-type control or the G-->A and P-->A mutants. Insulin degradation, which occurs during receptor endocytosis and recycling, was similarly elevated in cells transfected with GP-->AA mutant receptors. Fluorescence photobleaching recovery measurements showed that the lateral mobility of GP-->AA mutant receptors was also increased 2- to 3-fold. These results suggest that lateral mobility directly influences rates of insulin-mediated receptor endocytosis and that rates of endocytosis and lateral mobility are retarded by a kinked TM domain in the wild-type receptor. Invariance of Gly-Pro within insulin receptor TM domain sequences suggests a physiologic advantage for submaximal rates of receptor internalization.
Chuang, Myers, Seidner, Birnbaum, White, and Kahn. 1993. “Insulin receptor substrate 1 mediates insulin and insulin-like growth factor I-stimulated maturation of Xenopus oocytes”. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 90 (11): 5172-5.
Insulin and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) initiate cellular functions by activating their homologous tyrosine kinase receptors. In most mammalian cell types, this results in rapid tyrosine phosphorylation of a high-molecular-weight substrate termed insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS-1). Previous studies suggest that IRS-1 may act as a "docking" protein that noncovalently associates with certain signal-transducing molecules containing src homology 2 domains; however, direct evidence for the role of IRS-1 in the final biological actions of these hormones is still lacking. We have developed a reconstitution system to study the role of IRS-1 in insulin and IGF-I signaling, taking advantage of the fact that Xenopus oocytes possess endogenous IGF-I receptors but have little or no IRS-1, as determined by immunoblotting with anti-IRS-1 and antiphosphotyrosine antibodies. After microinjection of IRS-1 protein produced in a baculovirus expression system, tyrosyl phosphorylation of injected IRS-1 is stimulated by both insulin and IGF-I in a concentration-dependent manner, with IGF-I more potent than insulin. Furthermore, after IRS-1 injection, both hormones induce a maturation response that correlates well with the amount of injected IRS-1. By contrast, overexpression of human insulin receptors in the Xenopus oocytes does not enhance either IRS-1 phosphorylation or oocyte maturation response upon insulin stimulation. These results demonstrate that IRS-1 serves a critical role in linking IGF-I and insulin to their final cellular responses.
Feener, Backer, King, Wilden, Sun, Kahn, and White. 1993. “Insulin stimulates serine and tyrosine phosphorylation in the juxtamembrane region of the insulin receptor”. J Biol Chem 268 (15): 11256-64.
Insulin-stimulated autophosphorylation of the cytoplasmic juxtamembrane region of the human insulin receptor was examined by Tricine/SDS-PAGE. Various mutant receptor molecules were used to identify two tryptic phosphopeptides associated with the juxtamembrane region which accounts for 15% of the autophosphorylation of partially purified insulin receptor. These phosphopeptides were immunoprecipitated with an antipeptide antibody against the juxtamembrane sequence and were phosphorylated exclusively on tyrosine. Substitution of both Tyr960 and Tyr953 with alanine eliminated insulin-stimulated phosphorylation of the juxtamembrane region without affecting tyrosine autophosphorylation in the C terminus or regulatory regions. Monosubstitution of Tyr960 with phenylalanine or alanine reduced phosphorylation in the juxtamembrane region by more than 50%, and manual Edman degradation indicated that Tyr960 was phosphorylated in wild-type receptor. In vivo, phosphorylation of the juxtamembrane region accounts for one-third of the insulin receptor phosphorylation and contains both phosphoserine and phosphotyrosine. Deletion of Tyr960 and 11 adjacent amino acids eliminated insulin-stimulated phosphorylation of the juxtamembrane region. Substitution of Tyr960 reduced this phosphorylation by more than 50%. The insulin receptor also undergoes serine phosphorylation outside of the juxtamembrane region which depends on the presence of Tyr1151. Together with our previous studies, this report suggests that phosphorylation of Tyr960 may play an important role in signal transduction by the insulin receptor.
Csermely, Schnaider, Cheatham, Olson, and Kahn. 1993. “Insulin induces the phosphorylation of nucleolin. A possible mechanism of insulin-induced RNA efflux from nuclei”. J Biol Chem 268 (13): 9747-52.
