Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.24.56 (insulin-degrading enzyme)
737 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The mechanisms by which growth factors are degraded and the role this process plays in the regulation of cell growth are not well understood. Insulin degradation is believed to be mediated by a specific metalloprotease, insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE). We have previously shown that IDE can also degrade transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF alpha), but not epidermal growth factor (EGF), in vitro. This selectivity was surprising, since TGF alpha and EGF are structurally similar and bind to the same receptor with comparable affinities. Using a spectrum of protease inhibitors, we have now analyzed the degradation of TGF alpha, EGF, and insulin by human hepatoma HepG2 cells. The results suggest that bacitracin-sensitive metalloproteases are involved in the degradation of TGF alpha and EGF as well as insulin, and that the degradation of TGF alpha, but not EGF, is mediated in part by IDE. Inhibiting the activity of these metalloproteases decreased growth factor depletion, suggesting that these enzymes play an important role in the control of extracellular growth factor levels. The existence of separate degradative pathways for EGF and TGF alpha may explain how the two factors exert differential effects in some systems, and degradation of TGF alpha by IDE would provide a possible mechanism for interaction between the insulin and TGF alpha/EGF signalling systems.
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PMID:Regulation of insulin, epidermal growth factor, and transforming growth factor-alpha levels by growth factor-degrading enzymes. 184 63

Haemoglobin damaged by exposure of red blood cells to oxidants is rapidly degraded by a proteolytic pathway which does not require ATP [Fagan, Waxman & Goldberg (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 5705-5713]. By fractionating erythrocyte lysates, we have purified two proteases which hydrolyse oxidatively damaged haemoglobin (Ox-Hb). One protease hydrolysed small fluorogenic substrates in addition to Ox-Hb. Its molecular mass was approximately 700 kDa and it consisted of several subunits ranging in size from 22 to 30 kDa. This enzyme may be related to the high-molecular-mass multicatalytic proteinase previously isolated from a variety of tissue and cell types. The other Ox-Hb-degrading activity had an apparent molecular mass of 400 kDa on gel filtration, a subunit size of 110 kDa and an isoelectric point between 4.5 and 5.0. This protease also hydrolysed the small polypeptides insulin and glucagon, as well as other large proteins such as lysozyme. Insulin blocked the degradation of Ox-Hb and Ox-Hb blocked the hydrolysis of insulin by the purified protease. Thiol reagents and metal chelators strongly inhibited the hydrolysis of both Ox-Hb and insulin, whereas inhibitors of serine, aspartic and thiol proteases had little effect. These properties suggest that the Ox-Hb-degrading activity purified from rabbit erythrocytes is the cytosolic insulin-degrading enzyme that is believed to play a role in the metabolism of insulin in several tissues. We propose that this enzyme may also function as a key component in a cytoplasmic degradative pathway responsible for removing proteins damaged by oxidants.
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PMID:Purification of a protease in red blood cells that degrades oxidatively damaged haemoglobin. 187 13

The nature of insulin degradation within endosomes was studied in vitro. Radiolabeled insulin was perfused into rat liver via the portal vein, and insulin-containing endosomes were prepared by differential centrifugation. The endosomes were incubated in various buffers, and hormone degradation was monitored by Sephadex G-50 chromatography and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Endosomes incubated in simple imidazole or HEPES (pH 7.4) buffers rapidly degraded insulin to intermediate- and then to low-molecular-weight products that were lost from the vesicles. HPLC analysis of insulin-sized material showed the products to be the same as those produced by intact cells. The endosomes did not acidify in these buffers (as assessed by the acridine orange method), and ATP had no effects. When the endosomes were incubated in a chloride-containing buffer, degradation was greatly inhibited, and acidification did not occur. Both insulin degradation and acidification were activated when Mg-ATP was added to this buffer system. HPLC analysis of the products generated in this system revealed not only typical cellular products but additional less hydrophobic products. Western-blot analysis of endosomal protein with anti-insulin-degrading enzyme antibody showed this enzyme to be present. In conclusion, isolated endosomes rapidly and completely degrade insulin through products that are typical of cellular degradation without requiring acidification. Chloride-containing buffers inhibit endosomal degradation, which is reversed by Mg-ATP, but this system does not mimic cellular degradation. At least one of the enzymes responsible for insulin degradation is insulin-degrading enzyme.
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PMID:Degradation of intraendosomal insulin by insulin-degrading enzyme without acidification. 201 43

We have previously identified and characterized a metalloproteinase from Drosophila that cleaves insulin and transforming growth factor-alpha, but not epidermal growth factor, at physiological concentrations. On the basis of enzymatic properties and substrate specificity, this enzyme was identified as the Drosophila homolog of the mammalian insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE). We now report the cloning and sequencing of the cDNA coding for the Drosophila IDE (dIDE). Northern blot analysis indicates that the dIDE is translated from a 3.6-kilobase transcript similar in size to one of the two human IDE transcripts. The gene for the dIDE has been mapped to chromosome 3L (77B). The sequence of the dIDE is very similar to that of the human IDE, and both enzymes share limited but significant identity with the bacterial metalloproteinase protease III. Indirect studies based upon inhibitors, degradation products, and microinjected antibodies have suggested that the IDE can initiate cellular insulin degradation in mammalian cells. To determine whether dIDE expressed in mammalian cells can also degrade insulin, we transfected the cDNA into murine NIH3T3 cells. Extracts of the transfected cells showed increased insulin-degrading activity, demonstrating that the dIDE can be functionally expressed in mammalian cells. These results indicate that the properties of the IDE are evolutionarily conserved.
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PMID:Cloning and expression of the cDNA for a Drosophila insulin-degrading enzyme. 212 97

