Insulin Signalling and Insulin Actions in the Muscles and Livers of Insulin-Resistant, Insulin Receptor Substrate 1-Deficient Mice

Toshimasa Yamauchi(The University of Tokyo), Kazuyuki Tobe(The University of Tokyo), Hiroyuki Tamemoto(The University of Tokyo), Kohjiro Ueki(The University of Tokyo), Yasushi Kaburagi(The University of Tokyo), Ritsuko Yamamoto‐Honda(The University of Tokyo), Yoshihiko Takahashi(The University of Tokyo), Fumiaki Yoshizawa(Iwate Prefectural Morioka Agricultural High School), Shinichi Aizawa(Kumamoto University), Akanuma Yasuo(Third Way), Nahum Sonenberg(McGill University), Yoshio Yazaki(The University of Tokyo), Takashi Kadowaki(The University of Tokyo)
Molecular and Cellular Biology
June 1, 1996
Cited by 290Open Access
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Abstract

We and others recently generated mice with a targeted disruption of the insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS-1) gene and demonstrated that they exhibited growth retardation and had resistance to the glucose-lowering effect of insulin. Insulin initiates its biological effects by activating at least two major signalling pathways, one involving phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase) and the other involving a ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAP kinase) cascade. In this study, we investigated the roles of IRS-1 and IRS-2 in the biological action in the physiological target organs of insulin by comparing the effects of insulin in wild-type and IRS-1-deficient mice. In muscles from IRS-1-deficient mice, the responses to insulin-induced PI3-kinase activation, glucose transport, p70 S6 kinase and MAP kinase activation, mRNA translation, and protein synthesis were significantly impaired compared with those in wild-type mice. Insulin-induced protein synthesis was both wortmannin sensitive and insensitive in wild-type and IRS-1 deficient mice. However, in another target organ, the liver, the responses to insulin-induced PI3-kinase and MAP kinase activation were not significantly reduced. The amount of tyrosine-phosphorylated IRS-2 (in IRS-1-deficient mice) was roughly equal to that of IRS-1 (in wild-type mice) in the liver, whereas it only 20 to 30% of that of IRS-1 in the muscles. In conclusion, (i) IRS-1 plays central roles in two major biological actions of insulin in muscles, glucose transport and protein synthesis; (ii) the insulin resistance of IRS-1-deficient mice is mainly due to resistance in the muscles; and (iii) the degree of compensation for IRS-1 deficiency appears to be correlated with the amount of tyrosine-phosphorylated IRS-2 (in IRS-1-deficient mice) relative to that of IRS-1 (in wild-type mice).


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