Maeda R, Raz I, Zurlo F, Sommercorn J
Clinical Diabetes and Nutrition Section, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Phoenix, Arizona 85016.
J Clin Invest. 1991 Mar;87(3):1017-22. doi: 10.1172/JCI115060.
Insulin resistance, which may precede the development of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in Pima Indians, appears to result from a postreceptor defect in signal transduction in skeletal muscle. To identify the putative postreceptor lesion responsible for insulin resistance in Pima Indians, we investigated the influence of insulin on the activity of casein kinase II (CKII) in skeletal muscle of seven insulin-sensitive, four insulin-resistant, nondiabetic, and five insulin-resistant diabetic Pima Indians during a 2 h hyperinsulinemic, euglycemic clamp. In sensitive subjects, CKII was transiently activated reaching a maximum over basal activity (42%) at 45 min before declining. CKII was also stimulated in resistant (19%) and diabetic (34%) subjects. Basal CKII activity in resistant subjects was 40% higher than in either sensitive or diabetic subjects, although the concentration of CKII protein, as determined by Western blotting, was equal among the three groups. Basal CKII activity was correlated with fasting plasma insulin concentrations, suggesting that the higher activity in resistant subjects resulted from insulin action. Extracts of muscle obtained from all three groups either before or after insulin administration were treated with immobilized alkaline phosphatase, which reduced and equalized CKII activity. These results suggest that insulin stimulates CKII activity in human skeletal muscle by a mechanism involving phosphorylation of either CKII or of an effector molecule, and support the idea that elevated basal activity in resistant subjects results from insulin action. It appears that the ability of insulin to activate CKII in skeletal muscle is not impaired in insulin-resistant Pima Indians, and that the biochemical lesion responsible for insulin resistance occurs either downstream from CKII or in a different pathway of insulin action.
胰岛素抵抗可能先于皮马印第安人非胰岛素依赖型糖尿病的发生,它似乎源于骨骼肌信号转导中的受体后缺陷。为了确定导致皮马印第安人胰岛素抵抗的假定受体后病变,我们在2小时高胰岛素-正常血糖钳夹期间,研究了胰岛素对7名胰岛素敏感、4名胰岛素抵抗的非糖尿病以及5名胰岛素抵抗的糖尿病皮马印第安人骨骼肌中酪蛋白激酶II(CKII)活性的影响。在敏感受试者中,CKII被短暂激活,在45分钟时达到比基础活性高42%的最大值,随后下降。在抵抗(19%)和糖尿病(34%)受试者中,CKII也受到刺激。抵抗受试者的基础CKII活性比敏感或糖尿病受试者高40%,尽管通过蛋白质印迹法测定的CKII蛋白浓度在三组中是相等的。基础CKII活性与空腹血浆胰岛素浓度相关,这表明抵抗受试者中较高的活性是由胰岛素作用导致的。在胰岛素给药前后从所有三组获得的肌肉提取物用固定化碱性磷酸酶处理,这降低并使CKII活性相等。这些结果表明,胰岛素通过涉及CKII或效应分子磷酸化的机制刺激人骨骼肌中的CKII活性,并支持抵抗受试者中基础活性升高是由胰岛素作用导致的观点。看来在胰岛素抵抗的皮马印第安人中,胰岛素激活骨骼肌中CKII的能力没有受损,并且导致胰岛素抵抗的生化病变发生在CKII下游或胰岛素作用的不同途径中。