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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
630,302 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Extracts of fasted rat diaphragms, previously treated with or without insulin were assayed for glycogen synthase, protein kinase and cyclic [3H]-AMP binding. Treatment with insulin produced an elevation in the % of glycogen synthase I and a concurrent decrease in cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase activity and cyclic [3H]-AMP binding. Analysis of extracts by disc gel electrophoresis demonstrated the inhibition of cyclic [3H]-AMP binding to involve the Type I protein kinase holoenzyme. Inhibition of protein kinase activity was most apparent in the presence of 0.2 micrometer cyclic AMP, with enzymatic activity of the insulin-treated extracts typically 60--65% of control. Higher assay concentrations diminished the difference between control and insulin-treated extracts and concentrations greater than 20 micrometer abolished it. The inhibition of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase activity after insulin was a transient and labile phenomenon. The effect was independent of ATP concentration in the assay, but was sensitive to the pH of tissue extraction, requiring a pH of 7.0 to 8.4 to be observed. Insulin-mediated inhibition of protein kinase activity was reversed upon preincubation of extracts at 0--2 degrees. Relatively concentrated homogenates (less than 4 microliter buffer/mg tissue) yielded extracts which exhibited little or no inhibition of protein kinase activity compared to extracts prepared from more dilute (6--10 microliter/mg) homogenates. A model for the inhibition of the cyclic-AMP dependent protein kinase by an insulin-generated inhibitor which becomes directly associated with the Type 1 holoenzyme is proposed.
Mol Cell Biochem 1978 Feb 24
PMID:Reversible inhibition of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase by insulin. 2 80

Thyroid hormones regulate lipid metabolism by affecting lipogenesis as well as lipolysis. The present paper discusses the way thyroidectomy induced an enhancement in lipogenesis in rat fat cells. The doubling in the conversion of glucose to CO2 and fatty acids seen after thyroidectomy was found to be due to a modification in the actual pathway of glucose metabolism: there was a preferential stimulation of the conversion of glucose to CO2 by the pentose cycle (utilisation of [1-14C]glucose) while the production of fatty acids and glyceride-glycerol proceeded, respectively, much more, or only slightly more, via the pathway of [6-14C]glucose metabolism. Studies employing the phosphodiesterase inhibitor MIX, or the cyclic AMP analogue, DBcAMP showed that the lipogenic process depends on cyclic AMP. As the stimulatory effect of thyroidectomy was not abolished, however, lipogenesis must be under the independent control of both cyclic AMP and absence of thyroid hormones. Insulin, a further mediator of lipogenesis was found to further enhance the already preexisting high conversion of glucose to CO2 in fat cells from thyroidectomized rats. It is concluded that at least three factors modify lipogenesis: thyroidectomy, cyclic AMP and insulin; each achieving its effect in an independent manner.
Mol Cell Endocrinol 1979 Jun
PMID:Cyclic AMP and lipogenesis in fat cells from thyroidectomized rats. 8 52

1. Kidney weight and content of protein, RNA and DNA were measured in rats with streptozotocin diabetes of varying duration. 2. Diabetic rats had larger kidneys than control rats: after 3 days of diabetes the weight increase was 15 per cent and after 42 days of diabetes it was 90 per cent. The protein content rose in parallel to the weight. 3 RNA content was already increased after 36 h of glycosuria, whereas DNA content was unchanged for the first 3 days of diabetes, and increased thereafter. The protein/DNA ratio increased rapidly during the first 3 days but remained constant thereafter. 4. Insulin treatment decreased the renal weight gain by about 67 per cent during the first 8 days of diabetes, but did not prevent the increase in DNA. When insulin was started after 25 days of diabetes there was only a slight regression of kidney growth.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1976 Dec
PMID:Renal hypertrophy in streptozotocin-diabetic rats. 13 97

Thr relevance of the crystal structure of the polypeptide hormones, insulin, glucagon and human placental lactogen to conformation and flexibility in solution and to receptor binding is considered. X-ray studies for crystal forms of glucagon, human placental lactogen and three insulin derivatives (A1 acetyl insulin, A1-t-butoxy carbonyl insulin and A1 2,2-dimethyl-3-formyl-L-thiazolidine-4-carbonyl insulin) are reported. Neither glucagon nor human placental lactogen are as ordered as insulin in the crystal form. Glucagon crystals undergo distinct transformations on changing the pH of the mother liquor from pH 9.5 to pH 6, indicating that the glucagon molecule is flexible in the crystal, as it is in solution. On the other hand all insulin analogues have a similar three dimensional structure to that of native insulin. Three dimensional difference Fourier studies of two insulin derivatives at 3 A resolution indicate the position of the modifying groups and define the small conformational changes which have occurred. The in vitro biological activity and receptor binding decrease with the increasing size of the group added to A1. The correlation of the structure analysis with the biological data strongly implicate a region close to A1 in receptor binding. Insulin appears to bind to the receptor in a specific conformation similar to that observed in the crystal structure and in solution; amino acid residues which are separated in the primary structure but brought into close juxtaposition in the tertiary structure are important for full potency.
Mol Cell Biochem 1975 Jul 31
PMID:The relation of polypeptide hormone structure and flexibility to receptor binding: the relevance of X-ray studies on insulins, glucagon and human placental lactogen. 17 May 5