Upon reduction of serum in their media, mouse BC3H1 muscle cells withdraw from the cell cycle and begin to differentiate. In differentiating cells, the induction of muscle-specific genes is accompanied by a distinct morphological chance. However, differentiated BC3H1 cells do not fuse with each other; they remain mononucleated. Metalloendoprotease inhibitors selectively block the differentiation of BC3H1 cells while inhibitors of other protease types are ineffective. In these cells, the degradation of the internalized insulin is initiated by a 110 kDa, non-lysosomal protease known as the insulin-degrading enzyme. The same metalloendoprotease inhibitors that block BC3H1 differentiation also inhibit, with a similar specificity and potency, the in vitro and the in vivo degradation of insulin by the insulin-degrading enzyme. When the serum in the medium is reduced, the activity of the insulin-degrading enzyme in the cell cytoplasm increases rapidly. This increase precedes any detectable change in the differentiation state of these cells by about 12 hours. These results, together with very similar ones obtained with primary rat skeletal muscle cells, support our earlier proposal that the insulin-degrading enzyme is the metalloendoprotease involved in the initiation of the morphological and biochemical differentiation of muscle cells in culture.
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PMID:Differentiation of BC3H1 and primary skeletal muscle cells and the activity of their endogenous insulin-degrading enzyme are inhibited by the same metalloendoprotease inhibitors. 226 83

We have recently described the isolation of a cDNA encoding an enzyme thought to be involved in the degradation of insulin by insulin-responsive tissues. This enzyme, referred to as insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE), is a cytosolic proteinase of 110,000 mol wt which shares structural and functional homology with bacterial protease III. The enzyme may function in the termination of the insulin response. We report here the mapping of the human and mouse IDE genes to human chromosome 10 and mouse chromosome 19, respectively, and evidence for the existence of a single complex IDE gene. We also describe the stable transfection of Chinese hamster ovary cells with a plasmid containing the IDE cDNA under the transcriptional control of the SR alpha promoter. The recombinant protein synthesized by these cells is indistinguishable from the isolated human enzyme in both its size and immunoreactivity and degrades insulin with a specific activity similar to that of the purified proteinase. Overexpression of IDE using this system should allow for a functional test of the role of IDE in insulin action. In addition, expression of various site-directed mutants of IDE will aid in identifying the residues of IDE and protease III that are essential to the activity of this unique family of proteinases.
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PMID:Insulin-degrading enzyme: stable expression of the human complementary DNA, characterization of its protein product, and chromosomal mapping of the human and mouse genes. 229 21

Auditory capabilities of Nucleus 22 multichannel cochlear implant users were compared to those of matched 3M/House single-channel users. Six children who received either the 3M/House or Nucleus 22 cochlear implants were separated into three matched pairs. Group 1 consisted of two postlinguistically deafened adolescents, group 2 consisted of two prelinguistically deafened school-age children, and group 3 consisted of two perilinguistically deafened preschoolers. Participants were evaluated using auditory comprehension and discrimination tasks as indicated by the 3M/House and Nucleus 22 protocols. However, only tasks common to both were included here. While the 3M/House single-channel device has been under an IDE for children under the age of 18 years since 1984, the Nucleus 22 multichannel implant only recently became available for this age group. Thus, short-term evaluations at 6 months and 1 year postimplantation have been used for comparison. Two of the three groups indicated that the multichannel users performed as early as the 6-month level; the children in the third group performed equally. These results indicate that multichannel cochlear implants show great promise in deaf children.
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PMID:A matched-pairs comparison of single and multichannel cochlear implants in children. 229 98

