* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Document
Two-hybrid screening wikipedia , lookup
Point mutation wikipedia , lookup
Lipid signaling wikipedia , lookup
Peptide synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Genetic code wikipedia , lookup
Metalloprotein wikipedia , lookup
Ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides wikipedia , lookup
Amino acid synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Biochemistry wikipedia , lookup
Protein structure prediction wikipedia , lookup
AMER. ZOOL., 13:591-604 (1973). Comparative Aspects of Proinsulin and Insulin Structure and Biosynthesis D. F. STEINER, J. D. PETERSON, H. TAGER, Department of Biochemistry, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637 S. EMDIN, Y. OSTBERG, AND S. FALKMER Kristineberg Zoological Station, S-450 34 Fiskebackskil, Sweden, and Institute of Pathology, University of Umea, S-901 87 Umea, 6, Sweden SYNOPSIS. This review summarizes currently available information on the composition and structure of vertebrate insulins and proinsulins. Consideration is given to the important structural features of insulin and its precursor that are involved in the function and formation of the active hormone. Studies on the biosynthesis of insulin in teleost fishes indicate the existence of larger single chain precursor forms similar to the mammalian proinsulins. Preliminary results of experiments on insulin biosynthesis in the hagfish (Myxine glutinosa) , which has the most primitive islet parenchyma of all vertebrates, indicate the existence of a similar biosynthetic mechanism. The major storage product in the B-cells in all the vertebrate species studies thus far is insulin rather than proinsulin. In fishes an intracellular tryspin-like enzyme may suffice to convert proinsulin to insulin, while in mammals a more complex mechanism involving both an endopeptidase and an exopeptidase is probably required. Conversion occurs within the Golgi apparatus and newly formed secretory granules in the B-cells. The similarity to the higher vertebrates in the biosynthesis and molecular structure of insulin in the primitive hagfish indicates that the properties and biological role of this hormone have remained fairly constant throughout several hundred million years, or that its evolution has followed the same pattern in most extant organisms despite considerable differences in their origin and living conditions. A hypothesis for the evolution of insulin and of the B-cells based on the biosynthetic mechanism involving proinsulin and its conversion to insulin is briefly considered. INTRODUCTION which serve to integrate and modulate the „, r . r i • i , i, various metabolic processes occurring in & The fact is frequently ignored that all t h e ism The' hormonal mo i ec u i es , organisms are continuously undergoing ^ ^ of and ^ bi thetic evolutionary change and that the biochem- m e c h a n i s m s a l s Q b h a v e e v o l v e d i n ' nd ical and morphological organization of ^ theS£ c ha i r e g u l a t O ry demands. various tissues and metabolic pathways re- -r,, . ,. c uThe reconstruction of this progression in „ , , . i . ' '. . ,. . „ fleets not only an adaptation of present , „ „ , c , •; , ; , , , , hormone structure and function is not iust environmental demands but also the whole a c h a l ] e n ^ a n d fascinati blem! it evolutionary history of a particular orga- o f f m m a * ^ s s i b i H t i e s for b * o : T c l e n i n g o u r nism or group of organisms. Endocrine J ^ I I T I • <• 5 . ' • i i r •c i understanding ofr metabolic regulation, of systems provide particularly fruitful areas t . , , , • c • cu J • j- i . . . the molecular mechanisms of action of hortor comparative studies because the vicis, J I i Jr u . , ' ... , . , . mones, and ofc the developmental and funcsitudes of life have necessitated continual . , ,. , ,. , ' . , ,.c . ... ._ . ., „ tional disorders which occur in endocrine . . . . . . modification and diversification of the cellu. , . , , , , . . systems and give rise to distinctive diseases, lar and hormonal regulatory mechanisms r—, °c .. „ . _ ., ° I T h e aim of this report is to provide Portions of this work were supported by grants an overview of the evolution of insulin from ihe U.S.P.H.S. (AM 13914), the Swedish production in the vertebrates. After reviewMedical Research Council (Projects No. B73-12X- • »i ^ » ci i i • -710 non A »,„ ,ot> 9 M ! u IVT J- T iing the present state of knowledge in mam718-08B and B72-12R-3863, the Nordic Insulin , , Fund, and the Board for Medical Research of m a l s a n d s o m e teleost fishes concerning inSwedish Life Insurance Co. sulin structure, the biosynthesis of insulin, 591 592 STEINER, PETERSON, TAGER, EMDIN, OSTBERG, AND FALKMER 1 2 3 A 5 6 7 S 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Phe.Val.A£n.Gln.Hi8.Uu.Cy8.Gly.Ser.Hl«.Leu.Val.Glu.Ala.Lcu.Iyr.Leu.V«l.Cy».01y.Clu.Arg.Gly.Phe.Phe.Tyr.Thr.Pro.Ly».Thr 1 2 3 4 5 6 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 \ 21 Gly.Ilu.Val.Glu.Gln.Cys.Cys.Thr.Ser.Ilu.Cys.Ser.Leu.Tyr.Gln.Leu.Glu.Asn.Tyr.Cya.Aan. Human I n a u l l n FIG. 1. Primary structure of human insulin (Smith, 1966) . and the structure and properties of proinsulin, preliminary observations on insulin and proinsulin in the Atlantic hagfish, Myxine glutinosa are reported. Tihe hagfish is one of the two extant Orders of the Cyclostomes which represent a sister group to all the other vertebrates, viz., the Gnathostomes. The other Order of the Cyclostomes is the lampreys. The hagfishes