Highly purified insulin receptor was shown to be a substrate for cAMP kinase. Approximately 1 phosphate was incorporated per molecule of receptor, and the cAMP kinase's affinity for the receptor was at least as high as its affinity for histone. The sites phosphorylated by cAMP kinase seemed distinct from those phosphorylated by the protein kinase C. Phosphorylation by cAMP kinase had no effect on the ability of several monoclonal antibodies to recognize the receptor or on the insulin-binding activity of the receptor. However, cAMP phosphorylation partially inhibited the tyrosine kinase activity of the receptor (∼25%). These results suggest that catecholamine-induced resistance to insulin may be partly due to a direct phosphorylation of the receptor by cAMP kinase and a subsequent inhibition of the ability of the receptor kinase to be activated by insulin.
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January 01 1987
Phosphorylation of Purified Insulin Receptor by cAMP Kinase Free
Richard A Roth;
Richard A Roth
Department of Pharmacology, Stanford University School of Medicine
Stanford, California 94305-5332
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Jacqueline Beaudoin
Jacqueline Beaudoin
Department of Pharmacology, Stanford University School of Medicine
Stanford, California 94305-5332
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Send correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Richard A. Roth at the above address
Diabetes 1987;36(1):123–126
Article history
Received:
September 17 1986
Accepted:
October 10 1986
PubMed:
3539674
Citation
Richard A Roth, Jacqueline Beaudoin; Phosphorylation of Purified Insulin Receptor by cAMP Kinase. Diabetes 1 January 1987; 36 (1): 123–126. https://doi.org/10.2337/diab.36.1.123
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