The insulin-regulated glucose transporter isotype GluT4 expressed only in muscle and adipose cells is sequestered in a specific secretory vesicle. These vesicles harbor another major protein, referred to as vp165 (for vesicle protein of 165 kDa), that like GluT4 redistributes to the plasma membrane in response to insulin. We describe here the cloning of vp165 and show that it is a novel member of the family of zinc-dependent membrane aminopeptidases, with the typical large extracellular catalytic domain and single transmembrane domain but with a unique extended cytoplasmic domain. The latter contains two dileucine motifs, which may be critical for the specific trafficking of vp165, since this has been shown to be the case for this motif in GluT4.
A novel membrane aminopeptidase has been identified as a major protein in vesicles from rat adipocytes containing the glucose transporter isotype Glut4. In this study we have characterized this aminopeptidase, referred to as vp165, in 3T3-L1 adipocytes. The subcellular distributions of vp165 and Glut4 were determined by immunoisolation of vesicles with antibodies against both proteins, by immunofluorescence, and by subcellular fractionation and immunoblotting. Relative amounts of vp165 at the cell surface in basal and insulin-treated cells were assayed by cell surface biotinylation. These experiments showed that vp165 and Glut4 were entirely colocalized and that vp165 increased markedly at the cell surface in response to insulin, in a way similar to Glut4. When intact cells were assayed with a novel, membrane-impermeant fluorogenic substrate for vp165, we found that insulin stimulated aminopeptidase activity at the cell surface. This observation provides direct evidence for the functional consequence of vp165 translocation.An important effect of insulin is to increase glucose transport into muscle and fat cells. The basis of this effect is an increase in the amount of the glucose transporter isotype Glut4 in the plasma membrane, which is probably largely due to insulinelicited fusion of intracellular vesicles containing Glut4 with the plasma membrane (1, 2). We and others have developed methods for isolating these Glut4 vesicles from fat and muscle cells and are analyzing the proteins in them (3-6). A major protein, of 165 kDa, in the Glut4 vesicles from rat adipocytes (designated vp165) has recently been characterized by the Pilch laboratory and ourselves (3,7,8). Through cloning of the cDNA for vp165, we found that it is a novel membrane aminopeptidase, consisting of a 109 residue cytoplasmic amino-terminal domain that contains several potential sorting signals similar to those in Glut4, a single transmembrane segment, and a large lumenal domain that contains the active site (9).The distribution of vp165 in rat adipocytes has been determined for basal and insulin-treated cells by subcellular fractionation and immunoblotting (3, 7). These earlier studies showed that vp165, like Glut4, is concentrated in the low density microsomes and redistributes to the plasma membrane in response to insulin. Moreover, they showed that intracellular vp165 is located in vesicles that also contain Glut4, since immunoadsorption of vesicles with antibodies against Glut4 also adsorbed most of the vp165 (3, 7). However, these earlier studies did not rigorously address the questions of whether vp165 and Glut4 are entirely colocalized and translocate in a quantitatively similar way in response to insulin. One reason for this is that subcellular fractionation provides only a crude indication of subcellular localization and typically underestimates translocation due to contamination of the plasma membrane fraction with intracellular membranes (see Results and Discussion). Also, since at the time antibodies that immunoadsorbed vp165 were...
We previously discovered that insulin stimulates the marked translocation of a novel membrane aminopeptidase, designated vp165 for vesicle protein of 165 kDa, to the cell surface in adipocytes. To examine the hypothesis that this enzyme acts on peptide hormones, we assessed the relative affinity of the enzyme for 22 peptide hormones by measuring the inhibitory effect of each on the hydrolysis of a fluorogenic substrate, and we directly assayed the cleavage of four of these. Angiotensin III, angiotensin IV, and Lys-bradykinin bound to the enzyme with half-saturation constants between 20 and 600 nM and were cleaved by vp165. Vasopressin bound with lower affinity but at saturation was cleaved more rapidly. Subsequently, the effect of insulin on the rates of cleavage of 125I-labeled vasopressin by intact 3T3-L1 and rat adipocytes was determined. With both cell types, vasopressin cleavage was stimulated approximately threefold. These findings indicate that a physiological role for vp165 may be the processing of peptide hormones and that insulin could enhance the cleavage of extracellular substrates by eliciting the translocation of vp165 to the cell surface.
Light-scattering measurements of osmotically induced changes in the size of rat liver microsomal vesicles pre-equilibrated in a low-osmolality buffer revealed the following. (1) The increase in extravesicular osmolality by addition of glucose 6-phosphate or mannose 6-phosphate (25 mM each) caused a rapid shrinking of microsomal vesicles. After shrinkage, a rapid swelling phase (t1/2 approx. 22 s) was present with glucose 6-phosphate but absent with mannose 6-phosphate, indicating that the former had entered microsomal vesicles, but the latter had not. (2) Almost identical results were obtained in the absence of any glucose 6-phosphate hydrolysis, i.e. with microsomes pre-treated with 100 microM-vanadate. (3) The anion-channel blocker 4,4'-di-isothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulphonic acid (DIDS) suppressed the glucose 6-phosphate-induced swelling phase. (4) The swelling phase was more prolonged as the glucose 6-phosphate concentration increased (t1/2 = 16 +/- 3, 22 +/- 3 and 35 +/- 4 s with 25 mM, 37.5 mM- and 50 mM-glucose 6-phosphate respectively). The behaviour of glucose-6-phosphatase activity of intact and disrupted microsomes measured in the presence of high concentrations (less than 30 mM) of substrate also indicated the saturation of the glucose 6-phosphate permeation system by extravesicular concentrations of glucose 6-phosphate higher than 20-30 mM. Additional experiments showed that vanadate-treated microsomes pre-equilibrated with 0.1 mM- and 1.0 mM-glucose 6-phosphate (and [1-14C]glucose 6-phosphate as a tracer) rapidly (t1/2 less than 20 s) released [1-14C]glucose 6-phosphate when diluted in a glucose 6-phosphate-free medium. The efflux of [1-14C]glucose 6-phosphate was largely prevented by DIDS, allowing an evaluation of the intravesicular space of glucose 6-phosphate of approx. 1.0 microliter/mg of microsomal protein.
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