and the lampreys are of particular interest in the comparative endocrinology of the endocrine pancreas as they appear to represent an evolutionary link between the presumably gut-connected dispersed insulin-producing parenchyma of Deuterostomian invertebrates and the pancreatic islets of vertebrates (Falkmer and Patent, iy72). The Cyclostomes have attracted the attention of comparative endocrinologists in general—and that of scientists working in the field of diabetes research in particular—since the hagfish and the lamprey are the highly specialized survivors of the earliest vertebrates, the Ostracoderms (Falkmer et al., 1973), and may possibly have some precambrian ancestor in common with the Gnathostomes (Jarvik, 1964). Thus, in these organisms the production of an insulin with some "primitive" features may be anticipated. INSULIN STRUCTURE Insulin is an unusual small protein consisting of two chains linked together by two pairs of disulfide bonds (Fig. 1). The A-chain usually contains 21 and the Bchain, 30 amino acid residues. The primary structures of insulins isolated from a variety of vertebrate species have been determined in the interval since Sanger used this hormone as the prototype in his pioneering studies of amino acid sequence (Ryle et al., 1955; Smith, 1966). These results, shown in Figure 2, indicate that amino acid substitutions can occur at many A CHAIN G l y Pro Arg Val Ala Lys Thr Thr lie Asp Arg Phe Substitutions - - (His) Asp - - - His Asn Arg - Asn Lys His Asp - G i n Ser - - - Human Glylle'Val-Glu-Gln-Cys-Cys-Thr-Ser-lle'Cys-Ser-Leu-Tyr-Gln-Leu-Glu-Asn-Tyr-Cys-Asn 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Hagfish Glylle-Val-Glu-Gln-Cys-Cys.His.Lys-Arg-Cys-Ser.lle.Tyr.Asx-Leu B CHAIN Substitutions Human Del Val M Meel t 0 Hagfish - Ala Thr Ser G l y Arg Ala Lys (Pro) Ala Pro Pro Arg Arg Ala Pro Pro - - Pro Asp Lys Asn Asn Lys - Asn Asp Thr Thr Asp - Ser Ser - G i n Asp Asp - - Me Del Asn Ser (Gin) Mel Asp - Ser Ser Del Ala Phe- Val- Asn-Gln-His-Leu-Cys-Gly Ser- His-Ley V a l - G l u - Ala-Leu-Tyr-Leu- V a l - C y i - G l y Glu- Arg-GlyPhe-Phe-Tyr-Thr-Pro- Lys-Thr | 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Arg-Thr- X • Gly-His-Leu-Cys-Gly-Lys-Asp-Leu-Val-Asn-Ala FIG. 2. Compilation of known amino acid suhstiunions in the insulin molecule, including partial sequences of the A- and B-rhains of hav-fish insu- lin. Invariant positions are indicated by dashes, Del = deletion. (After Smith, 1966, and Humbcl et al., 197!i.) 593 INSULIN STRUCTURE AND BIOSYNTHESIS positions within either chain without greatly altering the biological effectiveness of the hormone as measured in various bioassay systems. On the other hand, certain structural features have been well preserved throughout vertebrate evolution including the positions of the three disulfide bonds, the N-terminal and Cterminal regions of the A-chain, and the hydrophobic residues in the C-terminal region of the B-chain, as well as others (Smith, 1966; Humbel et al., 1972). Since chemical modifications in any of these regions tend to markedly reduce or abolish biological activity, these evidently play important roles in maintaining the secondary and tertiary structure necessary for activity (Carpenter, 1966; Humbel et al., 1972). The C-terminal hydrophobic sequence of the B-chain (residues 23-27) also plays an important role in the formation of insulin dimers (vide infra). Preliminary results in the characterization and amino acid sequence of hagfish (Myxine glutinosa) insulin in our laboratories (Peterson et al., 1973) indicate that although more than half the amino acid residues differ from those found in the mammalian insulins (Table 1) (see also Weitzel et al., 1967), structural conservation is found in the important regions of the molecule described above (Fig. 2). One interesting difference is the substitution of aspartic acid for histidine at position 10 of the B-chain, an important residue for zinc binding in the formation of insulin hexamers as described below. Hagfish insulin crystallizes under conditions similar to those required for the crystallization of mammalian insulin but zinc or other divalent metal ions are not needed (Fig. 3). The biological activity of hagfish insulin has been reported to be 2 I.U./mg (i.e., 8% of mammalian insulin) as determined by the fat pad assay (Weitzel et al., 1967). Within the last three years the threedimensional structure of crystalline porcine insulin at a high resolution has been determined successfully by means of X-ray diffraction analysis (Blundell et al., 1971). The results have proven invaluable in interpreting much of the available chemical data on the properties of insulin. Detailed knowledge of the spatial organization of the molecule also promises to provide further insight into the mechanism of action of insulin at a molecular level. The hexameric unit cell of crystalline zinc insulin (Fig. 4) consists of three dimers arranged around a m,ajor three-fold axis which passes through two zinc atoms each of which is coordinated with three B ]0 histidine side chains located just above or just below the plane of the hexamer TABLE 1. CompONtiion of iovinc (S) and hagfixh (H) inxulin. A-Chain Lvs His Arg Asp Thr Ser Glu Pro Gly Ala Val Met He Leu Tvr Piie B-Oliain Insulin B H B H B H 1 2 1 2 1 — 1 1 1 1 2 1 3 2 3 3 2 2 4 3 — 1 3 3 1 3 7 1 4 3 5 — 1 6 4 3 (i 51 6 2 1 4 1 5 2 2-3 1 3 4 4 2 1 1 2 — 1 2 2 — 1 — 1 2 1 2 — 1 1 1 3 1 3 2 3 — — 4 2 3 4 21 4 21 2 3(1 9 1 1 4 2 1-2 1 1 3 2 2 2 30-31 6 51-52 594 STEINER, PETERSON, TAGER, EMDIN, OSTBERG, AND