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Insulin and glucose uptake in muscle and adipose tissue Aleksi Huuha & Iiro Repo Introduction • Insulin • Peptide hormone • Anabolic, increases the storage of glucose, amino acids and fatty acids • Glucagon • Antagonist of insulin • Peptide hormone • Catabolic, releases glucose, amino acids and fatty acids from the storages • Glucose transporters (GLUT) • Membrane proteins • Multiple different types Insulin • Insulin is a polypeptide containing two chains of amino acids linked by disulfide bridges • It is synthesized as a part of larger preprohormone in the rough ER of the β-cells of Langerhans islets in pancreas • Preproinsulin is processed and proinsulin is formed • Then proinsulin is cleaved internally at two sides to yield insulin and C peptide (connecting peptide) • Insulin is transported to the Golgi apparatus and packaged into vesicles, which are stored inside the β-cells Glucose transporters • Glucose mostly enters cells by facilitated diffusion, which is mediated by glucose transporters (GLUTs) • GLUTs are transmembrane proteins that span the cell membrane 12 times and have their N- and C-terminals inside the cell • Insulin stimulates glucose uptake in muscle, adipose and some other tissues by increasing the number of GLUTs in the cell membrane • GLUT2 is the glucose transporter for example in β-cells of Langerhans islets in pancreas • GLUT4 is the glucose transporter in muscle and adipose tissue that is stimulated by insulin Insulin secretion Glucose concentration increases in blood activates secretion of insulin from β-cells of Langerhans islets in pancreas • When the glucose concentration in blood increases, glucose is transported into the β-cells through GLUT2-transporters by facilitated diffusion • Glucose is phosphorylated by glucokinase into glucose-6phosphate, which is then used for ATP production • ATP induces the closing of K+channels, which leads to depolarisation of the cell and opening of Ca2+-channels • Ca2+ induces exocytosis of insulin to the bloodstream Insulin receptor • Insulin receptor is a tetramer, which consists of two α- and two β-subunits α α • It has a molecular weight of approximately 340 kDa • Binding of insulin triggers autophosphorylation of the β-subunits on tyrosine residues, which in turn triggers phosphorylations and dephosphorylations of some cytoplasmic proteins • Insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS-1) is one of the mediators of the insulin effects in humans β β Glucose uptake • When the concentration of glucose is high and the insulin receptors are activated by insulin, GLUT4-transporters stored in vesicles are transferred to the cell membrane which leads to uptake of glucose • Glucose is stored in muscles as glycogen and in adipose tissue as fat • ~ 90 % of insulin-stimulated glucose uptake occurs in skeletal muscle • ~ 10% in adipose tissue Effects of insulin Insulin resistance • In insulin resistance the insulin signal transduction is dysfunctional • Alterations in receptor expression, binding, phosphorylation state or kinase activity • Overall, it is usually caused by some genetic defects combined with environmental stresses • Ability to remove and process glucose from bloodstream is defected → Constantly high blood glucose → Increased chance of type 2 diabetes References • Barrett K.E., Barman S.M., Boitano S. & Brooks H.L. (2016) Ganong’s Review of Medical Physiology. McGraw-Hill Education. • Chakraborty C. (2006) Biochemical and Molecular Basis of Insulin Resistance. Current Protein and Peptide Science. • Figure 1: Dorland's Medical Dictionary for Health Consumers. © 2007 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. • Figure 2: Bryant N.J., Govers R. & James D.E. (2002) Regulated transport of the glucose transporter GLUT4. • Figure 3: https://www.studyblue.com/notes/note/n/pancreas/deck/6619458 • Figure 4: Barrett K.E., Barman S.M., Boitano S. & Brooks H.L. (2016) Ganong’s Review of Medical Physiology. McGraw-Hill Education. • Figure 5: http://www.proteopedia.org/wiki/index.php/GLUT4 • Figure 6: http://type1diabetes.uk/effects-of-insulin