A mutant insulin receptor with defective tyrosine kinase displays no biologic activity and does not undergo endocytosis.

Donald A. McClain(University of California, San Diego), Hiroshi Maegawa(University of California, San Diego), J Lee(University of California, San Diego), Thomas J. Dull(University of California, San Diego), Amy K. Ulrich(University of California, San Diego), Jerrold M. Olefsky(University of California, San Diego)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
October 1, 1987
Cited by 405Open Access
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Abstract

The cDNAs encoding the normal human insulin receptor (HIRc) and a receptor that had lysine residue 1018 replaced by alanine (A/K1018) were used to transfect Rat 1 fibroblasts. Lysine 1018 is a critical residue in the ATP binding site of the tyrosine kinase domain in the receptor beta-subunit. Untransfected Rat 1 cells express 1700 endogenous insulin receptors. Expressed HIRc receptors had levels of insulin-stimulable autophosphorylation in vitro comparable to normal receptors, whereas A/K1018 receptors had less than 1% of that activity. Stimulation by insulin of HIRc receptors in situ in intact cells led to phosphorylation of beta-subunit tyrosine residues and activation of tyrosine kinase activity that could be preserved and assayed in vitro after receptor purification. In contrast, A/K1018 receptors showed no such activation, either of autophosphorylation or of kinase activity toward histone. Cells expressing HIRc receptors display enhanced sensitivity to insulin of 2-deoxyglucose transport and glycogen synthase activity. This increased sensitivity was proportional to insulin receptor number at low but not at high levels of receptor expression. A/K1018 receptors were unable to mediate these biologic effects and actually inhibited insulin's ability to stimulate glucose transport and glycogen synthase through the endogenous Rat 1 receptors. Expressed HIRc receptors mediated insulin internalization and degradation, whereas A/K1018 receptors mediated little, if any. Endocytotic uptake of the expressed A/K1018 insulin receptors was also markedly depressed compared to normal receptors. Unlike HIRc receptors, A/K1018 receptors also fail to undergo down-regulation after long (24 h) exposures to high (170 nM) concentrations of insulin. We conclude the following. 1) Normal human insulin receptors expressed in Rat 1 fibroblasts display active tyrosine-specific kinase, normal intracellular itinerary after endocytosis, and normal coupling to insulin's biologic effects. 2) A receptor mutated to alter the ATP binding site in the tyrosine kinase domain had little if any tyrosine kinase activity. 3) This loss of kinase activity was accompanied by a nearly complete lack of both endocytosis and biologic activity.


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