FALKMER I—.' ».» *• '* , * ft <3 FIG. 3. Tetragonal crystals of hagtish insulin. Crystallization was carried out at 20 C in sodium cit- rate buffer at pH 6.0 in the absence of metal ions. (Blundell et al., 1971). The insulin dimers are held together in die crystals by hydrogen bonds between the peptide groups of residues 24 and 26 within the C-terminal segments of the B-chain forming an antiparallel pleated-sheet structure (Blundell et al., 1971). The locations in space of the known invariant amino acids within the insulin monomer are shown in Figure 5. As might be anticipated from the extensive amino acid substitutions that occur between mammalian and piscine insulins, it is not surprising that the immunological cross-reactivity between diese proteins is rather weak. For a more extensive consideration of insulin antigenicity in relation to structure, several recent discussions may be consulted (Humbel et al., 1972; Arquilla et al., 1972). derived in biosynthesis from a larger single chain precursor protein, proinsulin (Fig. 6) (Steiner and Oyer, 1967; Nolan et al., 1971; Steiner et al., 1972). When islets of Langerhans isolated from rat pancreas are incubated with labeled amino acids, proinsulin is synthesized first and is subsequently transformed to insulin by proteolysis within the cells (Steiner et al., 1967; Clark and Steiner, 1969). Several kinds of evidence summarized in detail elsewhere (Steiner et al. 1970, 1972; Kemmler et al., 1971) indicate that newly syndiesized proinsulin is transferred from the cisternal space of the ix>ugh endoplasmic reticulum to secretory granules via the Golgi apparatus in a sequence similar to that known to occur in many other secretory cells. The conversion of proinsulin to insulin is a slow process having a half-time of about 1 hour in rat islets in vitro (Steiner et al., 1969). Conversion evidently begins at about the same time that the newly synthesized pro- THE BIOSYNTHESIS OF INSULIN Recent studies have shown that insulin is INSULIN STRUCTURE AND BIOSYNTHESIS 595 FIG. 4. View of the zinc-insulin hexamer along the threefold axis showing three dimers arranged around two zinc atoms which lie on the threefold axis. (Reproduced with permission of Blundell et al., 1971.) insulin reaches the Golgi apparatus and it continues for a relatively long time after new secretion granules have been formed. Crude secretion granule fraction isolated from rat islets that have been incubated for a short time with labeled amino acids to allow these to be incorporated into proinsulin retain the ability to convert this endogenous labeled substrate to insulin during incubation in vitro, but they do not convert proinsulin that is added externally (Kemmler and Steiner, 1970). Disruption of the particles by sonication, freeze-thawing or detergents destroys their ability to convert the proinsulin. These results suggest that the converting enzymes are localized within the newly formed secretion granules or Golgi vesicles. After most of the proinsulin has been converted to insulin, the insulin 596 STEINER, PETERSON, TAGER, E M DIN, OSTBERG, AND FALKMER o2 B9 FIG. 5. Locations of invariant side chains in the insulin monomer. This view is oriented along the threefold axis. (Reproduced with permission of Blundell et al., 1971.) evidently combines with zinc ions to form small crystalline inclusions which are vis- ible with the transmission electron microscope as the central core of the mature 80 \ FIG. 6. Structure of bovine proinsulin. (Reproduced from Xolan et al., 1071.) INSULIN STRUCTURE AND BIOSYNTHESIS 597 correct proportions of A- and B-chains, as well as the necessary chemical determinants for appropriate folding of the polypeptide chain in a configuration that is conducive to the formation of the correct disulfide bonds and tertiary structure. However, recent studies of the biosynthesis of several other peptide hormones which do not contain disulfide bonds also have indicated the existence of larger precursor forms (Noe and Bauer, 1971; Cohn et al., 1972; Gregory and Tracy, 1972). Clearly, in these instances, other explanations must exist for the occurrence of these precursors, and we may anticipate that additional reasons for the existence of proinsulin eventually may emerge as more information \ accumulates regarding these biosynthetic systems. As a consequence of the sequestration FIG. 7. Diagrammatic representation of the insu- of the proteolytic conversion process within lin biosynthetic mechanism of the /9-cell. (R.E.R. the secretion granules of the B-cells, the = rough endoplasmic reticulum, M.V. = microremainder of the proinsulin interchain vesicles.) connecting segment, which we have desigsecretion granules. This scheme for the nated the C-peptide, is also retained in the biosynthesis, conversion, and intracellular secretory granules of the B-cells and distransport of new secretory products in the charged along with insulin in essentially equivalent amounts during active granule beta cell is summarized in Figure 7. The role of proinsulin seems to be con- extrusion by exocytosis (Rubenstein et al., fined mainly to the biosynthetic process 1969). The C-peptide contains all the since most of it is converted to insulin be- additional amino acids of proinsulin aside fore secretion occurs. However, small from the pairs of basic residues located at amounts of proinsulin are secreted into either end through which it is joined to the the blood under normal conditions in man insulin chains in the intact polypeptide and other species, and