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J. Cell Sri. 48, 1-18 (1981) Printed in Great Britain © Company of Biologists Limited 1981 EFFECTS OF INSULIN AND ANCHORAGE ON HEPATOCYTIC PROTEIN METABOLISM AND AMINO ACID TRANSPORT ALESSANDRO POLI*, PAUL B. GORDON, PER E. SCHWARZE, BJ0RN GRINDE AND PER O. SEGLENf Department of Tissue Culture, Norsk Hydro's Institute for Cancer Research, The Norwegian Radium Hospital, Montebello, Oslo 3, Norway SUMMARY Insulin partially inhibits endogenous protein degradation in isolated hepatocytes. The inhibition seems to specifically affect the lysosomal pathway of degradation, since it is not additive to the effects of lysosome inhibitors such as propylamine and leupeptin. The insulin effect is potentiated by intermediate concentrations of amino acids, but is largely abolished at high amino acid concentrations which suppress degradation maximally, suggesting that the hormone may exert its effect indirectly by acting upon the more basal amino acid control mechanism. Glucagon, which stimulates protein degradation, similarly displays its effect only in the presence of intermediate amino acid concentrations. The insulin inhibition is not affected by the aminotransferase inhibitor, aminooxyacetate, indicating that it is not due to interference with amino acid metabolism. Protein synthesis furthermore does not seem to be required, since a significant insulin effect can be seen in the presence of the protein synthesis inhibitor, cycloheximide. The issue is, however, complicated by the fact that cycloheximide itself inhibits protein degradation to approximately the same extent as does insulin. Insulin stimulates uptake of the amino acid a-aminoisobutyrate (AIB), but not the uptake of valine, indicating a specific stimulation of 'A'-type transport. Cycloheximide similarly stimulates AIB uptake, without completely obfuscating the transport effect of insulin. Neither protein synthesis, protein degradation, amino acid transport, nor the effects of insulin were affected by cell-to-substratum anchorage (attachment and spreading) in any detectable way. INTRODUCTION Hepatocytic protein degradation has been shown to be subject to regulation by the pancreatic hormones - insulin and glucagon - both in the perfused rat liver (Seglen, 1968; Mortimore & Mondon, 1970; Woodside, Ward & Mortimore, 1974; Schworer & Mortimore, 1979) and in isolated rat hepatocytes (Gunn et al. 1977; Hopgood, Clark & Ballard, 1980; Grammeltvedt & Berg, 1976; Seglen, Gordon & Poli, 1980). The hormones seem to act at the level of cellular autophagy, glucagon stimulating and insulin suppressing the formation of autophagic vacuoles (Ashford & Porter, 1962; Deter, 1971; Pfeifer, 1978; Schworer & Mortimore, 1979). Autophagy in hepatocytes is also controlled by the inhibitory effect of amino acids • Present address: Institute of Comparative Anatomy, University of Bologna, 40100 Bologna, Italy. f To whom correspondence should be addressed. 2 A. Poli and others (Woodside & Mortimore, 1972; Mortimore & Schworer, 1977; Hopgood, Clark & Ballard, 1979; Seglen et al. 1980a), and there are strong indications for the stimulation by glucagon being mediated by a decrease in intracellular amino acid levels (Schworer & Mortimore, 1979). In the present report, we have investigated the possible role of amino acids in the inhibition of protein degradation by insulin in isolated hepatocytes, examining several of the processes which influence intracellular amino acid levels (transport, metabolism, protein synthesis). Since some of these processes have been reported to be anchorage-dependent in cultured cells (Otsuka & Moskowitz, 1975, 1978; Profit & Strauss, 1977; Benecke, Ben-Ze'ev & Penman, 1978) we have, furthermore, looked at the role of anchorage for basal as well as for insulinaffected protein metabolism and amino acid transport. MATERIALS AND METHODS Isolated hepatocytes were prepared from the liver of i6-h-starved, male Wistar rats (250-300 g) by the method of collagenase perfusion (Seglen, 1976a). r o - i ^ x i o 1 cells (8-10 mg wet wt) were suspended in 2 ml attachment buffer, i.e. suspension buffer (Seglen, 1976a) fortified with 20 raM pyruvate, 18/iM (iomg/ml) garamycin and Mg 1+ to a final concentration of 2 mM. The cells were seeded in 6-cm polystyrene tissue-culture dishes, and incubated at 37 CC for up to 8 h. In some experiments a balanced amino acid mixture (Seglen, 19766) was added to the medium at various multiples of the 'normal' concentration. Incubations were terminated by the addition of 0-5 ml ice-cold perchloric acid (10%, w/v) or by replacement of the medium with 4 ml ice-cold buffer or 09 % NaCl (in the case of transport studies). Unless