Saad M J, Araki E, Miralpeix M, Rothenberg P L, White M F, Kahn C R
Joslin Diabetes Center, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Clin Invest. 1992 Nov;90(5):1839-49. doi: 10.1172/JCI116060.
Insulin rapidly stimulates tyrosine phosphorylation of a protein of approximately 185 kD in most cell types. This protein, termed insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1), has been implicated in insulin signal transmission based on studies with insulin receptor mutants. In the present study we have examined the levels of IRS-1 and the phosphorylation state of insulin receptor and IRS-1 in liver and muscle after insulin stimulation in vivo in two rat models of insulin resistance, i.e., insulinopenic diabetes and fasting, and a mouse model of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (ob/ob) by immunoblotting with anti-peptide antibodies to IRS-1 and anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies. As previously described, there was an increase in insulin binding and a parallel increase in insulin-stimulated receptor phosphorylation in muscle of fasting and streptozotocin-induced (STZ) diabetic rats. There was also a modest increase in overall receptor phosphorylation in liver in these two models, but when normalized for the increase in binding, receptor phosphorylation was decreased, in liver and muscle of STZ diabetes and in liver of 72 h fasted rats. In the hyperinsulinemic ob/ob mouse there was a decrease in insulin binding and receptor phosphorylation in both liver and muscle. The tyrosyl phosphorylation of IRS-1 after insulin stimulation reflected an amplification of the receptor phosphorylation in liver and muscle of hypoinsulinemic animals (fasting and STZ diabetes) with a twofold increase, and showed a significant reduction (approximately 50%) in liver and muscle of ob/ob mouse. By contrast, the levels of IRS-1 protein showed a tissue specific regulation with a decreased level in muscle and an increased level in liver in hypoinsulinemic states of insulin resistance, and decreased levels in liver in the hyperinsulinemic ob/ob mouse. These data indicate that: (a) IRS-1 protein levels are differentially regulated in liver and muscle; (b) insulin levels may play a role in this differential regulation of IRS-1; (c) IRS-1 phosphorylation depends more on insulin receptor kinase activity than IRS-1 protein levels; and (d) reduced IRS-1 phosphorylation in liver and muscle may play a role in insulin-resistant states, especially of the ob/ob mice.
在大多数细胞类型中,胰岛素能迅速刺激一种约185 kD蛋白质的酪氨酸磷酸化。这种蛋白质被称为胰岛素受体底物-1(IRS-1),基于对胰岛素受体突变体的研究,它被认为与胰岛素信号传导有关。在本研究中,我们通过用针对IRS-1的抗肽抗体和抗磷酸酪氨酸抗体进行免疫印迹,检测了两种胰岛素抵抗大鼠模型(即胰岛素缺乏性糖尿病和禁食)以及一种非胰岛素依赖型糖尿病小鼠模型(ob/ob)在体内胰岛素刺激后肝脏和肌肉中IRS-1的水平以及胰岛素受体和IRS-1的磷酸化状态。如先前所述,禁食和链脲佐菌素诱导(STZ)糖尿病大鼠的肌肉中胰岛素结合增加,胰岛素刺激的受体磷酸化也平行增加。在这两种模型的肝脏中,总体受体磷酸化也有适度增加,但在STZ糖尿病的肝脏和肌肉以及禁食72小时大鼠的肝脏中,当以结合增加进行标准化时,受体磷酸化降低。在高胰岛素血症的ob/ob小鼠中,肝脏和肌肉中的胰岛素结合和受体磷酸化均降低。胰岛素刺激后IRS-1的酪氨酸磷酸化反映了低胰岛素血症动物(禁食和STZ糖尿病)肝脏和肌肉中受体磷酸化的放大,增加了两倍,而在ob/ob小鼠的肝脏和肌肉中则显著降低(约50%)。相比之下,IRS-1蛋白水平表现出组织特异性调节,在胰岛素抵抗的低胰岛素血症状态下,肌肉中的水平降低,肝脏中的水平升高,而在高胰岛素血症的ob/ob小鼠肝脏中水平降低。这些数据表明:(a)IRS-1蛋白水平在肝脏和肌肉中受到不同调节;(b)胰岛素水平可能在IRS-1的这种差异调节中起作用;(c)IRS-1磷酸化更多地取决于胰岛素受体激酶活性而非IRS-1蛋白水平;(d)肝脏和肌肉中IRS-1磷酸化的降低可能在胰岛素抵抗状态中起作用,尤其是在ob/ob小鼠中。