Sinha M K, Miller J D, Sperling M A, Suchy F J, Ganguli S
Diabetes. 1984 Sep;33(9):864-71. doi: 10.2337/diab.33.9.864.
To directly examine the relationship between insulin receptors and insulin action in fetal tissue, we compared insulin receptor characteristics and insulin-mediated 14C-glucose incorporation into glycogen, as well as glycogen synthase activity, in freshly isolated hepatocytes from 21-day fetal (F) and adult (A) rats. Viability of hepatocytes was documented by trypan blue exclusion (greater than 90%), time-dependent 14C-leucine incorporation into protein, and dose-related incorporation of glucose into glycogen. Percent specific binding of 125I-insulin per unit protein was significantly higher in F than A liver plasma membranes (32.2 +/- 0.3 versus 18 +/- 2.4; P less than 0.01) and Scatchard plots revealed twice the number of receptors in F. Similarly, receptor number per cell surface area was threefold higher in F than in A (150 versus 50 sites/micron2). At a fixed medium glucose concentration of 11.2 mM, insulin stimulated 14C-glucose incorporation into glycogen in a dose-related manner in A with an apparent Km of 1.0 ng/ml and Vmax at 5-10 ng/ml corresponding to 30-40% of total receptor occupancy; no effect was obtained in F with insulin up to 100 ng/ml. Net glucose incorporation into glycogen (nmol/10(6) cells/h) increased progressively with increasing medium glucose concentrations ranging from 1.4 to 27.8 mM; incorporation by F was significantly greater than by A at each glucose concentration. However, whereas insulin at 100 ng/ml significantly augmented net glucose incorporation at each glucose concentration in A, no effect of insulin was apparent in F.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)