Vol. 284, Issue 3, E514-E520, March 2003
Insulin modulates PC-1 processing and recruitment in cultured
human cells
C.
Menzaghi1,2,
R.
Di Paola2,
G.
Baj1,4,
A.
Funaro1,3,
A.
Arnulfo1,4,
T.
Ercolino2,
N.
Surico4,
F.
Malavasi1,3, and
V.
Trischitta2,5
1 Laboratory of Immunogenetics, Department of
Genetics, Biology and Biochemistry, University of Torino Medical
School, and 3 Experimental Medicine Center, 10126 Torino; 2 Unit of Endocrinology, Scientific Institute
"Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza," San Giovanni Rotondo, 71013 Foggia; 4 Division of Obstetrics and Gynecology,
Department of Medical Science, University A. Avogadro of Eastern
Piedmont, 28100 Novara; and 5 Department of Clinical
Science, University of Rome "La Sapienza," 00161 Rome,
Italy
We evaluated whether insulin signaling
modulates plasma cell glycoprotein (PC-1) plasma membrane
recruitment, posttranslational processing, and gene expression in human
cultured cell lines. Insulin induced a fourfold increase
(P < 0.01) of membrane PC-1 expression by rapid and
sensitive mechanism(s). This effect was reduced (P < 0.05-0.01) by inhibition of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (200 nmol/l wortmannin) and S6 kinase (50 nmol/l rapamycin) activities and
intracellular trafficking (50 µmol/l monensin) and was not
accompanied by PC-1 gene expression changes. Moreover, at Western blot,
insulin elicited the appearance, in both plasma membrane and cytosol,
of a PC-1-related 146-kDa band (in addition to bands of 163, 117, 106, and 97 kDa observed also in absence of insulin) that was sensitive to
endoglycosidase H. Finally, inhibition of PC-1 translocation to plasma
membrane, by wortmannin pretreatment, increases insulin-stimulated
receptor autophosphorylation. Our data indicate that insulin stimulates
PC-1 posttranslational processing and translocation to the plasma
membrane, which in turn impairs insulin receptor signaling.
Bidirectional cross talk between insulin and PC-1, therefore, takes
place, which may be part of the hormone self-desensitization mechanism.
insulin receptor; insulin resistance; growth factor and ectoenzyme; insulin desensitization; plasma cell glycoprotein-1