The subcellular site where insulin is degraded by rat hepatocytes in vivo is controversial. While several potential insulin-degrading enzyme systems, each with its own characteristic cellular location, are known to exist in the liver, questions remain about which of them participates in the degradation of physiologic doses of insulin. These studies examine the proteases that degrade physiologic doses of [125I]-insulin in vivo to determine (1) when and where initial degradation occurs, and (2) which of the potential degradative enzymes is active. Following injection into the mesenteric veins of male rats, intact [125I]-insulin and its labeled degradation products were analysed by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) of biopsy homogenates. [125I]-insulin was rapidly degraded in vivo; the t 1/2 of degradation was approximately 2.7 minutes. To test for extracellular protease activity, an isolated perfused liver system was employed. [125I]-insulin (or [125I]-glucagon) uptake was controlled by changing the temperature of the perfusion medium. Five minutes after [125I]-insulin injection, surface-bound label was recovered in an acidic (pH 3.5) wash. In perfusion at 15 degrees C, both the internalization and degradation of [125I]-insulin were inhibited; 7.2% of unbound hormone was degraded and 5.1% of surface-bound insulin was degraded. Only 11.4% of unbound insulin and 17.4% of surface-bound insulin were degraded at 35 degrees C. In contrast, 95.5% of unbound glucagon and 89.9% of surface-bound glucagon were degraded at 35 degrees C. Thus, although glucagon degradation occurs at the sinusoidal plasmalemma of perfused livers, the same membrane does not mediate the rapid degradation of insulin observed in vivo. Analysis of the RP-HPLC [125I]-insulin elution profiles from liver biopsy homogenates, and comparison of them to profiles produced by purified proteases, suggested that insulin protease is responsible for most hepatic degradation of physiologic doses of insulin. Some cathepsin D-like activity was also observed in vivo, confirming that two pathways exist for insulin metabolism. The time course over which insulin was degraded was more rapid than previous studies in vitro would have predicted. This suggests that more insulin was receptor-bound at the time of its initial degradation, and that the active protease was soluble and was introduced into endocytic peripheral endosomes within seconds after their formation.
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PMID:[125I]-insulin metabolism by the rat liver in vivo: evidence that a neutral thiol-protease mediates rapid intracellular insulin degradation. 240 25

Four monoclonal antibodies were identified by their ability to bind to 125I-labeled insulin covalently linked to a cytosolic insulin-degrading enzyme from human erythrocytes. All four antibodies were also found to remove more than 90% of the insulin-degrading activity from erythrocyte extracts. These antibodies were shown to be directed to different sites on the enzyme by mapping studies and by their various properties. Two antibodies recognized the insulin-degrading enzyme from rat liver; one inhibited the erythrocyte enzyme directly; and two recognized the enzyme after gel electrophoresis and transfer to nitrocellulose filters. By this latter procedure and immunoprecipitation from metabolically labeled cells, the enzyme from a variety of tissues was shown to be composed of a single polypeptide chain of apparent Mr 110,000. Finally, these monoclonal antibodies were microinjected into the cytoplasm of a human hepatoma cell line to assess the contribution of this enzyme to insulin degradation in the intact cell. In five separate experiments, preloading of cells with these monoclonal antibodies resulted in an inhibition of insulin degradation of 18-54% (average 39%) and increased the amount of 125I-labeled insulin associated with the cells. In contrast, microinjection of control antibody or an extraneous monoclonal antibody had no effect on insulin degradation or on the amount of insulin associated with the cells. Moreover, the monoclonal antibodies to the insulin-degrading enzyme caused no significant inhibition of degradation of another molecule, low density lipoprotein. Thus, these results support a role for this enzyme in insulin degradation in the intact cell.
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PMID:Inhibition of insulin degradation by hepatoma cells after microinjection of monoclonal antibodies to a specific cytosolic protease. 242 18

Five monoclonal antibodies specific for glutathione-insulin transhydrogenase were characterized. None of the monoclonal antibodies cross-reacted with another insulin-degrading enzyme, neutral thiopeptidase. The isotype of four antibodies was IgG1 and of the fifth IgG2b. Affinity studies, competitive binding studies and immunoblot analysis of CNBr and trypsin cleavage products of glutathione-insulin transhydrogenase demonstrated that the four IgG1 antibodies were directed to an epitope of the enzyme which was distinct from the epitope recognized by the IgG2b antibody. Inhibition studies indicated that each monoclonal antibody, when added singly to glutathione-insulin transhydrogenase, was unable to inhibit the insulin-degrading activity of the enzyme. However, when monoclonal antibodies directed against separate epitopes of glutathione-insulin transhydrogenase were presented together (i.e., the IgG2b with any one of the four IgG1 antibodies), a loss in enzymatic activity was noted. Immunoblot analysis of rat organ extracts with the IgG1 antibodies demonstrated one immunoreactive protein band of Mr 56,000 in all tissues examined (liver, fat, pancreas and kidney) except the spleen, which demonstrated two immunoreactive protein bands of Mr 56,000 and 51,000. The same immunoblots, when probed with the IgG2b antibody, demonstrated the same immunoreactive protein banding pattern as above plus an additional immunoreactive protein band of Mr 67,000 in all tissues. Studies with spleen extracts from steptozotocin-induced diabetic rats demonstrated that there was a loss of the 51,000 immunoreactive band in diabetes. This 51,000 protein was restored upon insulin treatment of the diabetic rats and nullified upon concomitant administration of cycloheximide or actinomycin D with insulin. Immunoblots of human liver, adipose and skeletal muscle extracts indicated that each monoclonal antibody cross-reacted with the human form of the enzyme which had a molecular weight of Mr 63,000; a second minor immunoreactive band of 67,000 was detected with the IgG2b antibody. The physiological significance of additional molecular forms of the enzyme (i.e., 67,000 and 51,000) remains to be determined.
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PMID:Characterization and application of monoclonal antibodies directed to separate epitopes of glutathione-insulin transhydrogenase. 243 25


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