otherwise indicated, culture dishes pretreated with collagen (Gjessing & Seglen, 1980) were used. Collagen (Sigma type I) adsorbs readily to polystyrene, giving a substratum which will support the attachment and spreading of hepatocytes in a protein-free medium. Similarly prepared substrata of albumin, asialofetuin, gelatin, polylysine or serum, which have different attachment-supporting properties (Gjessing & Seglen, 1980), were used in experiments on anchorage dependence. Protein degradation was measured as the release of [14C]valine from protein pre-labelled in vivo 24 h before cell isolation (Seglen, Grinde & Solheim, 1979), and protein synthesis as the incorporation of [14C]valine of constant specific radioactivity (Seglen & Solheim, 1978 a). The uptake of amino acids ([a- 14 C]aminoisobutyrate, 1 mM and 63-125 nCi/ml; [ u C]valine, I mM and 250 nCi/ml) was measured as the accumulation of intracellular acid-soluble radioactivity (Seglen & Solheim, 19786). [14C]valine (CFB 75) and [a- 14 C]aminoisobutyrate (CFA 203) were purchased from the Radiochemical Centre, Amersham, Bucks, England. Garamycin was from Schering, Kenilworth, N.J., U.S.A.; and all biochemicals from Sigma Chem. Co., St Louis, MO, U.S.A. RESULTS Amino acid-dependent inhibition of protein degradation by insulin Insulin had a moderate inhibitory effect on protein degradation in hepatocyte monolayers (Fig. 1), as previously reported (Gunn et al. 1977; Hopgood et al. 1980). Inhibition was maximal at io~7 M (100 nM); at higher concentrations the hormone seemed to be less effective. The inclusion of albumin (1-5 %) in the medium shifted the dose-response curve about an order of magnitude to the left, without changing the maximum effect (not shown), indicating that considerable destruction of the hormone takes place in these serum-free, freshly seeded cultures. Protein metabolism in hepatocytes 3 The insulin effect displayed in Fig. 1 was obtained in a medium containing amino acids (7-5 x normal plasma concentrations), which by themselves suppress protein degradation (Woodside & Mortimore, 1972; Seglen et al. 1980 a). Hopgood et al. (1977) found the effects of insulin and amino acids to be approximately additive, and in Fig. 2 it is shown that insulin inhibits degradation over a wide range of amino acid concentrations. However, the insulin effect is significantly smaller at very high and very low amino acid concentrations, suggesting that it is somehow dependent upon amino acids. 10" 10"* 5 1CT 10" Insulin concentration, M Fig. 1. Concentration-dependent inhibition of hepatocytic protein degradation by insulin. Isolated hepatocytes were incubated in collagen-treated tissue culture dishes for 3 h at 37 °C in the presence of amino acids (7-5 x normal concentrations, cf. Seglen, 19766) and insulin at the concentration indicated. The mean rate of protein degradation was measured as the net release of ["Cjvaline from radioactive protein during the entire incubation period, and expressed as % relative to the hormone-free control (at 2 o %/h). Each value is the mean ± s.E. of 6 cell samples from 3 different experiments. In addition to the complete amino acid mixture used in Figs. 1 and 2, a variety of more simple amino acid combinations have been tried together with insulin. Seven amino acids (leucine, tyrosine, phenylalanine, histidine, tryptophan, asparagine and glutamine) are particularly active as inhibitors of protein degradation (Seglen et al. 1980 a), and insulin has been found to potentiate the effect of all inhibitory combinations of these, except when the maximally obtainable inhibition is approached. Some examples are given in Table 1. The potentiation by insulin of the effect of leucine alone is particularly striking, cf. also Table 3. 4 A. Poli and others Stimulation of protein degradation by glucagon is also amino acid-dependent Schworer & Mortimore (1979) found that the stimulation of protein degradation in the perfused liver by glucagon was strongly amino acid-dependent, and Table 2 shows that this is also the case in isolated hepatocytes. Glucagon alone ( I O ~ 7 M ) did not stimulate degradation at all, but reduced the inhibitory effect of an amino acid mixture ('old' mixture 10x normal plasma levels). Insulin (io~7 M) had the 5 10 15 Amino acid concentration, x N Fig. 2. Influence of amino acids on the inhibition of protein degradation by insulin. Isolated hepatocytes were incubated for 3 h with various amino acid concentrations (multiples of the normal concentration given by Seglen, 19766) in the presence ( • ) or absence (O) of insulin, io~7 M. The rate of protein degradation during the incubation was measured as the release of [14C]valine from