Abstract
Phenylarsine oxide (PAO), a trivalent arsenical, has been shown to inhibit insulin-stimulated glucose transport in 3T3-L1 adipocytes, implicating vicinal dithiols in signal transmission [Frost and Lane (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 2646-2652]. To assist in the direct identification of a PAO-binding protein which might be involved in this process, we have synthesized [3H]acetylaminophenylarsine oxide ([3H]APAO) from the amino acid derivative of phenylarsine oxide (NPAO). To assess the inhibitory effect of the product, a dual-labelling experiment was performed which showed that [3H]APAO inhibited insulin-stimulated 2-deoxy[1-14C]glucose transport in 3T3-L1 adipocytes with a Ki of 21 .mu.m, identical with that of the parent compound, NPAO. Further characterization revealed that over a wide concentration range, uptake of the labelled arsine oxide was linear. Although the dithiol reagent 2,3-dimercaptopropanol (DMP) reversed PAO-induced inhibition of transport, it had no effect on the uptake of [3H]APAO. In a simple fractionation experiment approx. 50% of the radioactivity was associated with the cytosolic fraction and 50% with the total membrane fraction. Identification of radiolabelled proteins by non-reducing SDS/PAGE revealed fraction-specific binding, although many proteins were observed. Covalent modification was time-dependent and could be reversed by addition of DMP. These data further support a role for vicinal dithiols in insulin-stimulated glucose transport. Additionally, the probe described may offer a new means with which to identify the inhibitory protein or, more globally, to investigate mechanisms of action of vicinal dithiol-containing proteins.

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