Insulin receptor signalling has a central role in mammalian biology, regulating cellular metabolism, growth, division, differentiation and survival1,2. Insulin resistance contributes to the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes mellitus and the onset of Alzheimer’s disease3; aberrant signalling occurs in diverse cancers, exacerbated by crosstalk with the homologous type 1 insulin-like growth factor receptor (IGF1R)4. Despite more than three decades of investigation, the three-dimensional structure of the insulin–insulin receptor complex has proved elusive, confounded by the complexity of producing the receptor protein. Here we present the first view, to our knowledge, of the interaction of insulin with its primary binding site on the insulin receptor, on the basis of four crystal structures of insulin bound to truncated insulin receptor constructs. The direct interaction of insulin with the first leucine-rich-repeat domain (L1) of insulin receptor is seen to be sparse, the hormone instead engaging the insulin receptor carboxy-terminal α-chain (αCT) segment, which is itself remodelled on the face of L1 upon insulin binding. Contact between insulin and L1 is restricted to insulin B-chain residues. The αCT segment displaces the B-chain C-terminal β-strand away from the hormone core, revealing the mechanism of a long-proposed conformational switch in insulin upon receptor engagement. This mode of hormone–receptor recognition is novel within the broader family of receptor tyrosine kinases5. We support these findings by photo-crosslinking data that place the suggested interactions into the context of the holoreceptor and by isothermal titration calorimetry data that dissect the hormone–insulin receptor interface. Together, our findings provide an explanation for a wealth of biochemical data from the insulin receptor and IGF1R systems relevant to the design of therapeutic insulin analogues.
Insulin provides a classical model of a globular protein, yet how the hormone changes conformation to engage its receptor has long been enigmatic. Interest has focused on the C-terminal Bchain segment, critical for protective self-assembly in β cells and receptor binding at target tissues. Insight may be obtained from truncated "microreceptors" that reconstitute the primary hormone-binding site (α-subunit domains L1 and αCT). We demonstrate that, on microreceptor binding, this segment undergoes concerted hinge-like rotation at its B20-B23 β-turn, coupling reorientation of Phe B24 to a 60°rotation of the B25-B28 β-strand away from the hormone core to lie antiparallel to the receptor's L1-β 2 sheet. Opening of this hinge enables conserved nonpolar side chains (Ile A2 , Val A3 , Val B12 , Phe B24 , and Phe B25 ) to engage the receptor. Restraining the hinge by nonstandard mutagenesis preserves native folding but blocks receptor binding, whereas its engineered opening maintains activity at the price of protein instability and nonnative aggregation. Our findings rationalize properties of clinical mutations in the insulin family and provide a previously unidentified foundation for designing therapeutic analogs. We envisage that a switch between free and receptorbound conformations of insulin evolved as a solution to conflicting structural determinants of biosynthesis and function.diabetes mellitus | signal transduction | receptor tyrosine kinase | metabolism | protein structure H ow insulin engages the insulin receptor has inspired speculation ever since the structure of the free hormone was determined by Hodgkin and colleagues in 1969 (1, 2). Over the ensuing decades, anomalies encountered in studies of analogs have suggested that the hormone undergoes a conformational change on receptor binding: in particular, that the C-terminal β-strand of the B chain (residues B24-B30) releases from the helical core to expose otherwise-buried nonpolar surfaces (the detachment model) (3-6). Interest in the B-chain β-strand was further motivated by the discovery of clinical mutations within it associated with diabetes mellitus (DM) (7). Analysis of residuespecific photo-cross-linking provided evidence that both the detached strand and underlying nonpolar surfaces engage the receptor (8).The relevant structural biology is as follows. The insulin receptor is a disulfide-linked (αβ) 2 receptor tyrosine kinase (Fig. 1A), the extracellular α-subunits together binding a single insulin molecule with high affinity (9). Involvement of the two α-subunits is asymmetric: the primary insulin-binding site (site 1*) comprises the central β-sheet (L1-β 2 ) of the first leucine-rich repeat domain (L1) of one α-subunit and the partially helical Cterminal segment (αCT) of the other α-subunit (Fig. 1A) (10). Such binding initiates conformational changes leading to transphosphorylation of the β-subunits' intracellular tyrosine kinase (TK) domains. Structures of wild-type (WT) insulin (or analogs) bound to extracellular receptor fragments were recently...
