8 research outputs found

    Regulation of Brown Fat Adipogenesis by Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase 1B

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    Protein-tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B) is a physiological regulator of insulin signaling and energy balance, but its role in brown fat adipogenesis requires additional investigation.To precisely determine the role of PTP1B in adipogenesis, we established preadipocyte cell lines from wild type and PTP1B knockout (KO) mice. In addition, we reconstituted KO cells with wild type, substrate-trapping (D/A) and sumoylation-resistant (K/R) PTP1B mutants, then characterized differentiation and signaling in these cells. KO, D/A- and WT-reconstituted cells fully differentiated into mature adipocytes with KO and D/A cells exhibiting a trend for enhanced differentiation. In contrast, K/R cells exhibited marked attenuation in differentiation and lipid accumulation compared with WT cells. Expression of adipogenic markers PPARγ, C/EBPα, C/EBPδ, and PGC1α mirrored the differentiation pattern. In addition, the differentiation deficit in K/R cells could be reversed completely by the PPARγ activator troglitazone. PTP1B deficiency enhanced insulin receptor (IR) and insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS1) tyrosyl phosphorylation, while K/R cells exhibited attenuated insulin-induced IR and IRS1 phosphorylation and glucose uptake compared with WT cells. In addition, substrate-trapping studies revealed that IRS1 is a substrate for PTP1B in brown adipocytes. Moreover, KO, D/A and K/R cells exhibited elevated AMPK and ACC phosphorylation compared with WT cells.These data indicate that PTP1B is a modulator of brown fat adipogenesis and suggest that adipocyte differentiation requires regulated expression of PTP1B

    Structural basis for a novel intrapeptidyl H-bond and reverse binding of c-Cbl-TKB domain substrates

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    The c-Cbl tyrosine kinase binding domain (Cbl-TKB), essentially an ‘embedded' SH2 domain, has a critical role in targeting proteins for ubiquitination. To address how this domain can bind to disparate recognition mofits and to determine whether this results in variations in substrate-binding affinity, we compared crystal structures of the Cbl-TKB domain complexed with phosphorylated peptides of Sprouty2, Sprouty4, epidermal growth factor receptor, Syk, and c-Met receptors and validated the binding with point-mutational analyses using full-length proteins. An obligatory, intrapeptidyl H-bond between the phosphotyrosine and the conserved asparagine or adjacent arginine is essential for binding and orientates the peptide into a positively charged pocket on c-Cbl. Surprisingly, c-Met bound to Cbl in the reverse direction, which is unprecedented for SH2 domain binding. The necessity of this intrapeptidyl H-bond was confirmed with isothermal titration calorimetry experiments that also showed Sprouty2 to have the highest binding affinity to c-Cbl; this may enable the selective sequestration of c-Cbl from other target proteins

    Insulin-Like Growth Factor-1 Receptor Is Differentially Distributed in Developing Cerebellar Cortex of Rats Born to Diabetic Mothers

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    Insulin analogs: Assessment of insulin mitogenicity and IGF-I activity.

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    The metabolic activity of insulin has been studied extensively in vitro and in vivo, based on the initial assessment of insulin receptor affinity, followed by methods to estimate the metabolic activity in vitro. These estimates provide some guidance about the biological activity which will be found in vivo; they need to be confirmed and supplemented by testing the glucose-lowering activity in animals (mice, rats, dogs, pigs). The biological effects (hypoglycemic activity) are related to the direct activation of the insulin receptor and subsequent signaling through intracellular mechanisms. The second group of biological effects is related to cell proliferation (mitogenic activity), which may be mediated by the insulin receptor, by the IGF-I receptor, and by hybrids of the two receptors. The evaluation of the relevance of mitogenicity estimates may be performed in in vitro and in vivo. One approach is cell proliferation in benign and malignant cell lines, for example, on mammary epithelial cell lines MCF-10 and MCF-7 (Milazzo et al. 1997)
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