radioactive protein, and expressed as %/h. Each value is the mean of 6 cell samples from 2 different experiments. opposite effect, which was not significantly reduced by the simultaneous presence of glucagon at an equimolar concentration. Hopgood et al. (1980) found that a 10-fold molar excess of glucagon was required to prevent the effect of io" 8 M insulin. As was the case with insulin, the effect of glucagon tended to disappear at very high amino acid concentrations. The 'new' amino acid mixture in Table 2 contains particularly large amounts of the 7 most degradation-inhibitory amino acids and with this mixture none of the hormones produced any significant effect. Glucocorticoid hormone (dexamethasone) was ineffective under all conditions tested. Methylamine, a lysosomotropic amine, and leupeptin, a protease inhibitor, are Protein metabolism in hepatocytes 5 effective and relatively specific inhibitors of lysosomal protein degradation (Seglen et al. 1979). As shown in Table 2, protein degradation in the hepatocytes was strongly inhibited by these two agents, and the remaining degradation, thought to be nonlysosomal (Seglen et al. 1979), was not affected by insulin or glucagon. The pancreatic hormones therefore seem to act selectively upon the lysosomal pathway of protein degradation, in accordance with their known effect on cellular autophagy (Deter, 1971; Pfeifer, 1978). Table 1. Effect of insulin on inhibition of protein degradation by various ammo acid combinations Amino acids present Aminn flcifl concentration Inhibition of protein degradation, % ( Leu Tyr Phe o — IO X 10 X + + + + — + — + + + + — + + + + — — + + + His Trp Asn Gin IS — - — — — — — — Insulin + Insulin Expt. i IOX IOX Expt. 2 o 5 mM i mM IOX S mM — — + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + — — + + + — — + + + — — + + + — — + + + — — + + + — — + — 0 48 57 60 7i 9 65 72 74 82 0 12 16 39 67 69 76 46 SO 68 Hepatocytes were incubated in collagen-treated tissue culture dishes for 3 h at 37 °C with or without insulin (io~7) and with different combinations of amino acids, either at 10 x the concentrations of the physiological mixture (Seglen, 19766) or at the molarity indicated. Protein degradation was measured as the net release of [l*C]valine from radioactive protein. The effect of the amino acids, or amino acids plus insulin, was expressed as % inhibition of the control degradation in unsupplemented medium (4-2 %/h in expt. 1; 4-6 %/h in expt. 2). Each value is the mean of 2 cell samples. Inhibition of protein degradation by insulin may be independent of amino acid metabolism It has been suggested that the stimulation of hepatocytic protein degradation by glucagon reflects an enhanced metabolic utilization of amino acids (Schworer & Mortimore, 1979). To assess the role of amino acid metabolism in the mechanism of action of insulin, the aminotransferase inhibitor aminooxyacetate (Rognstad & Clark, 1974; Seglen & Solheim, 1978 a) was used. This drug will block the initial step in the metabolism of the majority of amino acids, and has been found to inhibit, e.g., hepatocytic gluconeogenesis (Rognstad & Clark, 1974). However, as shown in Table 3, aminooxyacetate had no effect on either the basal protein degradation or the inhibition by amino acids and/or insulin. It is therefore unlikely that amino acid metabolism is involved in the response to insulin; indeed the general lack of effect 6 A. Poli and others Table 2. Effects of glucagon, insulin and ghicorticoid hormone on protein degradation in the presence of amino acids and lysosome inhibitors Inhibition of protein degradation, % Amino acids Expt. 1 Control Dexamethasone, IO'M Glucagon, io~7 M Insulin, io~7 M Insulin + glucagon Expt. 2 Control Glucagon Insulin Insulin + glucagon Methylamine, Leupeptin, Old mixture New None (10 x) mixture 10 mM 0-25 mM 0 76 10 65 63 44 82 81 82 74 73 75 73 83 2 7 82 14 77 0 56 39 75 0 8 4 . 64 65 68 80 72 70 7i Isolated hepatocytes were incubated in collagen-treated tissue culture dishes for 3 h at 37 °C with hormones and inhibitors as indicated. Two types of amino acid mixture were used: the 'old' mixture, 10 x concentrated (Seglen, 19766) or a new mixture, containing additionally elevated levels of leucine, 2-5 mM; asparagine, 5 mM; glutamine, 5 mM; phenylalanine, 2 mM; tyrosine, 2 HIM; and histidine, 1 mM. The control rate of protein degradation in unsupplemented medium, measured as the release of [14C]valine from radioactive protein, was 3-8 %/h in expt. 1 and 3'7%/h in expt. 2. The total effect of the various additions was expressed as % inhibition of the control degradation. Each value is the mean of 2 cell samples. Table 3. Effect of the aminotransferase