additional physio- (see Fig. 6). Methods have been developed logic roles for proinsulin have not been in one of our laboratories for the isolation excluded (Rubenstein et al., 1972). In of the C-peptide from fresh mammalian terms of biosynthesis, proinsulin appears pancreas, and the amino acid sequences to function to promote the formation of of nine mammalian C-peptides have now the correct disulfide bonds of the insulin been elucidated (Fig. 8). This region of the molecule. Tims, after full reduction and proinsulin molecule is far more variable denaturation in 8 M urea at a slightly than the insulin portion. Thus, while acalkaline pH, the single peptide chain of cepted point mutations occur at a rate of proinsulin rapidly reoxidizes to its original approximately four per hundred residues disulfide bond structure in high yield when per million years in insulin (Dayhoff, 1972), diluted, while insulin chains or partly this figure for the C-peptide is about 60. cleaved intermediate forms of proinsulin Only the fibrinopeptides have undergone give very low yields under similar condi- as rapid an evolutionary change, suggesting tions (Steiner and Clark, 1968). Proinsulin that this portion of the proinsulin molethus ensures the efficient formation of in- cule has fewer highly specific structural resulin by providing the stoichiometrically quirements that must be conserved. MoreBETA GRANULE FORMATION T PROINSULIN' (S-S Bond formation) 1 TRANSFER STEP STEP 3 (Enargy <tep*nd nt Cfl*» (topandtnt) SECRETED PRODUCTS INSULIN j . . . C-PEPTIDE I941 PROINSULIN |. INTERMEDIATES! 598 STEINER, PETERSON, TAGER, EMDIN, OSTBERG, AND FALKMER 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 NH 5 + - Glu - Alo - Glu - Asp - Leu - Gin - Vol - Gly - Gin - Vol - Glu - Leu - Gly - Gl£ - Gly - MAN NH j * - Glu - Alo - Glu - Asp - Pro - Gin - Vol - Gly - Gin - Vol - Glu - Leu - Gly - Gl^ - Gly - MONKEY N H 3 * - Glu'- Alo - Glu - Asp - Pro - Gin - Vol - Gly - Glu - Vol - Glu - Leu - Gly - Gly_ - Gly - HORSE N H , * - G l u - V o l - Glu - Asp-Pro - Gin-Vol-Pro-Gin-Leu-Glu-Leu-Gly - G l y - G l y - RAT I NH S * - Glu - Vol - G l u - A s p - P r o - G i n - V o l - A l o - G i n - L e u - G l u - L e u - Gl*-Gly_-Gly- RAT I NH S * -Glu-Alo - G l u - A s n - P r o - G i n - A l o - G l y - A l o - V o l - G l u - L e u - G l y - G l ^ - G l y - PIG N H S + - Glu-Vol -GJu_-Gly - Pro - Gin -Vol -Gly- Alo - Leu-Glu - L e u - Alo- Gly - Gly - COW, LAMB + N H S - Asp-Vol - Glu - 16 17 18 19 -Leu-Alo-GI^-Alo- 20 21 22 23 24 2 5 26 27 28 29 30 DOG 31 - Pro-Gly- Alo- Gly - Ser - Leu - Gin - Pro - Leu - Alo •Leu-Glu-Gly-Ser-Leu-GJn-COiT MAN - Pro-Gly - A l o - Gly - Ser - Leu - Gin - Pro -Leu - Alo •Leu - Glu - Gly - Ser - Leu -Gin - C02~ MONKEY - Pro-Gly- Leu-Gly -Gly - L e u - G i n - P r o - L e u - A l a Leu-Alo-Gly-Pro-Gln-Gln_-CO 2 ~ HORSE - Pro-Glu- Alo-Gly - Asp-Leu-Gin-Thr-Leu-Ala Leu-Glu-Vol-Ala-Arg-Gin-C0 2 ~ RAT I - P r o - G l y - Alo-Gly - Asp - Leu - Gin - Thr - Leu- Alo • Leu-Glu-Vol-Alo-Arg-Gin-C0 2 ~ RAT I -Leu-Gly- -Gly - L e u - G i n - Alo-Leu- Alo- Leu-Glu-Gly-Pro-Pro-Gin-C0 2 ~ PIG - P r o - G i y - Alo-Giy - Giy - L e u - - Glu - Gly - Pro - Pro -Gin - C0 2 ~ COW, LAMB - Pro-Gly -Glu -Gly - Gly - L e u - G i n - P r o - L e u - A l o Leu-Glu-Gly-Alo-Leu-Gin-C0 2 ~ DOG FIG. 8. Amino acid sequences of several mammalian C-peptides. (These sequences do not include the basic residues at each end that link the C-pep- tide to the insulin chains in the proinsulins of these species.) over, this variability implies that the Cpeptide probably does not function as an endocrine substance in a physiological sense, even though it is secreted into the bloodstream with insulin (Rubenstein et al., 1972). Nevertheless, from a comparison of the available structures as well as the known compositions of the C-peptides of the anglerfish and codfish (Table 2), it does appear that considerable structural conservatism has occurred. This is reflected in the unusual and restricted composition of these peptides, in the presence of a glycdnerich central region surrounded by hydrophobic regions, and in the presence of more hydrophilic character in the regions near the cleavage sites (Fig. 8). These features may play important roles in dictating the folding of the peptide cliain necessary TABLE 2. Amino acid composition of cod and angltrfish proinsulin- connecting polypeptides. Ood* Asp Thr Ser Glu Gly Ala Val Met Leu He Pro Lys Arg Total Anglerfish t 1 2 3 9 1 4 4 3 5 2 3 1 3 2 1 4 2 30 7 6 33 * Data from Grant and Eeid (1968). t Data from Traketellis and Schwartz (1970). INSULIN STRUCTURE AND BIOSYNTHESIS for correct disulfide bond formation, and they may serve also to direct the specific cleavage of proinsulin by the converting enzymes. PROPERTIES OF PROINSULIN The unique composition of the C-peptide undoubtedly also confers important properties on proinsulin. The isoelectric pH of mammalian proinsulins ranges from about 5.1 to 5.45 and is thus very close to that of insulin (5.3). It also has similar stability, solubility, and self association properties. Sedimentation studies indicate that proinsulin forms dimers in dilute acid solutions and hexamers at neutral pH in the presence of zinc ions (Frank and Veros, 1968). Spectral (Frank and Veros, 1970) as well as immunological (Rubenstein et al., 1972) studies indicate that the insulin moiety of proinsulin must have nearly the same conformation as native insulin, and there is no spectral evidence for the existence of ordered secondary structure within the connecting