Rat liver parenchyma harbors equal numbers of epidermal growth factor (EGF) and insulin receptors. Following administration of a saturating dose of EGF (10 micrograms/100 g body weight), there was a rapid (t1/2 approximately 1.1 min) internalization of receptor coincident with its tyrosine phosphorylation at residue 1173 and receptor recruitment of the adaptor protein SHC, its tyrosine phosphorylation and its association with GRB2 and the Ras guanine nucleotide exchange factor, mSOS, largely in endosomes. This led to a cytosolic pool of a complex of tyrosine‐phosphorylated SHC, GRB2 and mSOS. It was demonstrated that these constituents were linked to Ras activation by the characteristic decrease in Raf‐1 mobility on SDS‐PAGE, which was maintained for 60 min after a single bolus of administered EGF. While insulin administration (15 micrograms/100 g body weight) led to insulin receptor beta‐subunit tyrosine phosphorylation and internalization, there was little detectable tyrosine phosphorylation of SHC, recruitment of GRB2, association of a complex with mSOS or any detectable change in the mobility of Raf‐1. Therefore, in normal physiological target cells in vivo, distinct signaling pathways are realized after EGF or insulin receptor activation, with regulation of this specificity most probably occurring at the locus of the endosome.
The insulin receptor kinase (IRK) is a tyrosine kinase whose activation, subsequent to insulin binding, is essential for insulin-signalling in target tissues. Insulin binding to its cell surface receptor is rapidly followed by internalization of insulin-IRK complexes into the endosomal apparatus (EN) of the cell. Internalization of insulin into target organs, especially liver, is implicated in effecting insulin clearance from the circulation. Internalization mediates IRK downregulation and hence attenuation of insulin sensitivity although most internalized IRKs readily recycle to the plasma membrane at physiological levels of insulin. A role for internalization in insulin signalling is indicated by the accumulation of activated IRKs in ENs. Furthermore, the maximal level of IRK activation has been shown to exceed that attained at the cell surface. Using an in vivo rat liver model in which endosomal IRKs are exclusively activated has revealed that IRKs at this intracellular locus are able by themselves to promote IRS-1 tyrosine phosphorylation and induce hypoglycemia. Furthermore, studies with isolated rat adipocytes reveal the EN to be the principle site of insulin-stimulated IRS-1 tyrosine phosphorylation and associated PI3K activation. Key steps in the termination of the insulin signal are also operative in ENs. Thus, an endosomal acidic insulinase has been identified which limits the extent of IRK activation. Furthermore, IRK dephosphorylation is effected in ENs by an intimately associated phosphotyrosine phosphatase(s) which, in rat liver, appears to regulate IRK activity in both a positive and negative fashion. Thus, insulin-mediated internalization of IRKs into ENs plays a crucial role in effecting and regulating signal transduction in addition to modulating the levels of circulating insulin and the cellular concentration of IRK in target tissues.
Upon the binding of insulin or epidermal growth factor to their cognate receptors on the liver parenchymal plasmalemma, signal transduction and receptor internalization are near co-incident. Indeed, the rapidity and extent of ligand mediated receptor internalization into endosomes in liver as well as other organs predicts that signal transduction is regulated at this intracellular locus. Although internalization has been thought as a mechanism to attenuate ligand mediated signal transduction responses, detailed studies of internalized receptors in isolated liver endosomes suggest an alternative scenario whereby selective signal transduction pathways can be accessed at this locus.
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