Sadagurski Lab

Neuroinflammation | Metabolism | Environmental Stressors & Aging

Insulin Receptor Substrate 2 Plays Diverse Cell-specific Roles in the Regulation of Glucose Transport*


Journal article


M. Sadagurski, G. Weingarten, C. Rhodes, M. White, E. Wertheimer
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2005

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APA   Click to copy
Sadagurski, M., Weingarten, G., Rhodes, C., White, M., & Wertheimer, E. (2005). Insulin Receptor Substrate 2 Plays Diverse Cell-specific Roles in the Regulation of Glucose Transport*. Journal of Biological Chemistry.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Sadagurski, M., G. Weingarten, C. Rhodes, M. White, and E. Wertheimer. “Insulin Receptor Substrate 2 Plays Diverse Cell-Specific Roles in the Regulation of Glucose Transport*.” Journal of Biological Chemistry (2005).


MLA   Click to copy
Sadagurski, M., et al. “Insulin Receptor Substrate 2 Plays Diverse Cell-Specific Roles in the Regulation of Glucose Transport*.” Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2005.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{m2005a,
  title = {Insulin Receptor Substrate 2 Plays Diverse Cell-specific Roles in the Regulation of Glucose Transport*},
  year = {2005},
  journal = {Journal of Biological Chemistry},
  author = {Sadagurski, M. and Weingarten, G. and Rhodes, C. and White, M. and Wertheimer, E.}
}

Abstract

The insulin receptor substrate 2 (IRS-2) protein is one of the major insulin-signaling substrates. In the present study, we investigated the role of IRS-2 in skin epidermal keratinocytes and dermal fibroblasts. Although skin is not a classical insulin target tissue, we have previously demonstrated that insulin, via the insulin receptor, is essential for normal skin cell physiology. To identify the role of IRS-2 in skin cells, we studied cells isolated from IRS-2 knock-out (KO) mice. Whereas proliferation and differentiation were not affected in the IRS-2 KO cells, a striking effect was observed on glucose transport. In IRS-2 KO keratinocytes, the lack of IRS-2 resulted in a dramatic increase in basal and insulin-stimulated glucose transport. The increase in glucose transport was associated with an increase in total phosphatidylinositol (PI) 3-kinase and Akt activation. In contrast, fibroblasts lacking IRS-2 exhibited a significant decrease in basal and insulin-induced glucose transport. We identified the point of divergence, leading to these differences between keratinocytes and fibroblasts, at the IRS-PI 3-kinase association step. In epidermal keratinocytes, PI 3-kinase is associated with and activated by only the IRS-1 protein. On the other hand, in dermal fibroblasts, PI 3-kinase is exclusively associated with and activated by the IRS-2 protein. These observations suggest that IRS-2 functions as a negative or positive regulator of glucose transport in a cell-specific manner. Our results also show that IRS-2 function depends on its cell-specific association with PI 3-kinase.


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