Insulin induces the serine phosphorylation of the nucleolar protein nucleolin at subnanomolar concentrations in differentiated 3T3-442A cells. The stimulation is biphasic with phosphorylation reaching a maximum at 10 pM insulin and then declining to only 40% of basal levels at insulin concentrations of 1 microM. These changes are rapid, reaching half-maximal after 4 min and maximal after 15 min of incubation. The cell-permeable casein kinase II inhibitor 5,6-dichlorobenzimidazole-riboside prevents the insulin-stimulated phosphorylation of nucleolin suggesting that casein kinase II may mediate this effect of the hormone. Insulin-like growth factor 1 mimics the action of insulin on dephosphorylation of nucleolin at nanomolar concentrations suggesting that the latter effect may be mediated by insulin-like growth factor 1 receptors. Insulin treatment of 3T3-442A cells also results in a stimulation of RNA efflux from isolated, intact cell nuclei. The dose dependence of insulin-induced nucleolin phosphorylation and insulin-stimulated RNA efflux from intact cell nuclei are almost identical. Insulin induces an increase in the RNA efflux at subnanomolar concentrations in 3T3-442A adipocytes, while high (micromolar) concentrations of insulin inhibited the efflux of RNA. These data indicate that insulin regulates the phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of nucleolin, possibly via stimulation of casein kinase II, and this may play a role in regulation of the RNA efflux from nuclei.
Kahn, and AB Goldfine. 1993. “Molecular determinants of insulin action”. J Diabetes Complications 7 (2): 92-105.
Insulin elicits an array of biologic responses. Insulin exerts a regulatory role in almost all cells of the body and is the primary hormone responsible for signaling the storage and utilization of basic nutrients. On the molecular level, the actions of insulin are initiated by binding of insulin to the insulin receptor. Interaction of the alpha and beta subunits of the receptor results in tyrosine kinase activity, which is integral to the initiation of cascades of phosphorylation/dephosphorylation reactions that mediate a large number of the actions of insulin. Insulin-receptor substrate 1 may be central to phosphorylation reactions through a role in serine and threonine kinase activity. Insulin action may also involve the generation of low-molecular-weight mediators capable of modulating intracellular enzymes. The regulation of glucose transport is a primary feature of the physiologic role of insulin and is performed by a family of glucose-transporter proteins with different characteristics. One mechanism by which insulin exerts its effect on glucose transport is the stimulation of the translocation of the glucose transporter to the plasma membrane. Degradation of insulin occurs through diverse mechanisms at numerous sites in the body. Reversal of the insulin signal at the cellular level may be accomplished by a class of enzymes termed phosphotyrosine phosphatases, which may play a role in certain pathophysiologic states. Important roles for insulin-receptor kinase, glucose transporters, insulin-receptor substrate 1, and various intracellular enzymes in the actions of insulin have been demonstrated; nonetheless, the formulation of potential therapeutic strategies directed at particular stages of the insulin action cascade will require further elucidation of its components.
Kriauciunas, Goldstein, Lipes, and Kahn. (1993) 1993. “Modulation of expression of insulin and IGF-I receptor by Epstein-Barr virus and its gene products LMP and EBNA-2 in lymphocyte cell lines”. J Cell Physiol 154 (3): 486-95. https://doi.org/10.1002/jcp.1041540306.
The receptors for insulin and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) are two closely related integral membrane glycoproteins involved in signalling of cell growth and metabolism. We have used the unique paradigm of pairs of Burkitt lymphoma cell lines (BLO2, BL30, BL41) with or without Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) infection and cells transfected with EBV-related genes to examine effects of EBV on expression of these receptors at the gene and protein functional level. In BL30 and BL41 cells, EBV infection increased surface insulin binding and total receptor number by 2- and 18-fold, respectively. By contrast, EBV infection decreased total IGF-I receptors by 29 to 87% in all three cell lines. In general, there was a correlation between total receptor concentration and the level of insulin or IGF-I receptor mRNAs, although in one cell line insulin binding increased while receptor mRNA levels decreased slightly, suggesting posttranslational effects. BL41 cells transfected with a vector expressing the EBV latent membrane protein (LMP) exhibited a 2.6- to 3.2-fold increase in insulin receptor expression, whereas cells transfected with EBNA-2 (one of the EBV nuclear antigens) alone exhibited no effect. However, EBNA-2 appears to be required for the EBV effect on insulin receptor expression since cells infected with a mutant virus, P3JHRI, which lacks the EBNA-2 gene failed to show an increase in insulin receptor number. These data indicate that EBV infection of lymphocytes increases expression of insulin receptors while simultaneously decreasing expression of IGF-I receptors. The magnitude and sometimes even the direction of change, depends on host cell factors. A maximal increase in insulin receptors appears to require the coordinate action of several of the EBV proteins including LMP and EBNA-2.