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Leucine-973 is a crucial residue differentiating insulin and IGF-1 receptor signaling
Hirofumi Nagao, … , Matthias Mann, C. Ronald Kahn
Hirofumi Nagao, … , Matthias Mann, C. Ronald Kahn
Published December 22, 2022
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2023;133(4):e161472. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI161472.
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Research Article Endocrinology Metabolism Article has an altmetric score of 7

Leucine-973 is a crucial residue differentiating insulin and IGF-1 receptor signaling

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Abstract

Insulin and IGF-1 receptors (IR and IGF1R) are highly homologous and share similar signaling systems, but each has a unique physiological role, with IR primarily regulating metabolic homeostasis and IGF1R regulating mitogenic control and growth. Here, we show that replacement of a single amino acid at position 973, just distal to the NPEY motif in the intracellular juxtamembrane region, from leucine, which is highly conserved in IRs, to phenylalanine, the highly conserved homologous residue in IGF1Rs, resulted in decreased IRS-1/PI3K/Akt/mTORC1 signaling and increased Shc/Gab1/MAPK cell cycle signaling. As a result, cells expressing L973F-IR exhibited decreased insulin-induced glucose uptake, increased cell growth, and impaired receptor internalization. Mice with knockin of the L973F-IR showed similar alterations in signaling in vivo, and this led to decreased insulin sensitivity, a modest increase in growth, and decreased weight gain when mice were challenged with a high-fat diet. Thus, leucine-973 in the juxtamembrane region of the IR acts as a crucial residue differentiating IR signaling from IGF1R signaling.

Authors

Hirofumi Nagao, Weikang Cai, Bruna B. Brandão, Nicolai J. Wewer Albrechtsen, Martin Steger, Arijeet K. Gattu, Hui Pan, Jonathan M. Dreyfuss, F. Thomas Wunderlich, Matthias Mann, C. Ronald Kahn

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