Glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK3) is inactivated in vitro by p70 S6 kinase or MAP kinase-activated protein kinase-1 beta (MAPKAP kinase-1 beta; also known as Rsk-2). Here we show that GSK3 isoforms are inhibited by 40% within minutes after stimulation of the rat skeletal-muscle cell line L6 with insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) or insulin. GSK3 was similarly inhibited in rabbit skeletal muscle after an intravenous injection of insulin. Inhibition resulted from increased phosphorylation of GSK3, probably at a serine/threonine residue(s), because it was reversed by incubation with protein phosphatase-2A. Rapamycin blocked the activation of p70 S6 kinase by IGF-1 in L6 cells, but had no effect on the inhibition of GSK3 or the activation of MAPKAP kinase-1 beta. In contrast, wortmannin, a potent inhibitor of PtdIns 3-kinase, prevented the inactivation of GSK3 and the activation of MAPKAP kinase-1 beta and p70 S6 kinase by IGF-1 or insulin. Wortmannin also blocked the activation of p74raf-1. MAP kinase kinase and p42 MAP kinase, but not the formation of GTP-Ras by IGF-1. The results suggest that the stimulation of glycogen synthase by insulin/IGF-1 in skeletal muscle involves the MAP-KAP kinase-1-catalysed inhibition of GSK3, as well as the previously described activation of the glycogen-associated form of protein phosphatase-1.
Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3k) activity is required for the insulin stimulation of glucose transport in adipocytes and Chinese hamster ovary cells. Wortmannin (WM), an inhibitor of PI3k, inhibits the stimulation of glucose transport by insulin and the gain of glucose transporters at the cell surface. However, the effect of inhibition of PI3k on the maintenance of the basal and the insulin-stimulated glucose transport and on the intracellular donor pool of glucose transporters has not been clarified. Here we show that in L6 skeletal muscle cells in culture WM significantly inhibits the basal PI3k activity (by 40%), decreases the levels of phosphatidylinositol 3,4-phosphate and 3,4,5-phosphate (by about 50%) and abolishes the activation of the enzyme by insulin. WM inhibited the basal rate of transport of glucose (by 45%) and of amino acids through system A (by 25%) and abolished their stimulation by insulin. Insulin caused a transient increase in PI3k activity and PI3k products that returned to basal levels within 40 min, whereas glucose and amino acid transport remained elevated. Under these conditions, WM reduced the rate of glucose and amino acid transport back to basal levels. In unstimulated cells, WM decreased significantly the GLUT4 glucose transporter content at the plasma membrane and prevented the ability of insulin to recruit transporters to this membrane. Interestingly, the intracellular pools of the GLUT3 and GLUT4 glucose transporters were significantly reduced in response to WM treatment alone. We conclude that in muscle cells PI3k activity is required to maintain basal and insulin-stimulated glucose and amino acid transport, as well as to develop the stimulation of the two transport processes in response to the hormone. We hypothesize that PI3k, likely through production of phosphatidylinositol 3,4-phosphate and 3,4,5-phosphate, regulates the basal plasma membrane glucose transporter recycling and the organization of the transporter intracellular pool, in addition to being an insulin signal.
In this study we have investigated the effects of insulin, chemical and hyperthermic stresses upon the activity of the System A amino acid transporter in L6 rat muscle cells. Uptake of K K-methyl-aminoisobutyric acid (Me-AIB), a nonmetabolisable System A substrate, was increased by between 50% and 80% when muscle cells were exposed to a maximally effective concentration of insulin (100 nM), sodium arsenite (ARS, 0.5 mM) or a 42³C heat shock (HS). The observed activation in System A in response to all three stimuli was maximal within 20 min and in the case of insulin and ARS primarily involved an increase in the V mx of System A transport. In contrast, HS induced significant increases in both V mx and K m of System A transport suggesting that hyperthermic stress may activate System A by a mechanism distinct from that mediating the effects of insulin and ARS. The hormonal stimulation of System A was blocked by the phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3k) inhibitor, wortmannin, but not by rapamycin or PD 98059 which respectively inhibit the mTOR and classical MAP kinase pathways. Exposure of L6 cells to ARS, but not HS, caused a 4.7-fold stimulation in MAPKAP-K2 activity that was blocked by SB 203580, a specific inhibitor of the stress activated protein kinase SAPK2/p38. However, neither SB 203580, rapamycin nor wortmannin were able to suppress the ARS-or HS-induced stimulation in System A transport. In summary, our results demonstrate that activity of the System A transporter can be rapidly upregulated in response to hormonal and stress stimuli through changes in the transport kinetics of the System A carrier. Our data show that whilst the hormonal response is PI3k dependent, the signalling mechanisms which instigate changes in System A activity in response to chemical or hyperthermic stress do not appear to involve PI3k or components of the mTOR, p42/p44 MAP kinase or SAPK2/p38 signalling pathways.z 1998 Federation of European Biochemical Societies.
