The structure of the hepatic insulin receptor and insulin binding

Abstract
Hepatocytes or hepatic plasma membranes were photoaffinity-labelled with radioiodinated N.epsilon.B29-monoazidobenzoyl-insulin. Analysis of the samples by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and autoradiography revealed the insulin receptor as a predominant band of 450 kDa. When hepatic plasma membranes were first treated with clostridial collagenase and then photolabelled, the insulin receptor appeared as a predominant band of 360 kDa. This effect of collagenase treatment on the insulin receptor was due to Ca2+-dependent heat-labile proteinases contaminating the preparation of collagenase, and it could be mimicked by elastase. The decrease in size of the insulin receptor to 360 kDa resulted from the loss of a receptor component that was inaccessible to photolabelling. In contrast, the size of the insulin receptor of intact cells was not affected by collagenase treatment. This suggests that the site sensitive to proteolysis was located on the cytoplasmic side of the plasma membrane. In hepatic plasma membranes that were treated with collagenase or elastase, and contained the 360 kDa form of the insulin receptor, the binding affinity for insulin was increased by up to 2-fold. These findings support the concept that a component which is either a part of, or closely associated with, the insulin receptor may regulate its affinity for insulin.