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1 Diabetes and Metabolism Unit and 2 Department of Physiology, Boston University Medical Center, Boston, Massachusettes 02118; and 3 Department of Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637
Denervation has been shown to impair the
ability of insulin to stimulate glycogen synthesis and, to a lesser
extent, glucose transport in rat skeletal muscle. Insulin binding to
its receptor, activation of the receptor tyrosine kinase and
phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase do not appear to be involved. On the
other hand, it has been shown that denervation causes an increase in
the total diacylglycerol (DAG) content and membrane-associated protein
kinase C (PKC) activity. In this study, we further characterize these changes in PKC and assess other possible signaling abnormalities that
might be related to the decrease of glycogen synthesis. The results
reveal that PKC-
and -
, but not -
or -
, are increased in
the membrane fraction 24 h after denervation and that the timing of these changes parallels the impaired ability of insulin to stimulate
glycogen synthesis. At 24 h, these changes were associated with a
65% decrease in glycogen synthase (GS) activity ratio and decreased
electrophoretic mobility, indicative of phosphorylation in GS in
muscles incubated in the absence of insulin. Incubation of the
denervated soleus with insulin for 30 min minimally increased glucose
incorporation into glycogen; however, it increased GS activity
threefold, to a value still less than that of control muscle, and it
eliminated the gel shift. In addition, insulin increased the apparent
abundance of GS kinase (GSK)-3 and protein phosphatase (PP)1
in the
supernatant fraction of muscle homogenate to control values, and it
caused the same increases in GSK-3 and Akt/protein kinase B (PKB)
phosphorylation and Akt/PKB activity that it did in nondenervated
muscle. No alterations in hexokinase I or II activity were observed
after denervation; however, in agreement with a previous report,
glucose 6-phosphate levels were diminished in 24-h-denervated soleus,
and they did not increase after insulin stimulation. These results
indicate that alterations in the distribution of PKC-
and -
accompany the impairment of glycogen synthesis in the 24-h-denervated
soleus. They also indicate that the basal rate of glycogen synthesis
and its stimulation by insulin in these muscles are diminished despite
a normal activation of Akt/PKB and phosphorylation of GSK-3. The
significance of the observed alterations to GSK-3 and PP1
distribution remain to be determined.
denervation; soleus muscle; novel protein kinase C; Akt/protein kinase B; glycogen synthase kinase 3; protein phosphatase-1; glycogen synthase
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