Literature DB >> 3046965

Rapid reduction and return of surface insulin receptors after exposure to brief pulses of insulin in perifused rat hepatocytes.

C J Goodner1, I R Sweet, H C Harrison.   

Abstract

Hepatic receptors are normally exposed to discrete pulses of insulin and glucagon at intervals of 8 to 16 min. Using a multicolumn system for perifusing hepatocytes, we investigated the effect of this pattern on the normal processing of the insulin receptor. Surface-receptor binding was measured in acid-washed cells harvested from individual columns. The number of high-affinity surface receptors fell to a nadir 1 min after the end of a 3-min square-wave pulse of insulin. The maximum reduction reached 45% of baseline at amplitudes of 1000 microU/ml or above. The number of surface binding sites returned to baseline 15 min after the end of the pulse, but the affinity constant of the high-affinity receptor was unchanged. The reduction of surface binding was dose dependent, with an ED50 of 251 +/- 34 microU/ml. Prolonging the pulse to 60 min did not affect the nadir or the rate of restoration of the surface-receptor population. The change in surface binding was reduced at 15 degrees C and abolished at 4 degrees C. After a pulse, the pattern of change was a period of rapid decline to a nadir (t1/2 less than or equal to 1 min) that persisted for 3-5 min, followed by restoration of surface binding that reached baseline in 10-15 min. This same pattern was present after six ED95 pulses delivered at intervals of 15 min. These data indicate that the internalization of hepatocyte surface receptors and their recycling and reinsertion into the plasma membrane can be entrained to pulses at the physiologic pulse frequency.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 3046965     DOI: 10.2337/diab.37.10.1316

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


  18 in total

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3.  Low- and high-frequency insulin secretion pulses in normal subjects and pancreas transplant recipients: role of extrinsic innervation.

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7.  Pulsatile insulin release from pancreatic islets with nonoscillatory elevation of cytoplasmic Ca2+.

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8.  Spatial and temporal coordination of insulin granule exocytosis in intact human pancreatic islets.

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9.  Glucose induces oscillatory Ca2+ signalling and insulin release in human pancreatic beta cells.

Authors:  B Hellman; E Gylfe; P Bergsten; E Grapengiesser; P E Lund; A Berts; A Tengholm; D G Pipeleers; Z Ling
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10.  Pathophysiology of hyperinsulinemia following pancreas transplantation: altered pulsatile versus Basal insulin secretion and the role of specific transplant anatomy in dogs.

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