inhibitor, aminooxyacetate, on the inhibition of protein degradation by insulin Inhibition of protein degradatior 1, — Aminooxyacetate % + Aminooxyacetate — Insulin + Insulin — Insulin + Insulin None 0 7 0 Gly Pro Gin Leu 0 9 3 7 7 0 13 13 0 10 0 28 32 81 7 15 26 29 Amino acids 0 3 Pro + Met + Phe + Trp 14 67 67 78 Complete amino acid mixture (10 x ) Isolated hepatocytes were incubated in collagen-treated tissue culture dishes for 3 h at 37 °C with various combinations of insulin, I O " ' M ; aminooxyacetate, 5 mM; and amino acids, individually or in combination, at 10 x the concentrations of the mixture previously given (Seglen, 19766). Protein degradation was measured as the release of [14C]valine from radioactive protein, and the effect of amino acids and insulin expressed as percentage inhibition of the control degradation in the absence (4-6 %/h) or presence (49 %/h) of aminooxyacetate. The effect of the latter alone was regarded as non-significant. Each value is the mean of 2 cell samples. Protein metabolism in hepatocytes 1 2 Incubation time, h 3 4 Fig. 3. Time-course of inhibition of protein degradation by insulin and cycloheximide. Isolated hepatocytes were incubated at 37 °C in collagen-treated tissue culture dishes for the length of time indicated, and protein degradation measured as the release of [14C]valine from radioactive protein. D, No additions; O, amino acids (5 x normal); Ai amino acids + insulin, io~7 M; 0 , amino acids + cycloheximide, io~4 M; A, amino acids + insulin + cycloheximide; • , propylamine, 10 mM. Each value is the mean of 3 cell samples. Table 4. Effect of the protein synthesis inhibitor, cycloheximide, on protein degradation in the presence and absence of insulin % Inhibition of protein degradation by Expt. no. Amino acids Insulin Cycloheximide Insulin + cycloheximide Significance 1 + Cw.C P < o-ooi 27 ± 2 (5) 46 ±2 (5) P < o-ooi 46 ±2 (5) 54 ±2 (5) 29 ±3 (S) 39 ±3 (5) o-01 < P < O'O2 SX 3 N.S. 44 ±3 (3) 43 ± 3 (3) 4 5* Isolated hepatocytes were incubated in collagen-treated tissue culture dishes for 3 h at 37 CC witlvinsulin (io~7 M), cycloheximide (io~s M) and intermediate concentrations of amino acids (5 x normal, cf. Seglen, 19766) as indicated. Protein degradation was measured as the release of ["CJvaline from radioactive protein. The control degradation rates without hormone and inhibitor were 46 and 3-8 %/h in the absence of amino acids (expts. 1 and 2, respectively), and 2-8 and 33 %/h in the presence of amino acids (expts. 3 and 4, respectively). The effects of insulin and cyclohexamide were expressed as % inhibition of the respective controls. Each value is the mean ± S.E. of the no. of cell samples given in parentheses. The significance of the insulin (I) effect in the presence of cycloheximide (C) has been calculated by the use of Student's t-test. N.S. means not significant. 1 0 2 0 13 ±2 (5) 13 ±4 (5) 30 ±2 (5) 28 ± s (3) 8 A. Poli and others of aminooxyacetate may suggest that amino acid metabolism is usually not a ratelimiting factor for hepatocytic protein degradation. The role of protein synthesis: effect of cycloheximide Cycloheximide, a strong inhibitor of hepatocytic protein synthesis (Seglen, 1977), was previously found not to affect protein degradation in i-h experiments with isolated hepatocytes (Seglen et al. 1979); however, in long-term experiments with perfused livers (Woodside, 1976; Khairallah & Mortimore, 1976) or hepatocyte monolayers (Hopgood et al. 1980) an inhibitory effect was observed. As shown in Fig- 3, cycloheximide inhibited protein degradation significantly, but only after a 60-min lag. At the concentration used here (io~3 M), cycloheximide inhibited protein synthesis without a lag, and essentially completely (more than 95 %, as tested in separate experiments). Insulin had an effect on protein degradation very similar to that of cycloheximide; furthermore, an additional inhibition by insulin was evident even in the presence of cycloheximide. The 2 compounds together inhibited protein degradation almost as strongly as did the lysosomotropic inhibitor propylamine, suggesting a virtually complete suppression of the lysosomal pathway (Seglen et al. 1979)The magnitude of the cycloheximide effect varied considerably from experiment to experiment; unlike the insulin effect it was prominent both in the presence of moderate amounts of amino acids and in an amino acid-free medium (Table 4). In most experiments an additional effect of insulin was observed; however, the latter tended to disappear when the total inhibition became large. The inhibition of protein degradation by insulin thus does not appear to require protein synthesis, but the hormone and the synthesis inhibitor