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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Chelation of intracellular calcium blocks insulin action in the adipocyte.

The hypothesis that intracellular Ca2+ is an essential component of the intracellular mechanism of insulin action in the adipocyte was evaluated. Cells were loaded with the Ca2+ chelator quin-2, by preincubating them with quin-2 AM, the tetrakis(acetoxymethyl) ester of quin-2. Quin-2 loading inhibited insulin-stimulated glucose transport (IC50, 26 microM quin-2 AM) without affecting basal activity. The ability of insulin to stimulate glucose uptake in quin-2-loaded cells could be partially restored by preincubating cells with buffer supplemented with 1.2 mM CaCl2 and the Ca2+ ionophore A23187. These conditions had no effect on basal activity and omission of CaCl2 from the buffer prevented the restoration of insulin-stimulated glucose uptake by A23187. Quin-2 loading also inhibited insulin-stimulated glucose oxidation (IC50, 11 microM quin-2 AM) and the ability of insulin to inhibit cAMP-stimulated lipolysis (IC50, 78 microM quin-2 AM), without affecting their basal activities. Incubation of cells with 100 microM quin-2 or quin-2 AM had no effect on intracellular ATP concentration or the specific binding of 125I-labeled insulin to adipocytes. These findings suggest that intracellular Ca2+ is an essential component in the coupling of the insulin-activated receptor complex to cellular physiological/metabolic machinery. Furthermore, differing quin-2 AM dose-response profiles suggest the presence of dual Ca2+-dependent pathways in the adipocyte. One involves insulin stimulation of glucose transport and oxidation, whereas the other involves the antilipolytic action of insulin.[1]

References

  1. Chelation of intracellular calcium blocks insulin action in the adipocyte. Pershadsingh, H.A., Shade, D.L., Delfert, D.M., McDonald, J.M. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. (1987) [Pubmed]
 
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