The high resolution crystal structure of an N-terminal fragment of the IGF-I receptor, has been reported. While this fragment is itself devoid of ligand binding activity, mutational analysis has indicated that its N terminus (L1, amino acids 1-150) and the C terminus of its cysteine-rich domain (amino acids 190 -300) contain ligand binding determinants. Mutational analysis also suggests that amino acids 692-702 from the C terminus of the ␣ subunit are critical for ligand binding. A fusion protein, formed from these fragments, binds IGF-I with an affinity similar to that of the whole extracellular domain, suggesting that these are the minimal structural elements of the IGF-I binding site. To further characterize the binding site, we have performed structure directed and alanine-scanning mutagenesis of L1, the cysteinerich domain and amino acids 692-702. Alanine mutants of residues in these regions were transiently expressed as secreted recombinant receptors and their affinity was determined. In L1 alanine mutants of The insulin-like growth factors I and II are essential for normal fetal and post-natal growth (1). They were originally identified as circulating polypeptides with potent mitogenic activity, which mediated many of the actions of growth hormone, and were later shown to be structurally homologous to proinsulin. It is now apparent that these growth factors are produced by many cell types and have paracrine and autocrine as well as endocrine functions. Targeted disruption of the gene for IGF-I 1 in transgenic mice results in both embryonic and post-natal growth retardation (2). In contrast, the effects of disruption of the IGF-II gene are confined to growth retardation during the embryonic period (2). In addition to being mitogens, it is now evident that these peptides play a crucial role in cell survival (3) and contribute to transformation and the maintenance of the malignant phenotype in many tumor systems (4). However, despite extensive study, the signal transduction mechanisms underlying the biological effects of these peptides remain to be elucidated.The mitogenic effects of these growth factors appear to be mediated by receptors belonging to the insulin receptor subclass of receptor tyrosine kinases (for review see Ref. (5)). The type 1 IGF receptor binds both peptides with high affinity; the affinity for IGF-I being greater than that for IGF-II. Transgenic experiments indicate that the growth-promoting effects of both peptides can be mediated by this receptor (2, 6). Such studies also point to the role of a second receptor in mediating the mitogenic effects of IGF-II (2, 6), and recent in vitro studies indicate that this is the A isoform of the insulin receptor (7); this receptor binds IGF-II with high affinity and can mediate the growth-promoting effects of the peptide (8).The receptors in this family are dimeric protein-tyrosine kinases with significant homology (5). In higher vertebrates there are three known members, the insulin receptor (9, 10), the type 1 IGF receptor (11), and the orphan in...
Mutational analyses of the secreted recombinant insulin receptor extracellular domain have identified a ligand binding site composed of residues located in the L1 domain (amino acids 1-470) and at the C terminus of the ␣ subunit (amino acids [705][706][707][708][709][710][711][712][713][714][715] , and Phe 89 on insulin-induced receptor autophosphorylation. They had no effect on the maximal response to insulin but produced an increase in the EC 50 commensurate with their effect on the affinity of the receptor for insulin.The initiating event in the insulin-signaling cascade is the binding of insulin to a specific plasma membrane receptor. This interaction has been studied extensively and was found to be extremely complex (see Ref. 1 for review). Scatchard plots (2) of equilibrium binding data are concave and curvilinear, suggesting heterogeneity of ligand binding sites, negatively cooperative site-site interactions, or a combination of both (1). These properties and high affinity interactions with insulin are dependent on the dimeric structure of the receptor; insulin binds non-cooperatively to a single population of binding sites in the monomeric receptor (3-5). The stoichiometry of binding to the native receptor appears to be one insulin molecule to one receptor dimer (6). The secreted recombinant extracellular domain of the receptor exhibits properties similar to those of the receptor monomer and has a stoichiometry of two insulin molecules to one receptor dimer (6, 7).A number of hypothetical models of insulin-receptor interactions have been proposed to explain these findings (7-9). The model that best explains the experimental findings is that of De Meyts (1). This proposes that insulin has two topographically distinct receptor binding sites and that the receptor has two topographically distinct insulin binding sites/monomer. In this model, insulin binds asymmetrically to the insulin dimer, with each of its binding sites contacting its cognate receptor site on a separate monomer. Although the detailed structural basis of this model has yet to be elucidated, the structure-function relationships of the insulin molecule and the receptor have been studied extensively and provide support for the essentials of the model.Insulin (1, 10). However, hagfish insulin, in which these residues and the tertiary structure of the molecule are conserved (11), displays anomalous receptor binding behavior (11,12), suggesting that other residues outside this region might also be involved in receptor interactions. This is supported by the finding that two recombinant insulin analogues with substitutions in residues located on the opposite side of the molecule, Leu A13 to Ser and Leu B17 to Gln, exhibited similar receptor binding behavior to hagfish insulin (7,8).The structure and structure-function relationships of the insulin receptor are not as well documented. It is a dimeric transmembrane protein (see Ref. 1 for review). Each monomer consists of disulfide-linked ␣ and  subunits. The ␣ subunits are wholly extracellular and c...
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