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Query: EC:3.1.3.16 (
calcineurin
)
17,112
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of streptozotocin-induced diabetes and of
insulin
supplementation to diabetic rats on glycogen-metabolizing enzymes in liver were determined. The results were compared with those from control animals. The activities of glycogenolytic enzymes, i.e. phosphorylase (both a and b), phosphorylase kinase and protein kinase (in the presence or in the absence of cyclic AMP), were significantly decreased in the diabetic animals. The enzyme activities were restored to control values by
insulin
therapy. Glycogen synthase (I-form) activity, similarly decreased in the diabetic animals, was also restored to control values after the administration of
insulin
. The increase in glycogen synthase(I-form) activity after
insulin
treatment was associated with a concomitant increase in
phosphoprotein phosphatase
activity. The increase in phosphatase activity was due to (i) a change in the activity of the enzyme itself and (ii) a decrease in a heat stable protein inhibitor of the phosphatase activity.
...
PMID:The effect of streptozotocin-induced diabetes and of insulin supplementation on glycogen metabolism in rat liver. 20 91
In summary, we have presented evidence which relates to the action pathway of hormonal control of glycogen metabolism. In the case of
insulin
, there are changes demonstrable in the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase and also in the
phosphoprotein phosphatase
, under conditions where no direct relationship to either cyclic AMP or cyclic GMP levels are measurable. Therefore, a new unknown intermediate or second messenger system is again proposed. An
insulin
-generated labile compound(s) which inhibits the protein kinase has been discovered. This may function as an intermediate. Finally, the fact that the glycogen synthase system clearly differs from phosphorylase in its regulation by covalent phosphorylation is discussed. Synthase is now accepted as a multiply phosphorylated subunit, in contrast to phosphorylase which is singly phosphorylated. The inherent theoretical advantages of multiple phosphorylation over single phosphorylation are considered. The advantages of a multistate over a two-state model of enzyme interconversion are mentioned. The importance of the multiple phosphorylations interacting in a nonlinear manner with the control by cellular metabolites is in the explanation of how a small change in covalent phosphorylation signalled by a hormone can be translated in the cell milieu into a much larger change in rate.
...
PMID:Hormonal control of glycogen metabolism. 21 30
Deproteinized skeletal muscle extracts free of major nucleotides from control and
insulin
-treated rats were fractionated and assayed for inhibition of protein phosphorylation by cyclic adenosine monophosphate (AMP)-dependent and -independent protein kinases. A differential effect of
insulin
on a particular fraction was observed on cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase but not on cyclic AMP-independent protein kinases. This fraction that inhibited cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase also stimulated glycogen synthase
phosphoprotein phosphatase
. It is proposed that this fraction may contain a mediator substance generateed in the presence of
insulin
.
...
PMID:Generation by insulin of a chemical mediator that controls protein phosphorylation and dephosphorylation. 22 95
Patients with non-
insulin
-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) had an impaired capability to activate exogenous ATP.Mg-dependent
protein phosphatase
in lymphocytes compared with nondiabetic subjects. More importantly, the impaired
protein phosphatase
activation in the lymphocytes of patients with NIDDM could be consistently and completely restored to normal by exogenous pure protein kinase FA (the activating factor of ATP.Mg-dependent
protein phosphatase
), indicating that the molecular mechanism for the impaired
protein phosphatase
activation in patients with NIDDM is due to a functional loss of kinase FA. By contrast, both NIDDM patients and nondiabetic subjects had similar levels of total cell proteins and spontaneously active
protein phosphatase
activity in their lymphocytes, indicating that the dysfunction of kinase FA in patients with NIDDM is very specific. Statistical analysis further revealed that the lymphocytes isolated from 21 nondiabetic subjects contained high levels of FA activity (148 +/- 22 mU/mg cell protein), whereas, the lymphocytes of 21 patients with NIDDM contained low levels of FA activity (50 +/- 22 mU/mg), indicating statistically significant differences in FA activity between diabetic patients and nondiabetic subjects. This is the first report providing initial evidence that patients with NIDDM may statistically have a common impairment in the
protein phosphatase
activation in their lymphocytes and that the molecular mechanism for this defect is due to a biochemical dysfunction of protein kinase FA, a biological mediator for both
insulin
and epidermal growth factor.
...
