In:
Biochemical Journal, Portland Press Ltd., Vol. 237, No. 1 ( 1986-07-01), p. 99-104
Abstract:
Sephadex (G-50 fine grade)-gel chromatography and trichloroacetic acid (TCA) precipitation were used to investigate the effects of chloroquine and bacitracin on the nature of cell-associated radioactivity in studies on the binding and degradation of 125I-insulin in cultured rat hepatocytes. Sephadex peak I, eluted with the void volume, increased with hepatocyte incubation time and comprised 6% of total cell-bound radioactivity at 120 min. However, all radioactivity in this peak was due to unspecific binding. Peak II, corresponding to intact insulin, represented 95% of specifically cell-associated label at 5 min and decreased to 77% at 120 min. Peak III, containing the final low-Mr degradation products, increased with incubation time (22% of specifically bound label at 120 min). The TCA-precipitable and TCA-soluble fractions of hepatocytes extracted with 0.1% SDS were within 4-7% of the proportions of radioactivity in peaks II and III respectively. Scatchard plots based on insulin-binding data from Sephadex chromatography or TCA precipitation were identical. Dissociation studies revealed that at least 75% of the intact insulin associated with the hepatocytes was bound to receptors at the cell surface. Bacitracin increased the proportion of cell-associated intact hormone and decreased that of ligand degraded when analysed by either Sephadex chromatography or TCA precipitation. The proportion of surface-bound to internalized intact hormone remained unaltered, indicating that bacitracin acted predominantly at the cell surface. In the presence of chloroquine, which dramatically increased the contribution of peak I to specific binding, ‘intact’ insulin was substantially overestimated when determined as the TCA-precipitable fraction. In addition, all peak I material and 50% of cell-associated label in peak II was trapped intracellularly, thereby pointing to the lysosomal or prelysosomal site of action of this drug.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
0264-6021
,
1470-8728
Language:
English
Publisher:
Portland Press Ltd.
Publication Date:
1986
detail.hit.zdb_id:
1473095-9
SSG:
12
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