Joost H G, Weber T M, Cushman S W
Experimental Diabetes, Metabolism and Nutrition Section, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, Bethesda, MD 20892.
Biochem J. 1988 Jan 1;249(1):155-61. doi: 10.1042/bj2490155.
Conditions are described which allow the isolation of rat adipose-cell plasma membranes retaining a large part of the stimulatory effect of insulin in intact cells. In these membranes, the magnitude of glucose-transport stimulation in response to insulin was compared with the concentration of transporters as measured with the cytochalasin-B-binding assay or by immunoblotting with an antiserum against the human erythrocyte glucose transporter. Further, the substrate- and temperature-dependencies of the basal and insulin-stimulated states were compared. Under carefully controlled homogenization conditions, insulin-treated adipose cells yielded plasma membranes with a glucose transport activity 10-15-fold higher than that in membranes from basal cells. Insulin increased the transport Vmax. (from 1,400 +/- 300 to 15,300 +/- 3,400 pmol/s per mg of protein; means +/- S.E.M.; assayed at 22 degrees C) without any significant change in Km (from 17.8 +/- 4.4 to 18.9 +/- 1.4 nM). Arrhenius plots of plasma-membrane transport exhibited a break at 21 degrees C, with a higher activation energy over the lower temperature range. The activation energy over the higher temperature range was significantly lower in membranes from basal than from insulin-stimulated cells [27.7 +/- 5.0 kJ/mol (6.6 +/- 1.2 kcal/mol) and 45.3 +/- 2.1 kJ/mol (10.8 +/- 0.5 kcal/mol) respectively], giving rise to a larger relative response to insulin when transport was assayed at 37 degrees C as compared with 22 degrees C. The stimulation of transport activity at 22 degrees C was fully accounted for by an increase in the concentration of transporters measured by cytochalasin B binding, if a 5% contamination of plasma membranes with low-density microsomes was assumed. However, this 10-fold stimulation of transport activity contrasted with an only 2-fold increase in transporter immunoreactivity in membranes from insulin-stimulated cells. These data suggest that, in addition to stimulating the translocation of glucose transporters to the plasma membrane, insulin appears to induce a structural or conformational change in the transporter, manifested in an altered activation energy for plasma-membrane transport and possibly in an altered immunoreactivity as assessed by Western blotting.
本文描述了一些条件,在这些条件下可以分离出大鼠脂肪细胞质膜,该质膜保留了胰岛素在完整细胞中的大部分刺激作用。在这些质膜中,将胰岛素刺激后葡萄糖转运的刺激程度与用细胞松弛素B结合试验或用人红细胞葡萄糖转运蛋白抗血清进行免疫印迹法测定的转运蛋白浓度进行了比较。此外,还比较了基础状态和胰岛素刺激状态下底物和温度的依赖性。在精心控制的匀浆条件下,胰岛素处理的脂肪细胞产生的质膜葡萄糖转运活性比基础细胞的质膜高10 - 15倍。胰岛素增加了转运的Vmax(从每毫克蛋白质1400±300增加到15300±3400 pmol/s;平均值±标准误;在22℃下测定),而Km没有任何显著变化(从17.8±4.4到18.9±1.4 nM)。质膜转运的阿伦尼乌斯图在21℃出现转折,在较低温度范围内具有较高的活化能。基础细胞质膜在较高温度范围内的活化能明显低于胰岛素刺激细胞的质膜[分别为27.7±5.0 kJ/mol(6.6±1.2 kcal/mol)和45.3±2.1 kJ/mol(10.8±0.5 kcal/mol)],与在22℃测定相比,在37℃测定转运时对胰岛素的相对反应更大。如果假设质膜被低密度微粒体污染5%,则在22℃下转运活性的刺激完全可以由细胞松弛素B结合测定的转运蛋白浓度增加来解释。然而,这种转运活性的10倍刺激与胰岛素刺激细胞的质膜中转运蛋白免疫反应性仅2倍的增加形成对比。这些数据表明,除了刺激葡萄糖转运蛋白向质膜的转位外,胰岛素似乎还诱导了转运蛋白的结构或构象变化,表现为质膜转运活化能的改变,并且可能在免疫印迹评估中表现为免疫反应性的改变。