Thomopoulos P, Roth J, Lovelace E, Pastan I
Cell. 1976 Jul;8(3):417-23. doi: 10.1016/0092-8674(76)90154-9.
The insulin receptors in normal and transformed lines of mouse Balb/3t3 fibroblasts have been studied. In the normal fibroblasts, the binding of insulin was low in growing cells and increased 2-9 fold in confluent stationary cells. Insulin binding was increased whether growth arrest was due to contact inhibition of growth or serum starvation. When serum-starved cells were stimulated to grow by the addition of fresh serum, insulin binding declined. In cells transformed by simian virus 40, Kirsten, Moloney, and Harvey sarcoma viruses, methylcholanthrene, X rays, or spontaneously, the binding was low, in the same range as growing normal cells. In simian virus 40-transformed cells, insulin binding increased 4 fold as the cells reached higher densities in culture. No relationship to changes in cell size was found. The differences in binding were due to changes in the concentration of the receptors, without changes in their affinity for the hormone.