peptide region. However, immunological studies in guinea pigs and rabbits indicate that the connecting segment in proinsulin contains strongly antigenic and specific determinants (Rubenstein et al., 1972). In contrast to the lack of reactivity of isolated insulin chains against antibodies to native insulin, antibodies to proinsulin or to C-peptide generally react well with both of these forms of antigen; no definite conclusions regarding the conformation of this region can be deduced from these results, however. Many of the properties of proinsulin described above can be readily understood in terms of the known three-dimensional structure of porcine insulin. In the insulin hexamer it is noteworthy that the Ctermini of the B-chains and the N-termini of the A-chains, where the connecting peptide is attached in proinsulin, lie near the external surface of the hexamer, oriented away from the three-fold axis (see Fig. 4). Thus, in proinsulin hexamers, the connecting peptide may be located around the periphery, on the outside of 599 the polymer, where it would not obstruct the regions involved in dimer or hexamer formation. The ability of proinsulin to aggregate like insulin could account for its tendency to co-crystallize with insulin during the commercial preparation of insulin (Steiner and Oyer, 1967; Nolan et al., 1971). Although pure proinsulin is less readily crystallized than insulin, preliminary X-ray studies have been carried out and these indicate that the asymetric unit is a dimer (Fullerton et al., 1970). Further analysis by these techniques may eventually provide definitive information regarding the conformation of the insulin moiety, as well as the C-peptide region, in proinsulin. BIOSYNTHESIS OF PROINSULIN AND INSULIN IN THE HAGFISH IN VITRO The biosynthesis of proinsulin and insulin in the hagfish is at present being studied in vitro (Emdin et al., 1973). Batches of 5-6 hagfish islet organs were incubated under a variety of conditions in a medium containing glucose (3 mg/ml) and (3H)-leucine as a tracer. The composition of the medium was similar to that of hagfish plasma in terms of salts and amino acids. The individual batches were then extracted with acid ethanol, and the extracts were partially purified before gel filtration on BioGel P-30 columns (0.9 X 100 cm) equilibrated with 3 M acetic acid. The positions in the elution profiles and the relative purities of hagfish proinsulin and insulin were then determined by means of immunoprecipitation and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The rate of incorporation of (3H)-leucine into proinsulin and insulin was found to be a slow process, requiring 12-15 times more time at 11 C than for rat islets at 37 C. Also, the rate of proinsulin synthesis and conversion was shown to be temperature dependent (Fig. 9). At 30 C essentially no incorporation into proinsulin occurred. Tn order to establish a precursor-product relationship between proinsulin and insulin, several pulse-chase experiments were 600 STEINER, PETERSON, TAGER, EMDIN, OSTBERG, AND FALKMER PR0INSULIN 500- ^•400- 300- j= 200o o I iooH 25 30 35 FRACTION NO. 40 FIG. 9. Elution patterns from columns of Bio-Gel P-30 showing labelling of proinsulin with (3H) labelled leucine at various temperatures (6, 11 and 18 C) for 48 hours. The results have been normalized, and the radioactivity of unrelated proteins has been deleted. carried out (Fig. 10). From these experiments the approximate half-time of conversion of proinsulin to insulin could be calculated; these were 12 hours at 11 C and 9 hours at 18 C. The corresponding halftime for conversion in the rat is approximately 1 hour at 37 C. protein has been isolated which consists of the anglerfish insulin bearing an additional tripeptide sequence, GlyThr-Lys, at the amino-terminus of the A-chain and presumably representing a residuum of the connecting region of anglerfish proinsulin (Yamaji et al., 1972). These workers also have shown that this intermediate form can be transformed to insulin by trypsin treatment. Grant and coworkers have presented evidence suggesting that tryptic activity alone can account for the conversion of codfish proinsulin to insulin (Grant and Coombs, 1971; Grant et al., 1971). They have identified a trypsin-like enzyme in codfish islets which also appears to exist in a zymogen or inactive form. The enzyme can be inhibited by NEP (O-ethyl-O(p - nitrophenyl) - phenylpropylphosphonate), an inhibitor of trypsin-like enzymes and by DFP (di-isopropyl-fluorophosphate) (Reid et al., 1968). In many of the fish insulins, including the cod and the anglerfish, a Cterminal basic residue is present on the Bchain which corresponds to the penultimate lysine residue at position B-29 in most mammalian insulins (Reid et al., 1968; —•— 48hours pulse in ^ 2 — o - 4 8 hours pulse + 2 4 hours chase 3000 PROINSULIN | I A\l(\ it u ^ 2000XCTI Several studies have now indicated that insulin biosynthesis in teleost fishes (Grant and Reid, 1968; Trakatellis and Schwartz, 1970; Grant and Coombs, 1971) as well as in cyclostomes, as decribed above, proceeds via a precursor that is similar to mammalian proinsulin. Labeled amino acids were incorporated into proinsulin in incubated principal islets from the cod and angler fish (Grant and Reid, 1968; Trakatellis and Schwartz, 1970). Insulin began to appear later during incubation, and several intermediate forms also could be identified. In the anglerfish an interesting intermediate +11 C a. o 0. COMPARATIVE ASPECTS OF PROINSULIN BIOSYNTHESIS AND CONVERSION TO INSULIN