Eight proteins of diverse lengths, functions, and origin, are examined for compositional non-randomness amino acid by amino acid. The proteins investigated are human fibrinopeptide A, guinea pig Insulin, rattlesnake cytochrome c, MS2 phage coat protein, rabbit triosephosphate isomerase, bovine pancreatic deoxyribonuclease A, bovine glutamate dehydrogenase, and Bacillus thermoproteolyticus thermolysin. As a result of this study the experimentally testable hypothesis is put forth that for a large class of proteins the ratio of that fraction of the molecule which exhibits compositional non-randomness to that fraction which does not is on the average, stable about a mean value (estimated as 0.32 plus or minus 0.17) and (nearly) independent of protein length. Stochastic and selective evolutionary forces are viewed as interacting rather than independent phenomena. With respect to amino acid composition, this coupling ameliorates the current controversy over Darwinian vs. non-Darwinian evolution, selectionist vs. neutralist, in favor of neither: Within the context of the quantitative data, the evolution of real proteins is seen as a compromise between the two viewpoints, both important. The compositional fluctuations of the electrically charged amino acids glutamic and aspartic acid, lysine and arginine, are examined in depth for over eighty protein families, both prokaryotic and eukaryotic. For both taxa, each of the acidic amino acids is present in amounts roughly twice that predicted from the genetic code. The presence of an excess of glutamic acid is independent of the presence of an excess of aspartic acid and vice versa.
J Mol Evol 1975 Mar 24
PMID:Deviations from compositional randomness in eukaryotic and prokaryotic proteins: the hypothesis of selective-stochastic stability and a principle of charge conservation. 17 58

The in vitro effects of insulin on different phosphodiesterase activities present in rat epididymal fat cells from normal and hypothyroid rats have been studied. Evidence is presented that insulin increases the maximum velocity of a particulate, low Km, cyclic adenosine-3', 5'-monophosphate (cyclic AMP) phosphodiesterase in both types of cells, this effect being more clearly evident with the fat cells from hypothyroid animals; combination of insulin and thyroidectomy resulted in a 400% stimulation with 10-10 - 10-9 M insulin. A clear and significant effect was apparent at 10-11 M insulin. However, the dose-response curve was biphasic, since stimulation by insulin was suppressed for doses of hormone higher 10-8 - 10-7 M. Moreover, insulin effects were very fast, since clear stimulation was observed after only 2 min of incubation; the maximal increase was obtained after 10 min. Insulin did not significantly affect the soluble cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity in normal cells, thus confirming results obtained by others. However, the soluble cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity was clearly stimulated by insulin when the fat cells were prepared from hypothyroid rats. Maximal stimulation was obtained with 10-9 M insulin; the response was again very fast. Soluble cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase activity was also increased additively by hypothyroidism and insulin, maximal stimulation being obtained with 10-9 M insulin. With this dose of insulin the additive effects of thyroidectomy and insulin produced a 5-fold stimulation. The effect of insulin on the soluble cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase was very fast (2-5 min). With both soluble cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase activities, insulin increased the maximal velocity but not apparent Km of the enzyme. Thus, hypothyroidism and insulin produced additive effects suggesting a different mechanism of action of these two hormonal situations on the degradation of the intracellular pools of cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP.
Mol Cell Endocrinol
PMID:Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases, insulin and thyroid hormones. 18 75

Control of the levels of cAMP in the early phase after addition of catecholamines and the effect of insulin is discussed under consideration of own findings from experiments with isolated fat cells of the rat. Data on the kinetics of cAMP are interpreted in the light of results from several groups of a rapid activation of phosphodiesterase activity along with the adenylate cyclase system. Comparison of energy metabolism of fat cells with the formation of cAMP under conditions of near-maximal activation of the adenylate cyclase system by isoproterenol shows that about half of the cellular ATP turnover is used for information transfer. Insulin reduces cAMP concentrations in the presence of isoproterenol within one min of incubation when added either together with or after the catecholamine. Experiments with propranolol and the phosphodiesterase inhibitor, methyl isobutylxanthine suggest an effect of insulin on formation and breakdown of cAMP.
Mol Cell Endocrinol
PMID:Hormonal control of cyclic AMP turnover in isolated fat cells. 18 81

