pubmed:abstractText |
Addition of insulin to wheat-germ-lectin-purified glycoproteins derived from rat hepatocytes or rabbit brown adipose tissue results in the increased phosphorylation of a Mr-110 000 protein. This naturally occurring glycoprotein appears as a monomeric structure and is not part of the insulin receptor itself, since it is not immunoprecipitated by highly specific antibodies to insulin receptor. Phosphorylation of the Mr-110 000 protein and autophosphorylation of the receptor beta-subunit (Mr 95 000) are stimulated by insulin in a remarkably similar dose-dependent fasion, with half-maximal stimulation at 1 nM-insulin. Further, kinetic studies suggest that the phosphorylation of the Mr-110 000 protein occurs after autophosphorylation of the insulin-receptor kinase. In conclusion, the present identification of an endogenous substrate for the insulin-receptor kinase could suggest that some, if not all, effects of insulin may be mediated through activation of this kinase.
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