Role of membranes and energy-producing reactions in cellular processing of insulin in primary cultures of rat hepatocytes

1985 
Abstract Incubation of primary cultures of rat hepatocytes with the local anesthetics, procaine or lidocaine, had little or no effect on insulin uptake or degradation but caused an inhibition of insulin-stimulated glycogenesis. While exposure of cultures to the amines, monodansylcadaverine or CH 3 NH 2 , resulted in significant dose-dependent decreases in glycogenesis, only monodansylcadaverine (an inhibitor of receptor clustering) decreased uptake whereas CH 3 NH 2 (a lysosomotropic agent) caused increases in both insulin uptake and degradation. When cells were treated with agents which inhibit glycolysis (NaF, 2-deoxy-D-glucose) or oxidative metabolism (2,4-dinitrophenol, carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone, NaN 3 , antimycin A), pronounced inhibitions of each of the bioactivities studied (syntheses of glycogen, protein, lipid) were observed, but only the glycolytic inhibitors decreased insulin uptake. These results suggest that insulin is internalized by an endocytotic process involving receptor clustering and requiring metabolic energy derived from glycolysis. The post-receptor biosynthetic processes involved in the expression of the biological activities of insulin (syntheses of glycogen, protein, lipid) require energy produced by oxidative metabolism while the degradation of insulin is carried out by nonlysosomal mechanisms which are not energy-requiring.
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