Several characteristics of the binding of insulin and glucagon to human circulating mononuclear leukocytes have been studied. Functional analysis (latex bead ingestion) revealed that cell mixtures, as prepared according to Boyum and used generally in studies of insulin resistance in humans, consist of 20-29% phagocytic monocytes, with the remainder being lymphocytes. Partial separation of monocytes from lymphocytes on columns of Sephadex G-10, followed by correlation of insulin binding with cell type, confirms that the monocyte is the binding species. Insulin influenced neither glucose uptake nor the further conversion of glucose to lipids and CO2 by the leukocytes. The transport of alpha-aminoisobutyrate, a nonmetabolizable amino acid, into these cells was also unaffected by insulin. Monocyte/lymphocyte mixtures specifically bound glucagon and prostaglandin E1. At physiological concentrations of these hormones, steady states were reached in 15 min and 45 min, respectively. In contrast to the 8-10-fold increases in cellular cyclic AMP produced by prostaglandins, the effect of glucagon was very small but apparently real. Under appropriate preincubation conditions, sodium azide and iodoacetamide inhibited phagocytosis and insulin binding in parallel. The binding of glucagon was unaffected by these agents. Although both antimycin A and actinomycin D inhibited phagocytosis of the monocytes, only the former inhibited insulin binding; there was only a slight effect on glucagon binding. We would conclude that the binding of insulin to human circulating monocytes, although reflective of insulin resistance in diabetes mellitus and obesity, may not be to traditional receptors. In contrast, the binding of glucagon to lymphocyte/monocyte mixtures may be to function-linked receptors.
Mol Cell Endocrinol 1977 Oct
PMID:Hormone receptors: VI. On the nature of the binding of glucagon and insulin to human circulating mononuclear leukocytes. 20 May 11

Insulin binding was demonstrated in cultured HT 29 cells originating from a human colon carcinoma. At 37 degrees and in complete medium, the binding of [125I]insulin (1-4x10-10M) reaches a maximum in 40 min and the cell associated radioactivity remains constant for at least 4 h. No degradation of the hormone is observed under these conditions. The binding is proportional to the number of cells and its pH optimum is 7.8. In the presence of excess insulin 50% of the [125I]insulin is dissociated from the complex after 10 min. At equilibrium, insulin binding is specific: proinsulin is 25 times less potent than native insulin in competing with [125I]insulin and related polypeptide hormones are inactive. Scatchard analysis indicates two classes of binding sites (1400 sites/cell of "high affinity" e.g. 4.7 x 108 M-1, and 20 000 sites of "low affinity" e.g. 4 x 107 M-1). The binding of insulin to this non-target cell shows the same kinetic characteristics and specificity as found for insulin in its target cells, except that HT 29 cells do not degrade the hormone. The problem of the correlation between insulin binding and a biological effect in these cells remains to be elucidated.
Mol Cell Endocrinol 1979 May
PMID:Insulin binding by a cell line (HT 29) derived from human colonic cancer. 46 79

1. Young Wistar rats were used as an experimental model to determine the effects of protein-energy malnutrition on glucose tolerance and insulin release. 2. Malnourished rats presented some of the features commonly found in human protein-energy malnutrition, such as failure to gain weight, hypoalbuminaemia, fatty infiltration of the liver and intolerance of oral and intravenous glucose loads. 3. The rate of disappearance of glucose from the gut lumen was greater in the malnourished rats but there was no significant difference in portal blood glucose concentration between normal and malnourished rats 5 and 10 min after an oral glucose load. 4. Insulin resistance was not thought to be the cause of the glucose intolerance in the malnourished animals since these rats had a low fasting plasma insulin concentration with a normal fasting blood glucose concentration and no impairment in their hypoglycaemic response to exogenous insulin administration. Furthermore, fasting malnourished rats were unable to correct the insulin-induced hypoglycaemia despite high concentrations of hepatic glycogen. 5. Malnourished rats had lower peak plasma insulin concentrations than normal control animals after provocation with oral and intravenous glucose, intravenous tolbutamide and intravenous glucose plus aminophyllin. This was not due to a reduction in the insulin content of the pancreas or potassium deficiency. Healthy weanling rats, like the older malnourished rats, had a diminished insulin response to intravenous glucose and intravenous tolbutamide. However, their insulin response to stimulation with intravenous glucose plus aminophyllin far exceeded that of the malnourished rats. Thus the impairment of insulin release demonstrated in the malnourished rats cannot be ascribed to a 'functional immaturity' of the pancreas.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1976 Mar
PMID:Glucose tolerance and insulin release in malnourished rats. 81 69


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