Literature DB >> 10909978

The IR1152 mutant insulin receptor selectively impairs insulin action in skeletal muscle but not in liver.

M Caruso1, C Miele, A Oliva, G Condorelli, F Oriente, G Riccardi, B Capaldo, F Fiory, D Accili, P Formisano, F Beguinot.   

Abstract

In patients harboring the IR1152 mutant insulin receptor, hepatic glucose production was normally suppressed by insulin. Hepatocytes without the insulin receptor gene and expressing IR1152 (Hep(MUT)) also showed normal insulin suppression of glucose production and full insulin response of glycogen synthase. In contrast, expression of the IR1152 mutant in skeletal muscle maximally increased glucose uptake and storage, preventing further insulin stimulation. IRS-1 phosphorylation was normally stimulated by insulin in both intact Hep(MUT) and L6 skeletal muscle cells expressing the IR1152 mutant (L6(MUT)). At variance, IRS-2 phosphorylation exhibited high basal levels with no further insulin-dependent increase in L6(MUT) but almost normal phosphorylation, both basal and insulin-stimulated, in the Hep(MUT) cells. In vitro, IR1152 mutant preparations from both the L6(MUT) and the Hep(MUT) cells exhibited increased basal and no insulin-stimulated phosphorylation of IRS-2 immobilized from either muscle or liver cells. IR1152 internalization in liver and muscle cells closely paralleled the ability of this mutant to phosphorylate IRS-2 in vivo in these cells. Block of receptor internalization (wild-type and mutant) in the liver and muscle cells also inhibited IRS-2, but not IRS-1, phosphorylation. Thus, the mechanisms controlling insulin receptor internalization differ in liver and skeletal muscle cells and may enable IR1152 to control glucose metabolism selectively in liver. In both cell types, receptor internalization seems necessary for IRS-2 but not IRS-1 phosphorylation.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10909978     DOI: 10.2337/diabetes.49.7.1194

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Diabetes        ISSN: 0012-1797            Impact factor:   9.461


  2 in total

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Authors:  Aashish Sethi; Nicola Foulds; Sarah Ehtisham; Syed Haris Ahmed; Jayne Houghton; Kevin Colclough; Mohammed Didi; Sarah E. Flanagan; Senthil Senniappan
Journal:  J Clin Res Pediatr Endocrinol       Date:  2020-01-28

2.  Overexpression of the ped/pea-15 gene causes diabetes by impairing glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in addition to insulin action.

Authors:  Giovanni Vigliotta; Claudia Miele; Stefania Santopietro; Giuseppe Portella; Anna Perfetti; Maria Alessandra Maitan; Angela Cassese; Francesco Oriente; Alessandra Trencia; Francesca Fiory; Chiara Romano; Cecilia Tiveron; Laura Tatangelo; Giancarlo Troncone; Pietro Formisano; Francesco Beguinot
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2004-06       Impact factor: 4.272

  2 in total

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