Summary A new cancer gene, HIC-1 (Hypermethylated in Cancer) telomeric to p53 on chromosome 17p may be of clinical importance in sporadic breast cancer. Regional DNA hypermethylation of 17p13.3 resulting in suppression of gene expression has been shown to precede 17p structural changes in human carcinogenesis. In addition, loss of heterozygosity studies have suggested clinically significant involvement of a gene on 17p13.3 associated with poor prognosis in breast cancer. Using RT-PCR analysis, we demonstrate that the MCF7 (wild type p53) cell line expressed HIC-1 transcripts but the MDAMB231 (mutant p53) cell line did not, suggesting loss of HIC-1 expression and p53 malfunction may be synergistic events in sporadic breast cancer. HIC-1 expression was examined using RT-PCR on RNA extracted from 50 primary untreated, human breast cancers and was detected in only 7/50 (14%) cancers. All seven patients with HIC-1 expression were alive without disease recurrence after 8 years follow-up and 5/7 had detectable p53 wild type mRNA expression. This suggests that retained HIC-1 expression may offer a survival advantage. However the seven cancers had 17p13.3 loss of heterozygosity (LOH; four patients), a feature previously associated with poor prognosis, or were homozygous (three patients) suggesting there may be two genes at 17p13.3 involved in breast carcinogenesis. Using a demethylating drug 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine (DeoxyC), HIC-1 expression was restored in the MDAMB231 cells, also suggesting restoration of HIC-1 function by reversing HIC-1 hypermethylation may offer a therapeutic avenue in breast cancer.
A characteristic response of cells subjected to a stress stimulus is a rapid activation of cellular glucose transport. The mechanisms governing this increase in glucose transport are poorly understood, but it has been suggested that the response may involve the intracellular-signaling components that also participate in the hormonal activation of glucose transport. In skeletal muscle and fat tissue, inositol phospholipid 3-kinase plays an integral role in the regulation of both basal and insulin-stimulated glucose transport. In this study, we have investigated whether inositol phospholipid 3-kinase is activated by chemical stress and, if so, whether it has a role to play in the stress-induced increase in glucose transport in L6 muscle cells. Furthermore, we have attempted to assess the basis by which inositol phospholipid 3-kinase may participate in the regulation of basal glucose transport. Acute exposure (30 min) of L6 muscle cells to 0.5 mM arsenite induced an 80% stimulation in glucose transport. This activation was due to a rise in the number of cell-surface glucose transporters, based on an increase in the V,,,, of glucose transport and the observation that arsenite increases the plasma membrane content of GLUT1 and GLUT4 glucose transporters by 95 % and 60%, respectively, from an intracellular compartment. Arsenite induced rapid activation (< 2 min) of inositol phospholipid 3-kinase with an approximately fourfold increase in phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate (PtdIns3,4,5P,). In contrast, phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (PtdIns3P) levels were unaffected. Prior treatment of L6 cells with 100 nM wortmannin suppressed the arsenite-induced increase in PtdIns3,4,5P3 and reduced the cellular content of PtdIns3P by 50%. Under these conditions however, wortmannin failed to prevent the stress-induced activation of glucose transport, but suppressed basal glucose transport by 60% with an IC,,, of about 10 nM. In the absence of arsenite, wortmannin caused a dose-dependent inhibition in the cellular levels of PtdIns3P and PtdIns3,4,5P3 with IC,, values of about 10 nM and 100 nM, respectively. In summary, the present results demonstrate that chemical stress activates inositol phospholipid 3-kinase and glucose transport in L6 muscle cells, but unlike the hormonal responses of these cells the activation of inositol phospholipid 3-kinase is not responsible for the stress-induced increase in glucose transport. This implies that stress-induced and hormonal stimulated increases in PtdIns3,4,5P, levels are functionally distinct. By contrast, the maintenance of PtdIns3P levels, presumably involving a PtdIns-specific, wortmannin-sensitive inositol phospholipid 3-kinase may be required to support basal glucose transport.
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