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How insulin engages its primary binding site on the insulin receptor

Authors :
Geoffrey K.-W. Kong
Jiří Jiráček
Emília Kletvíková
Linda Whittaker
Shu Jin Chan
Michael A. Weiss
Andrzej M. Brzozowski
Christopher J. Watson
Brian J. Smith
John G. Menting
Donald F. Steiner
Jonathan Whittaker
Mai B. Margetts
Guy Dodson
Lenka Žáková
Colin W. Ward
Michael C. Lawrence
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Insulin receptor signalling has a central role in mammalian biology, regulating cellular metabolism, growth, division, differentiation and survival1,2. Insulin resistance contributes to the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes mellitus and the onset of Alzheimer’s disease3; aberrant signalling occurs in diverse cancers, exacerbated by crosstalk with the homologous type 1 insulin-like growth factor receptor (IGF1R)4. Despite more than three decades of investigation, the three-dimensional structure of the insulin–insulin receptor complex has proved elusive, confounded by the complexity of producing the receptor protein. Here we present the first view, to our knowledge, of the interaction of insulin with its primary binding site on the insulin receptor, on the basis of four crystal structures of insulin bound to truncated insulin receptor constructs. The direct interaction of insulin with the first leucine-rich-repeat domain (L1) of insulin receptor is seen to be sparse, the hormone instead engaging the insulin receptor carboxy-terminal α-chain (αCT) segment, which is itself remodelled on the face of L1 upon insulin binding. Contact between insulin and L1 is restricted to insulin B-chain residues. The αCT segment displaces the B-chain C-terminal β-strand away from the hormone core, revealing the mechanism of a long-proposed conformational switch in insulin upon receptor engagement. This mode of hormone–receptor recognition is novel within the broader family of receptor tyrosine kinases5. We support these findings by photo-crosslinking data that place the suggested interactions into the context of the holoreceptor and by isothermal titration calorimetry data that dissect the hormone–insulin receptor interface. Together, our findings provide an explanation for a wealth of biochemical data from the insulin receptor and IGF1R systems relevant to the design of therapeutic insulin analogues.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e1c1c9e16f0f5f69287b9a27ad0e9fda