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Sulfonylurea Binding to Adipocyte Membranes and Potentiation of Insulin-stimulated Hexose Transport

Authors :
Chan Y. Jung
I Jo
A Martz
Source :
Journal of Biological Chemistry. 264:13672-13678
Publication Year :
1989
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 1989.

Abstract

We have previously shown that the sulfonylureas increase insulin-stimulated glucose transport in adipocytes mainly by enhancing the insulin-induced recruitment of glucose transporter from its intracellular storage pool to the plasma membrane (Jacobs, D. B., and Jung, C. Y. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 2593-2596). In order to determine if this sulfonylurea effect is mediated by a specific membrane-associated sulfonylurea-binding protein, in the present report we measured exact dose dependence of the transport enhancement activities of different sulfonylureas in adipocytes in primary culture and equilibrium binding affinities of these agents to various adipocyte membrane fractions. Glycuride was found to increase the insulin-stimulated, 3-O-methyl-D-glucose equilibrium exchange in cultured rat adipocytes by up to 60% with little effect in the absence of insulin. The effect developed gradually reaching the maximum level at 24 h of incubation. The effect was concentration dependent showing a simple, one-to-one stoichiometry and an apparent activation constant (Ka) of approximately 1 microM. Glypizide, tolazamide, and tolbutamide also enhanced the insulin-stimulated hexose transport by up to 60%, but with Ka of approximately 2, 11, and 25 microM, respectively. HB-699 and ciglitazone, non-sulfonylureas, were without effect under the same condition. In equilibrium binding experiments, [3H]glyburide was found to bind to adipocyte membranes at two or more protein-specific, saturable sites, with similar apparent dissociation constants (KD) ranging 1-3 microM. These protein-specific glyburide bindings were displaced not only by tolazamide and tolbutamide, but also by ciglitazone and HB-699, with indicated KD of 11-16, 80-85, 20-25, and 85-95 microM, respectively. However, with the plasma membrane fraction, the displacements by ciglitazone and HB-699 were partial and did not exceed 56-61% at maximum. Based on these findings, we propose that there is a sulfonylurea-specific-binding protein in the plasma membrane of adipocytes, and that this sulfonylurea-binding protein may play a key role in the enhancement of insulin-stimulated hexose transport by sulfonylureas, probably via potentiation of the insulin-induced recruitment of glucose transporter.

Details

ISSN :
00219258
Volume :
264
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........afa5a27be5fd6dae64710f0834cfc21d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0021-9258(18)80049-7