seem to affect degradation by related mechanisms. The cycloheximide effect, like the insulin effect, is not seen in the presence of lysosomotropic amines or at a very high amino acid concentration (A. Kovacs & P. O. Seglen, unpublished experiments), suggesting an amino acid-mediated inhibition of the lysosomal degradation pathway. The common denominator for insulin and cycloheximide could therefore very well be suppression of cellular autophagy by amino acids, as suggested by Hopgood et al. (1980). Effect of insulin and cycloheximide on amino acid transport It has been shown that the addition of insulin as well as glucagon to hepatocyte suspensions or cultures selectively stimulates amino acid uptake by the 'A' system, as exemplified by the use of the non-metabolizable model substrate a-aminoisobutyrate (AIB) (Kletzien et al. 1976; Pariza et al. 1976; Fehlmann, Le Cam & Freychet, 1979). The stimulation of AIB uptake by insulin is demonstrated in Fig. 4A, while Fig. 4B shows that the hormone had no effect on the uptake of valine, which is transported by the ' L' system. AIB uptake is inhibited by a mixture of amino acids whether these are present outside (cis inhibition) or inside (trans inhibition) the cells (Kelley & Potter, 1978), as shown in Table 5. It is therefore conceivable that a reduced formation of amino Protein metabolism in hepatocytes 120 180 240 Incubation time, min 10 15 Fig. 4. Effect of insulin on amino acid transport. Isolated hepatocytes were preincubated in collagen-treated tissue culture dishes for 3 h at 37 °C in the presence ( • ) or absence ( O) of insulin (io~7 M), then re-incubated under the same conditions for the length of time indicated. The latter period was used for the measurement of: A, transport of a-aminoisobutyrate (AIB), measured as the continuous uptake of [14C]AIB (1 mM; i2SnCi/ml) into the cells; andB, transport of valine, measured as the uptake of ["C]valine (1 mM; 250 nCi/ml). Each value is the mean of 2 cell samples. Table 5. cis and trans inhibition of a-atninoisobutyrate (AIB) uptake by amino acids AIB uptake (relative) Preincubation ][ i h — Amino acids + Amino acids (iox) — Amino acids + Amino acids( 1 0 x ) IOO± 2 52 ± I 50 ±3 After 3 h in culture (collagen-treated dishes at 37 °C) hepatocytes were preincubated for 1 h in the absence or presence of amino acids (10 x normal); then washed 3 x at o°C and re-incubated 1 h with or without amino acids. [UC]AIB (1 mM; nCi/ml) was added during the last hour, and its uptake measured as the accumulation of acid-soluble radioactivity in washed (3 x at o °C) cells. Uptake rates are expressed as % of the control (preincubated and incubated without amino acids), which was 928 cpm/sample (106 mg cells). Each value is the mean ± S.E. of s cell samples. 70 ±2 acids (e.g. by suppression of proteolysis) might play a part in the stimulation of AIB transport by insulin, but this possibility has not been further examined. Cycloheximide has been reported to inhibit the effect of insulin on hepatocytic AIB uptake (Kletzien et al. 1976; Fehlmann et al. 1979). As shown in Table 6, we found the effect of cycloheximide to be rather complex. The inhibitor alone stimulated AIB uptake in all the experiments. The stimulation by insulin was unaffected or slightly reduced; however, because of the stimulation by cycloheximide itself, the relative effect of insulin was strongly, but not completely, suppressed. The insulin io A. Poli and others effect would therefore seem not to require protein synthesis per se, but interference with protein synthesis apparently affects AIB transport so strongly as to partially obscure the hormone effect. The possibility should be considered that cycloheximide and insulin may have related mechanisms of action, as was suggested for their effect on protein degradation. Table 6. Stimulation of a-aminoisobutyrate (AIB) uptake by insulin and cycloheximide AIB uptake (relative) Incubation time, h Expt. i 5 Expt. 2 2 7 Expt. 3 2 7 — Cycloheximide + Cycloheximide — Insulin + Insulin — Insulin + Insulin Significance I + Ctt.C ioo±4 334 ± H 235 ±9 382 ±11 P < o-ooi ioo±4 IOI ± 2 162 ± 3 234 ±13 I38±3 120 ±3 I39±5 165 ± 4 N.S. p < 0001 ioo±s 8S±3 165 ± 1 207 ± 1 142 ±6 i38±5 176 ±2 I7i±3 p < 0005 p < 0-005 Isolated hepatocytes were incubated in collagen-treated (expts. 