PMID:Dysfunction of insulin mediator protein kinase FA in lymphocytes of patients with NIDDM. 130 56
Cell surface tyrosine kinase receptors are subject to a rapid activation by their ligand, which is followed by secondary regulatory processes. The IHE2 cell line is a unique model system to study the regulation of EGF binding to EGF receptors after activation of the EGF receptor kinase. IHE2 cells express both a chimeric
insulin
-EGF receptor kinase (IER) and a kinase-deficient EGF receptor (HER K721A). We have previously reported that IER is an
insulin
-responsive EGF receptor tyrosine kinase that activates one or several serine/threonine kinases, which in turn phosphorylate(s) the unoccupied HER K721A. In this article we show that
insulin
through IER activation induces a decrease in 125I-EGF binding to IHE2 cells. Scatchard analysis indicates that, as for TPA, the effect of
insulin
can be accounted for by a loss of the high affinity binding of EGF to HER K721A. Since this receptor transmodulation persists in protein kinase C downregulated IHE2 cells, it is likely to be due to a mechanism independent of protein kinase C activation. Using an in vitro system of 125I-EGF binding to transmodulated IHE2 membranes, we illustrate that the inhibition of EGF binding induced by IER activation is related to the phosphorylation state of HER K721A. Further, studies with
phosphatase 2A
, or at a temperature (4 degrees C) where only IER is functional, strongly suggest that the loss of high affinity EGF binding is related to the serine/threonine phosphorylation of HER K721A after IER activation. Our results provide evidence for a "homologous desensitization" of EGF receptor binding after activation of the EGF receptor kinase of the IER receptor.
...
PMID:Activation of insulin-epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor chimerae regulates EGF receptor binding affinity. 130 16
TSH regulation of
insulin
and insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) receptor kinases has been studied in FRTL5 cultured thyroid cells. Preincubation of intact cells with TSH increased by 2-fold
insulin
and IGF-I receptor autophosphorylation and phosphorylation of the p175 endogenous substrate for the receptors. Enhanced phosphorylations reached a maximum within 30 min, were maintained for 30 min more, and vanished after 120 min of TSH incubation. TSH dose-responses exhibited half-maximal and maximal effects at 1 and 10 pM, respectively. In vitro,
insulin
as well as IGF-I receptors purified from cells treated with 10 pM TSH also exhibited 2-fold enhanced receptor autophosphorylation and kinase activity toward the exogenous substrate poly(Glu,Tyr) (4:1). At variance with TSH, cell incubation with either 8-bromo-cAMP or the protein kinase-C activator 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate inhibited
insulin
and IGF-I receptor kinases. In intact cells, TSH stimulation of
insulin
and IGF-I receptor kinases was accompanied by enhanced turnover of phosphate on autophosphorylated receptors, increased receptor tyrosine phosphorylation, and decreased receptor serine/threonine phosphorylation in response to
insulin
. Incubation of in vivo labeled
insulin
and IGF-I receptors with extracts from TSH-treated cells also decreased receptor phosphoserine and phosphothreonine content. Furthermore, preincubation of
insulin
and IGF-I receptors with extracts from TSH-treated cells enhanced in vitro autophosphorylation. The latter effect was inhibited by the serine/threonine phosphatase inhibitors fluoride and okadaic acid, but not by the tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor vanadate. The data suggest that in FRTL5 cells, TSH induces the activity of a Ser/Thr
protein phosphatase
, which dephosphorylates
insulin
and IGF-I receptors and enhances their endogenous kinases.
...
PMID:Thyrotropin regulates autophosphorylation and kinase activity in both the insulin and the insulin-like growth factor-I receptors in FRTL5 cells. 131 Dec 44
Extracellular signals that promote cell growth activate cascades of protein kinases. The kinases are dephosphorylated and deactivated by a single type-2A
protein phosphatase
. The catalytic subunit of type-2A
protein phosphatase
was phosphorylated by tyrosine-specific protein kinases. Phosphorylation was enhanced in the presence of the phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid, consistent with an autodephosphorylation reaction. More than 90% of the activity of
phosphatase 2A
was lost when thioadenosine triphosphate was used to produce a thiophosphorylated protein resistant to autodephosphorylation. Phosphorylation in vitro occurred exclusively on Tyr307. Phosphorylation was catalyzed by p60v-src, p56lck, epidermal growth factor receptors, and
insulin
receptors. Transient deactivation of
phosphatase 2A
might enhance transmission of cellular signals through kinase cascades within cells.
...
PMID:Regulation of protein serine-threonine phosphatase type-2A by tyrosine phosphorylation. 132 71
The role of protein phosphatases in the regulation of
insulin
release from rat pancreatic islets was studied with
protein phosphatase
inhibitors, okadaic acid and calyculin A. Okadaic acid inhibited glucose- and glyceraldehyde-induced
insulin
release dose-dependently and also inhibited the potentiation of glucose-induced release either by adding forskolin, an activator of adenylate cyclase or by increasing K+ concentration to 25 mM. At a non-stimulatory concentration of 3 mM glucose, a high concentration (2 microM) of okadaic acid inhibited
insulin
release induced by high K+ or 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA), an activator of protein kinase C, but a low concentration (1 microM) of okadaic acid did not significantly inhibit TPA-induced
insulin
release. Calyculin A also inhibited glucose-induced
insulin
release, and the effect was greater than that of okadaic acid. The data suggest that protein phosphatases may play an important role in the regulation of
insulin
release.
