Functional properties of a naturally occurring Trp1200----Ser1200 mutation of the insulin receptor.

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Citation

Moller DE, Yokota A, Ginsberg-Fellner F, Flier JS

Functional properties of a naturally occurring Trp1200----Ser1200 mutation of the insulin receptor.

Mol Endocrinol. 1990 Aug;4(8):1183-91.

PubMed ID
1963473 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Based on the sequence of cDNA encoding the intracellular domain of the insulin receptor beta-subunit, we recently defined a heterozygous point mutation causing a Ser for Trp substitution at position 1200 in the tyrosine kinase domain of a patient (BI-2) with the type A syndrome of insulin resistance. We have now sequenced the remainder of BI-2's insulin receptor cDNA-coding region and find no additional alterations in the encoded proreceptor protein. The nucleotide sequence of cDNA encoding the portion of the beta-subunit which includes Trp1200 was normal in BI-2's unaffected mother. Hybridization of a mutant allele-specific oligonucleotide to polymerase chain reaction-amplified cDNA confirmed the presence of the mutant allele in the proband and excluded it in her unaffected sister and mother, 18 normal control subjects, and six other subjects with insulin resistance. To determine whether this mutation had functional consequences for receptor signalling, we reconstructed it into a full-length insulin receptor cDNA expression vector. Chinese hamster ovary cells were transfected with mutant cDNA, and the expressed insulin receptors were compared to receptors expressed by cells transfected with wild-type receptor cDNA. Both mutant and wild-type receptors were properly processed into receptor alpha- and beta-subunits, were expressed on the cell surface, and displayed similar insulin-binding affinity. In contrast, insulin-stimulated autophosphorylation of the mutant receptors was severely impaired, whether assessed in intact cells or with a partially purified receptor preparation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Insulin receptorP06213Details