INSULIN 4000- 1000- 4 <£ 25 30 35 FRACTION NO. 40 45 FIG. 10. Elution patterns from columns of Bio-Gel P-30 obtained in a pulse-chase experiment with hagfish islets incubated at 11 C. When the fH) leucine-medium was removed after 48 hours of incubation and replaced with a medium containing non-labelled leucine for 24 hours, the radioactivity of the proinsulin fell, whereas that associated with insulin correspondingly increased. The results are normalized essentially as described in Figure 9. INSULIN STRUCTURE AND BIOSYNTHESIS 601 stituted the primitive "converting enzyme" and that in the evolution of terrestrial NHj-Ph«- L y j • Ala- Arg*Arg• Glu — - — Gin-Lys-Arg-Gly—y Asn forms modifications in insulin structure -(S-S)j 1 and in the converting enzyme system were E, I Trypsin-like enzyme gradually added. -Lyl-AkrArg-Vg NH -Gly-4 Asn NH-j-PheIt is possible that the pairs of basic 1 residues found at the cleavage sites in the mammalian proinsulins allow for greater NH -GltiGln'i-ys'Arg specificity and for more rapid rates of cleavage by the trypsin-like enzyme in the Carboxyptldase B-like enzyme B-cells. The product of this kind of cleavNH -Pheage alone would be insulin bearing two additional residues of arginine at the C3Arg terminus of the B-chain. This form has NH -Glu — Gin somewhat lower biological activity than C- Peptlds insulin (Chance, 1971) and is less soluble FIG. 11. The cleavage of a mammalian proinsulin near neutral pH due to its higher isoto insulin and C-peptide by ithe combined action of trypsin-like and carboxypeptidase B-like prote- electric point. Removal of the arginine residues by a carboxypeptidase-B-like ases. enzyme may thus be required to circumvent Humbel et al., 1972). These lysine residues difficulties in storage or secretion that may evidently provide the necessary basic sites arise from these altered properties. for tryptic cleavage o£ the fish proinsulins. It may be concluded that, despite some The presence of an additional C-term- differences in the details, the major bioinal residue of alanine, threonine or serine chemical pathways involved in insulin bioin the mammalian insulins beyond the synthesis, as well as the molecular structure lysine residue at B-29 (Fig. 2) requires a of insulin in a wide sampling of the vertemore complex cleavage mechanism for con- brates, ranging from the hagfish through version of the mammalian proinsulins. The man, are strikingly similar. It is tempting mammalian system cleaves the proinsulin to speculate that some of the protein horat the pairs of basic residues at either end mones, perhaps especially those associated of the connecting segment and releases with the gastrointestinal tract and certain these basic residues as free amino acids, basic metabolic functions, can remain rethus giving rise to insulin and the free markably constant even though evolution C-peptide as the major products of conver- over several hundred million years has sion (Fig. 11). We have shown that pan- evoked extensive changes in many other creatic trypsin combined with an excess of processes and organ systems. carboxypeptidase B, an exopeptidase that cleaves C-terminal basic residues from SOME SPECULATIONS ON THE EVOLUTION peptides, can quantitatively convert bovine OF INSULIN AND THE BETA-CELLS proinsulin to insulin and C-peptide in vitro (Kemmler et al., 1971). No degradaAs indicated elsewhere in this symposium tion of the insulin occurred under the (Falkmer et al., 1973), there is evidence conditions used in these model experi- that insulin-producing cells are located in ments. Studies with isolated crude secretion the intestinal mucosa in certain invertegranule fractions from rat islets have pro- brate species and that these cells possibly vided evidence for the existence of trypsin- were arranged similarly in the ancestral like and carboxypeptidase-B-like activities vertebrates. Likewise, during the developin these particles (Kemmler et al., 1972), ment of the pancreas in mammals, B-cells but the enzymes have not yet been isolated first appear in the endoderm of the gut in or characterized. These results suggest that the region of the pancreatic anlage (Pictet trypsin or a similar enzyme may have con- and Rutter, 1972). Whether these cells inPROINSULIN CLEAVAGE 2 2 2 + 2 602 A STEINER, PETERSON, TAGER, EMDIN, OSTBERG, AND FALKMER PRIMITIVE MECHANISM OF INSULIN FORMATION >> B CELL EVOLUTION CIRCULATION FIG. 12. Hypothetical mode of evolution of insulin and the B-cell system. The primitive mucosal cells of the digestive tract may have elaborated a proinsulin-like protein along with other digestive hydrolases. During digestion this protoproinsulin could be degraded to give rise to fragments having insulin-like properties. This process might then have been internalized in specialized cells (B-cells) restricted to this function in order to provide more precise regulation of the synthesis, storage, and release of the hormone. deed arise from the endoderm of the gut has been questioned; however, a definitive answer to this question is not as yet available (see Epple et al., 1973). The existence of a zymogen-like proinsulin and the presence in the B-cells of a proteolytic converting enzyme system which has components having modes of cleavage similar to certain exocrine pancreatic proteases is consistent with a close evolutionary relationship between the acinar and B-cells. These relationships prompt the hypothesis that in the most primitive form the secretory cells forming the mucosa of the intestine discharged a number of digestive