1 and 2) or albumin-treated (expt. 3) tissue culture dishes at 37 °C for the length of time indicated (up to 7 h), with or without insulin (io~7 M) and cycloheximide (io~* M). [ M C ] A I B (I ITIM; 63 nCi/ml) was added during the last hour, and its uptake measured as the accumulation of acid-soluble radioactivity in the cells. The uptake rates are expressed as % of the values in insulin- and cycloheximide-free controls at the earliest time points measured (this control uptake averaged 1688 cpm per 10-mg sample, and did not change significantly with incubation time). Each value is the mean ± s.E. of 4-5 cell samples. The significance of the insulin effect in the presence of cycloheximide has been calculated using Student's t-test. The effects of insulin and cycloheximide both appeared to be independent of cell-to-substratum anchorage, since qualitatively similar results were obtained with cells attached and spread on collagen (expts. 1 and 2 of Table 6) and with nonattached cells on an albumin substratum (expt. 3 of Table 6). To investigate further to what extent the action of insulin might be anchorage-independent, the influence of several different substrata on protein degradation and amino acid transport was studied. Anchorage-independence of insulin effects on protein degradation and amino acid transport Hepatocytes in short-term suspension have been found to respond poorly to insulin (Seglen, 1977; Hopgood et al. 1979), whereas monolayers or long-term suspensions of cellular aggregates respond well (Jeejeebhoy et al. 1975; Crane & Miller, 1977; Tanaka, Kishi & Ishihara, 1979; Hopgood et al. 1980). This could have a trivial cause, such as proteolytic destruction of insulin and/or its receptors by proteases released from damaged cells in the vigorously shaken short-term suspensions (cf. the demonstration of such a phenomenon in fat cell suspensions; Protein metabolism in hepatocytes II Fig. 5. Morphology of hepatocytes on different substrata. Isolated hepatocytes were incubated for 4 h at 37 °C in tissue culture dishes pretreated with: A, bovine serum albumin (cells not attached); B, polylysine (cells attached, but not spread); c, foetal calf serum; or D, calf skin collagen, x 360. Gliemann & Sonne, 1978). However, it would also seem possible that insulin effects might be dependent on anchorage of the cells, either to each other (in aggregates) or to a substratum. Indications for the anchorage-dependence of amino acid transport as well as of protein degradation have been found in other cell types (Otsuka & Moskowitz, 1975, 1978; Pofit & Strauss, 1977) and the reported time-dependent increase in the amino acid uptake capacity of freshly seeded hepatocyte cultures (Kletzien et al. 1976) might be accordant with anchorage control. It is known that internalization and degradation of insulin-receptor complexes (down-regulation of receptors) takes place in isolated hepatocytes (Le Cam, Maxfield, Willingham & Pastan, 1979; Carpentier et al. 1979), and the anchorage of receptors to a substratum could be a mechanism by which to prevent such a decrease in hormone sensitivity. By using protein substrata with different abilities to support hepatocyte attachment and spreading (Gjessing & Seglen, 1980), the short-term effect of anchorage on various hepatocytic properties can be investigated. We have used adsorbed monomolecular layers of bovine serum albumin (Fig. 5 A), to which hepatocytes do not attach; gelatin, asialofetuin and polylysine (Fig. 5 B), which support attachment, but A. Poli and others 12 •a o 4 - 2 - Incubation time, h Fig. 6. Anchorage-independent inhibition of protein degradation by insulin. Isolated hepatocytes were incubated at 37 °C with amino acids (5 x normal), in the absence (open symbols) or presence (filled symbols) of insulin, io~7 M. The tissue culture dishes were pretreated with albumin (O, • ) , polylysine (A, A) or collagen (D, • ) to provide non-attached, attached but non-spread, and well-spread cells, respectively. Protein degradation was measured as the release of [14C]valine from radioactive protein. Each value is the mean of 2 cell samples. not cell spreading; fibronectin in the form of foetal calf serum (Fig. 5c), and collagen (Fig. 5 D), both of which support attachment as well a9 spreading. As shown in Fig. 6, protein degradation proceeded at the same rate in hepatocytes cultured on either albumin, polylysine or collagen, and insulin stimulated degradation to the same extent on all 3 substrata. Hepatocytes therefore do not appear to have anchorage-dependent control of protein degradation, at least not on a short-term basis. Similarly, the uptake of AIB was stimulated 2- to 3-fold by insulin on all substrata tested (Table 7), i.e. independently of anchorage. To see if quantitative differences could be detected, non-attached (on albumin) and well-spread cells (on collagen) were compared in a series of experiments. The basal AIB uptake (i.e. in the absence of insulin) was found to be similar on the 2 substrata, and insulin, continuously present for 5 h, stimulated uptake to the same