Abstract

The beta-subunit of the insulin receptor possesses a tyrosine-specific protein kinase activity which may play a role in coupling insulin binding to insulin action. Previously, we have identified a substrate for the receptor-associated protein kinase in a cell-free system. This endogenous substrate (pp120), which appeared to be a glycoprotein with an apparent mol wt of 120,000, was detected in rat liver microsomes. In the present work, we have demonstrated that pp120 is localized to a highly purified preparation of rat liver plasma membranes (Neville preparation). Moreover, pp120 appears to be specific to liver, having been detected in liver from rat, monkey, and rabbit, but not in rat brain, skeletal muscle, heart, kidney, or adipocytes. As a preliminary to addressing the question of whether insulin stimulates phosphorylation of pp120 in intact cells, we have sought to identify tissue culture cell lines that contain both insulin receptors and pp120. We have succeeded in identifying pp120 in two cell lines derived from rat liver: 1) H35 hepatoma cells (Reuber hepatoma) and 2) rat hepatocytes transformed with a temperature-sensitive mutant form of SV-40 (cultivated at both permissive and nonpermissive temperatures). In conclusion, pp120 appears to be a liver-specific plasma membrane glycoprotein which serves as a substrate for phosphorylation by the insulin receptor-associated protein kinase in a soluble cell-free system. The presence of pp120 in cultured cell lines will facilitate investigation of whether the phosphorylation of pp120 in intact cells is physiologically regulated in response to insulin.

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