hydrolytic enzymes into the gut, among which was a protein resembling proinsulin (Steiner et al., 1969, 1972). This primitive proinsulin, or protoproinsulin, may have had some kind of hydrolytic activity that has since been lost. In the gut during the digestion of food, the protoproinsulin may have been degraded by the digestive proteases with the production of small amounts of intermediate insulin-like proteins that were absorbed into the blood (Fig. 12). The close temporal association between the appear- ance of this insulin-like protein in the blood and the influx, of nutrients such as amino acids and sugars would have enhanced the possible evolution of an endocrine role for this protein. This would, of course, be especially likely if the insulinlike protein enhanced the utilization of these nutrients by the tissues of the organism in some way, perhaps by interacting in a favorable manner with the plasma membranes of the tissue cells, perhaps even by hydrolyzing certain critical bonds in the membranes. This cyclic absorption and interaction could have constituted the basis for a rudimentary regulatory system which conferred a selective advantage to these organisms. In the course of time this primitive endocrine system may have been refined by the gradual specialization of some of the mucosal cells for the unique role of making and storing the insulin-like protein and releasing it in judicious amounts at appropriate times. These specialized cells also eventually began to discharge the finished hormone directly into the bloodstream, and thus retained a close association with the vascular system even though their direct association with the intestinal cells was lost. Although this is an attractive hypothesis, many gaps in our knowledge of the origin and function of the B-cells must be filled in before we can determine whether it is correct. Information is especially needed regarding the existence of proinsulin-like proteins in invertebrates and in more primitive vertebrates. Modern methods of protein purification and the use of powerful immunological tools should enable us to carry out these studies in the near future. As more structural information on many different classes of proteins accumulates, unsuspected relationships may suddenly emerge. Thus, a recent study of the salivary gland nerve growth factor has suggested that this protein is closely related to proinsulin and that its gene may have arisen from the gene for proinsulin by the process of gene duplication (Frazier et al., 1972). This observation is especially interesting in view of the many developmental and func- INSULIN STRUCTURE AND BIOSYNTHESIS tional similarities between the salivary glands and the pancreas. Likewise, secretin from the intestine and glucagon from the pancreatic alpha cells clearly are closely related proteins derived from a common ancestral gene (Mutt et al., 1970). Further study of many exocrine pancreatic and intestinal protein sequences may reveal important evolutionary relationships between these and some of the proteins of the ftcells. Only time and much more patient study can slowly fill in the gaps in this fascinating but incomplete picture, but these efforts will surely be richly rewarded both in terms of practical as well as theoretical gains. REFERENCES Arquilla, E. R., P. V. Miles, and J. W. Morris. 1972. Immunochemistry of insulin, p. 159-173. In D. F. Steiner and N. Freinkel [ed], Handbook of physiology. Vol. 1. The endocrine pancreas. Williams and Wilkins Co., Baltimore. Blundell, T. L., G. G. Dodson, E. Dodson, D. C. Hodgkin, and M. Vijayan. 1971. X-ray analysis and the structure of insulin. Recent Progr. Hormone Res. 27:1-40. Carpenter, F. H. 1966. Relationship of structure to biological activity of insulin as revealed by degradative studies. Amer. J. Med. 40:750-758. Chance, R. E. 1971. Chemical, physical, biological and immunological studies on porcine proinsulin and related polypeptides, p. 292-305. In Proc. 7th Congr. Int. Diabetes Fed., Buenos Aires, 1971. Excerpta Med. Int. Congr. Ser. No. 231, Amsterdam. Clark, J. L., and D. F. Steiner. 1969. Insulin biosynthesis in the rat: demonstration of two proinsulins. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 62:278-285. Colin, D. V., R. R. MacGregor, L. L. Chu, J. R. Kimmel, and J. W. Hamilton. 1972. Calcemic fraction-A: biosynthetic peptide precursor of parathyroid hormones. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 69:1521-1525. Dayhoff, M. O. [ed.]. 1972. Atlas of protein sequence and structure 5:50. Emdin, S., J. D. Peterson, C. L. Coulter, Y. Ostberg, S. Falkmer, and D. F. Steiner. The structure and biosynthesis of insulin in a primitive vertebrate, the cyclostome, myxine glutinosa. Abstract submitted to 9th Int. Congr. Biochem., Stockholm, 1973. Epple, A., and T. L. Lewis. 1973. Comparative histophysiology of the pancreatic islets. Amer. Zool. 13:567-590. Falkmer, S., S. Emdin, N. Havu, G. Lundgren, M. Marques, Y. Ostberg, D. F. Steiner, and N. W. Thomas. 1973. Insulin in invertebrates and cyclo- 603 stomes. Amer. Zool. Falkmer, S., and G. J. Patent. 1972. Comparative and embryological aspects of the pancreatic isiets, p. 1-28. In D. F. Steiner and N. Freinkel [ed.], Handbook of physiology. Vol. 1. The endocrine pancreas. Williams and Wilkins Co., Baltimore. Frank, B. H., and A. J. Veros. 1968. Physical studies on proinsulin-association behavior and conformation in solution. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Comm. 32:155-160. Frank, B. H., and A. J. Veros. 1970. Interaction of zinc with proinsulin. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Comm. 38:284-289. Frazier, W. A., R. H. Angeletti, and R. A. Bradshaw. 1972. Nerve growth factor and insulin. Science 176:482-488. Fullerton, W. W., R. Potter, and B. W. Low. 1970. Proinsulin: crystallization and preliminary X-ray diffraction studies. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 66:1213-1219. Grant, P. T., and T. L. Coombs. 1971. Proinsulin, a biosynthetic precursor of insulin. Essays Biochem. 6:69-92. Grant, P. T., T. L. Coombs, N. W. Thomas, and J. R. Sargent. 1971. The conversion of ("C) proinsulin to insulin in isolated subcellular fractions of fish islet preparations. Mem. Soc. Endocrinol. 19:481-495. Grant, P. T., and K. B. M. Reid. 1968. Biosynthesis of an insulin precursor by islet tissue of cod (Gadus callarias) . Biochem. J. 110:281-288. Gregory, R. A., and H. J. Tracy. 1972. Isolation of two "Big Gastrins" from Zollinger-Ellison tumor tissue. Lancet 2:797-799. Humbel, R. E., H. R. Bosshard, and H. Zahn. 1972. Chemistry of insulin, p. 111-132. In D. F. Steiner and N. Freinkel [ed.], Handbook of physiology. Vol. 1. The endocrine pancreas. Williams and Wilkins Co., Baltimore. Jarvik, E. 1964. Specializations in early vertebrates. Ann. Soc. Roy. Zool. Belg. 94:11-95. Kemmler, W., J. D. Peterson, A. H. Rubenstein, and D. F. Steiner. 1972. On the biosynthesis, intracellular transport and mechanism of conversion of proinsulin to insulin and C-peptide. Diabetes 21:572-582. Kemmler, W., J. D. Peterson, and D. F. Stiener. 1971. Studies on the conversion of proinsulin to insulin: I. Conversion in vitro with trypsin and carboxypeptidase B. J. Biol. Chem. 246:67866791. Kemmler, W., and D. F. Steiner. 1970. Conversion of proinsulin to insulin in a subcellular fraction from rat islets. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Comm. 41:1223-1230. Mutt, V., J. E. Jorpes, and S. Magnussen. 1970. Structure of porcine secretin. Eur. J. Biochem. 15:513-519. Noe, B. D., and G. E. Bauer. 1971. Evidence for glucagon biosynthesis involving a protein intermediate in islets of the anglerfish (Lophius Americanus). Endocrinology 89:642-651. 604 STEINER, PETERSON, TAGER, EMDIN, OSTBERG, AND FALKMER Nolan, C, E. Margoliash, J. D. Peterson, and D. F. Steiner. 1971. The structure of bovine proinsulin. J. Biol. Chem. 246:2780-2795. Peterson, J. D., D. F. Steiner, S. O. Emdin, Y. Ostberg, and S. Falkmer. 1973. Isolation, composition and amino acid sequence of the insulin from a primitive vertebrate (hagfish; Myxine glutinosa) . Fed. Proc. 32:577. Pictet, R., and W. J. Rutter. 1972. Development of the embryonic endocrine pancreas, p. 25-66. In D. F. Steiner and N. Freinkel [ed.], Handbook of physiology. Vol. 1. The endocrine pancreas. Williams and Wilkins Co., Baltimore. Reid, K. B. M., P. T. Grant, and A. Youngson. 1968. The sequence of amino acids in insulin isolated from the islet tissue of the cod (Gadus callarias) . Biochem. J. 110:289-296. Rubenstein, A. H., J. L. Clark, F. Melani, and D. F. Steiner. 1969. Secretion of proinsulin C-peptide by pancreatic /3-cells and its circulation in blood. Nature (London) 224:697-699. Rubenstein, A. H-, F. Melani, and D. F. Steiner. 1972. Circulating proinsulin: immunology, measurement, and biological activity, p. 515-528. In D. F. Steiner and N. Freinkel [ed.], Handbook of physiology. Vol. 1. The endocrine pancreas. Williams and Wilkins Co., Baltimore. Ryle, A. P., F. Sanger, L. F. Smith, and R. Kitai. 1955. The disulfide bonds of insulin. Biochem. J. 60:541-556. Smith, L. F. 1966. Species variation in the amino acid sequence of insulin. Amer. J. Med. 40:662666. Steiner, D. F., and J. L. Clark. 1968. The spontaneous reoxidation of reduced beef and rat proinsulins. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 60:622-629. Steiner, D. F., J. L. Clark, C. Nolan, A. H. Rubenstein, E. Margoliash, B. Aten, and P. E. Oyer. 1969. Proinsulin and the biosynthesis of insulin. Rec. Progr. Hormone Res. 25:207-282. Steiner, D. F., J. L. Clark, C. Nolan, A. H. Rubenstein, E. Margoliash, F. Melani, and P. E. Oyer. 1970. The biosynlhesis of insulin and some speculations regarding the pathogenesis of human diabetes, p. 123-132. In E. Cerasi and R. Luft [ed.], The pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus. Proc. 13th Nobel Symp. Almqvist and Wiksell, Stockholm. Steiner, D. F., D. D. Cunningham, L. Spigelman, and B. Aten. 1967. Insulin biosynthesis: evidence for a precursor. Science 157:697-700. Steiner, D. F., W. Kemmler, J. L. Clark, P. E. Oyer, and A. H. Rubenstein. 1972. The biosynthesis of insulin, p. 175-198. In D. F. Steiner and N. Freinkel [ed.], Handbook of physiology. Vol. 1. The endocrine pancreas. Williams and Wilkins Co., Baltimore. Steiner, D. F., and P. E. Oyer. 1967. The biosynthesis of insulin and a probable precursor of insulin by a human islet cell adenoma. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 57:473-480. Trakatellis, A. C, and G. P. Schwartz. 1970. Biosynthesis of insulin in anglerfish islets. Nature 225:548-549. Weitzel, V., W. Stratling, J. Hahn, and O. Martini. 1967. Insulin vom Schleimfisch (Myxine glutinosa; Cyclostomata). Hoppe-Seyler's Z. Physiol. Chem. 348:525-532. Wilson, S. 1969. The antigenic loci in insulin, p. 403-405. In J. Ostman and R. D. G. Milner [ed.]. Diabetes. Proc. 6th Congr. Int. Diabetes Fed., Stockholm, 1967. Excerpta Med. Int. Congr. Ser. No. 172, Amsterdam. Yamaji, K., K. Tada, and A. C. Trakatellis. 1972. On the biosynthesis of insulin in anglerfish islets. J. Biol. Chem. 247:4080-4088.