extent in both cases (Table 7). Hormonal stimulation of AIB uptake is a reversible process, and upon removal of the hormone the uptake rate gradually returns to the basal value (ParLza et al. 1976). To see if anchorage to the substratum might retard intemalization and degradation of the insulin-receptor complex, and thus maintain the hormone effect for a longer period, a 2-h pulse of insulin was given, followed by a 3-h chase in hormone-free Protein metabolism in hepatocytes 13 medium. As shown in Table 7, some effect of insulin persisted after this regimen, but no significant difference between non-attached (on albumin) and well-spread cells (on collagen) could be detected. Our studies on AIB uptake therefore fail to provide any evidence for anchorage-dependent short-term control of amino acid transport in hepatocytes. Table 7. Influence of cell-substratum anchorage on the stimulation of a-aminoisobutyrate {AIB) uptake by insulin AIB uptake (relative) Type of anchorage Substratum Albumin Polylysine Serum Collagen Attached + Spread ; No hormone Insulin continuously Insulin pulse IOO IOO IOO IOO 242 ± 29 (6) 298 260 257 ± 24 (6) 135 ±19 (5) 154 ±12 (5) Isolated hepatocytes were incubated for 5 h on various protein substrata, i.e. in tissue culture dishes prerreated with the protein indicated. Insulin (io~7 M) was either absent, present throughout the incubation, or given as a pulse during the first 2 h and removed for the remainder of the incubation. The uptake of [14C]AIB (1 HIM; 63 nCi/ml) was measured during the last 2 h of incubation. The basal rate of uptake on each substratum was defined as 100% (no significant difference between the various substrata could be found), and the uptake in the presence of insulin expressed as % relative to the hormone-free controls. The values for polylysine and serum are taken from a single experiment (each value being the mean of 3 cell samples), whereas the values for albumin and collagen are the means of 5-6 different experiments with 3-5 parallel samples in each experiment (s.E. determined on the basis of the experimental means only). Anchorage-independence of protein synthesis Protein synthesis has been reported to be an anchorage-dependent process in certain cultured cells (Otsuka & Moskowitz, 1978; Benecke et al. 1978). We therefore measured the rates of protein synthesis after incubation of hepatocytes on different substrata for various lengths of time. The synthesis rates were constant during the first 8 h in culture, but fell during the next 8 h in the relatively simple, sub-optimal medium used. No significant rate differences could be observed between substrata which gave no attachment (albumin), attachment without spreading (asialofetuin and gelatin) or both attachment and spreading (fibronectin and collagen) (Table 8). Thus, as in the case of protein degradation and amino acid transport, our experiments provide no evidence for any short-term anchorage-dependence of hepatocytic protein synthesis. DISCUSSION Evidence from several sources suggests that the primary control of hepatocytic autophagy may be exerted by amino acids (Woodside & Mortimore, 1972; Mortimore & Schworer, 1977; Schworer & Mortimore, 1979; Hopgood et al. 1979, 1980; Seglen et al. 1980a). Only a limited number of amino acids are involved in such control, and in 14 A. Poli and others our previous work with isolated hepatocytes we found the 7 amino acids leucine, phenylalanine, tyrosine, tryptophan, histidine, asparagine and glutamine to be particularly effective (Seglen et al. 1980a). Their effects were to a large extent additive, suggesting a complex mechanism of regulation, although certain simple combinations such as asparagine plus leucine could apparently elicit a nearly complete response. Intracellular amino acid levels can be altered by interference with protein synthesis, protein degradation, amino acid metabolism or amino acid transport, and it is very likely that several of these processes are involved in the secondary control of autophagy, e.g. by hormones. Glucagon, which stimulates hepatic autophagy, appears to do so by depressing the intracellular level of glutamine (Schworer & Mortimore, 1979) one of the most active degradation-inhibitory amino acids (Seglen et al. 1980a). Table 8. Protein synthesis in hepatocytes cultured on different substrata Rate of protein synthesis, % / h Non-attached Attached, non-spread Culture time, h Albumin Asialofetuin Gelatin 2 070 4 8 O7S 073 043 0-69 063 078 066 073 047 061 16 o-8o Attached, spread Fibronectin 0-69 072 070 047 Collagen 063 076 070 058 Hepatocytes were cultured for up to 16 h, in medium supplemented with amino acids (7 x normal concentration, cf. Seglen, 