...
PMID:Effects of the protein phosphatase inhibitors okadaic acid and calyculin A on insulin release from rat pancreatic islets. 133 May 3
The activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC), a rate-limiting enzyme of fatty acid biosynthesis and malonyl-CoA production, can be regulated by several mechanisms, including multisite covalent phosphorylation, both in vitro and in intact cells. Evidence has been presented by others to indicate that a 5'-AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is likely the major regulatory kinase active on ACC. While
insulin
is known to activate ACC in several cell types, accompanied by changes in ACC phosphorylation, the mechanism underlying this activation has been obscure. In the present study, we have examined, in Fao hepatoma cells, the effects of
insulin
on ACC and AMPK activity, the latter measured with a synthetic peptide corresponding to one of the phosphorylation sites on ACC for AMPK. Our results show that
insulin
leads to inhibition of kinase activity prior to the onset of ACC activation; the peak of maximal kinase inhibition (approximately 35% at 10 min) is seen to precede the onset of ACC activation (20 min). The inhibition of kinase activity due to
insulin
is observed both in the absence and presence of varying stimulating concentrations of added 5'-AMP. Both kinase inhibition and ACC activation display similar
insulin
sensitivity (A50 0.3 nM). Preservation of this
insulin
-induced kinase inhibition requires the presence of
protein phosphatase
inhibitors in the cell lysis buffer, suggesting that AMPK itself might be regulated by
insulin
-stimulated changes in kinase phosphorylation. Taken together, these data are consistent with the hypothesis that the 5'-AMP-activated protein kinase is a regulated component of the
insulin
signal transduction pathway and may be the major target for
insulin
regulation of ACC.
...
PMID:Insulin activation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase accompanied by inhibition of the 5'-AMP-activated protein kinase. 134 11
1. Earlier studies have shown that exposure of fat-cells to
insulin
results in the rapid increased phosphorylation of an acid-soluble 22 kDa protein and that increases in phosphorylation were also evident in cells exposed to adrenaline [Belsham & Denton (1980) Biochem. Soc. Trans. 8, 382-383; Belsham, Brownsey, Hughes & Denton (1980) Diabetologia 18, 307-312]. 2. The effects of adrenaline are shown to be brought about through beta-adrenergic receptors and to be mimicked by other agents which increase cell cyclic AMP concentrations. The maximum extent of phosphorylation is about 60% of that observed with
insulin
. Increased phosphorylation is also observed in fat-cells exposed to vasopressin, oxytocin and phorbol esters, but not to alpha-adrenergic agonists. 3. No changes in the phosphorylation of the protein are evident in epididymal fat-pads from fat-fed, starved or starved/refed animals, despite the large changes in protein composition of fat-cells which accompany these nutritional alterations. This suggests that the protein is not closely involved in lipogenesis or associated metabolic pathways, but rather that it may play a more general regulatory role. 4. The 22 kDa protein migrates as a doublet on SDS/PAGE even after purification to apparent homogeneity by sequential use of Mono Q chromatography, SDS/PAGE and h.p.l.c. The amino acid compositions of the two components are very similar and share features in common with a number of proteins, including inhibitor-1, inhibitor-2, dopamine- and cyclic-AMP-regulated phosphoprotein (DARPP-32), and G-substrate, which may be involved in the regulation of
protein phosphatase
activity. 5. Phosphopeptide mapping and phosphoamino acid analysis reveals that
insulin
increases the phosphorylation of two distinct peptides within the protein (in one peptide
insulin
increases the amount of phosphothreonine, whereas in the other the hormone increases the amounts of phosphothreonine and phosphoserine). Both components of the doublet exhibit similar changes in phosphorylation, and hence the differences in migration are not the result of differences in phosphorylation, as suggested previously [Blackshear, Nemenoff & Avruch (1983) Biochem. J. 214, 11-19]. The pattern of phosphorylation observed with the beta-adrenergic agonist isoprenaline was similar to that observed with
insulin
. 6. The possible role and regulation of the 22 kDa protein are discussed.
...
PMID:Comparison of the effects of insulin and adrenergic agonists on the phosphorylation of an acid-soluble 22 kDa protein in rat epididymal fat-pads and isolated fat-cells. 134 72
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