Abstract

We have previously shown that an acute insulin treatment induces redistribution of the alpha 2- and beta 1- isoforms of the Na+-K+-ATPase from intracellular membranes to plasma membranes detected on subcellular fractionation of mixed muscles and immunoblotting with isoform-specific antibodies (H. S. Hundal et al. J. Biol. Chem. 267: 5040-5043, 1992). In the present study we give both biochemical and morphological evidence that this insulin effect is operative in muscles composed mostly of oxidative (red) fibers but not in muscles composed mostly of glycolytic (white) fibers. The redistribution of the Na+-K+-ATPase alpha 2- and beta 1-isoforms after insulin injection was detected in membranes isolated from and muscles (soleus, red gastrocnemius, red rectus femoris, and red vastus lateralis) but not in membranes from white muscles (white gastrocnemius, tensor fasciae latae, white rectus femoris, and white vastus lateralis). After insulin injection, the potassium-dependent 3-O-methylfluorescein phosphatase activity of the enzyme was higher by 22% in the plasma membrane-enriched fraction and lower by 15% in the internal membrane fraction isolated from red but not from white muscles. Quantitative immunoelectron microscopy of ultrathin muscle cryosections showed that in vivo insulin stimulation augmented the density of Na+-K+-ATPase alpha 2- and beta 1- isoforms at the plasma membrane of soleus muscle by 80 and 124%, respectively, with no change in white gastrocnemius muscle. The effect of insulin to increase the content of Na+-K+-ATPase alpha 2- and beta 1-subunits in isolated plasma membranes was still observed when glycemia was prevented from dropping by using hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamps. We conclude that the insulin-induced redistribution of the alpha 2- and beta 1-isoforms of the Na+-K+-ATPase from an intracellular pool to the plasma membrane in restricted to oxidative fiber-type skeletal muscles. This may be related to the selective expression of beta 1-subunits in these fibers and implies that the beta 2-subunit, typical of glycolytic muscles, does not sustain translocation of alpha 2 beta 2-complexes.

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