1976ft) on substrata of various proteins adsorbed to polystyrene tissue-culture dishes. At the times indicated, the total protein content as well as the incorporation of ["C]valine (10 mM; 50 mCi/mol) into protein during 1 h was measured, and the rate of protein synthesis calculated and expressed as %/h. Each value is the mean of 3 dishes. Although the exact biochemical mechanism remains a conjecture, glucagon is known both to stimulate gluconeogenesis, for which glutamine is an effective substrate, and to activate hepatic glutaminase (Joseph & McGivan, 1978). The stimulatory effect of glucagon on amino acid uptake (Pariza et al. 1976; Fehlmann et al. 1979) is apparently insufficient to counter its effect on glutamine metabolism. Insulin inhibits hepatic autophagy (Pfeifer, 1978) and the amino acid dependence of this inhibition would seem to indicate that, like the glucagon effect, it might be mediated by some of the processes which influence intracellular amino acid concentrations. However, neither insulin nor glucagon have any effects on over-all protein synthesis during the time intervals used in these experiments (Seglen et al. 19806), and the lack of an effect of the aminotransferase inhibitor aminooxyacetate suggests that at least the metabolic pathways starting with a transamination are not involved in the action of insulin. The stimulation of amino acid transport by insulin has been shown to be due to an increase in the amounts of 2 different transport proteins with A-system characteristics (Fehlmann et al. 1979); however, this induction is protein synthesis-dependent and therefore completely blocked by cycloheximide. Protein metabolism in hepatocytes 15 Since at least part of the inhibition of protein degradation by insulin appears to be cycloheximide-resistant, stimulation of amino acid uptake by known mechanisms cannot fully account for the effect of the hormone. Interpretation of insulin effects in the presence of cycloheximide is complicated by the fact that cycloheximide itself both inhibits protein degradation and stimulates amino acid uptake under the experimental conditions used. The effect on degradation disappears at high amino acid concentrations, and could therefore conceivably be mediated by amino acids. Inhibition of protein synthesis by cycloheximide might be expected to result in some elevation of intracellular amino acid levels; however, under the present conditions this effect would be very small because the synthesis rate is only about one-tenth of the degradation rate (Seglen et al. 1979). In the perfused liver, cycloheximide was found not to elevate intracellular amino acid concentrations under conditions where it inhibited protein degradation (Woodside, 1976). The fact that inhibition of degradation by cycloheximide is seen even in the absence of amino acids further suggests that it is not secondary to the stimulation of amino acid uptake by the drug. The inverse relationship would seem more likely: other investigators have found that cycloheximide either inhibits or has no effect on AIB transport (Kletzien et al. 1976; Pariza et al. 1976; Fehlmann et al. 1979); the paradoxical stimulation seen in our experiments may therefore be related to the particularly high rate of protein degradation. The amino acid efflux thus created may exert a significant /rani-inhibitory effect on AIB uptake, which can be partially relieved when cycloheximide reduces the degradation rate. A similar mechanism may conceivably contribute to the effect of insulin on AIB uptake. While the mechanisms of insulin's effects on protein degradation and AIB transport remain uncertain, our results indicate clearly that neither of these is dependent on cellular anchorage. Some influence of anchorage on the effects of insulin might have been expected on morphological grounds: the patchy alignment along active stress fibres of both the coated pits involved in insulin receptor internalization (Anderson et al. 1978; Goldstein, Anderson & Brown, 1979) and the fibronexuses involved in cellular attachment (Hynes & Destree, 1978; Singer, 1979) suggest that the 2 organelles may be identical or related. On the other hand, since transmission of the hormone signal does not require receptor internalization (Le Cam et al. 1979), interference with the latter process would be expected to have only moderate long-term effects (reduced 'down-regulation' of receptors). The absence of such effects of anchorage in the present experiments may indicate either that anchorage does not significantly retard receptor internalization, or that the effect is not of sufficient magnitude to affect the hormone response. 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