Abstract

The murine 3T3-L1 fibroblast under appropriate incubation conditions differentiates into an adipocyte phenotype. This 3T3-L1 adipocyte exhibits many of the morphologic, biochemical, and insulin-responsive features of the normal rodent adipocyte. Using quantitative electron microscopic (EM) autoradiography we find that, when 125I-insulin is incubated with 3T3-L1 adipocytes, the ligand at early times of incubation localizes to the plasma membrane of the cell preferentially to microvilli and coated pits. When the incubation is continued at 37 degrees C, 125I-insulin is internalized by the cells and preferential binding to the villous surface is lost. With the internalization of the ligand, two intracellular structures become labeled, as determined by the method of hypothetical grain analysis. These include large clear, presumably endocytotic, vesicles and multivesicular bodies. Over the first hour of incubation the labeling of these structures increases in parallel, but in the second hour they diverge: the labeling of multivesicular bodies and other lysosomal forms continuing to increase and the labeling of large clear vesicles decreasing. At 3 hours limited but significant labeling occurs in small Golgi-related vesicles that have the typical distribution of GERL. The distinct morphologic features of this cell make it ideal for a quantitative morphologic analysis and allow for an unambiguous view of the sequence of events involved in receptor-mediated endocytosis of a polypeptide hormone. These events are likely to be representative of the processing of insulin by the mature rodent adipocyte.

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