Drosophila insulin degrading enzyme and rat skeletal muscle insulin protease cleave insulin at similar sites
- 1 March 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 28 (6) , 2471-2477
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi00432a018
Abstract
Insulin degradation is an integral part of the cellular action of insulin. Recent evidence suggests that the enzyme insulin protesase is involved in the degradation of insulin in mammalian tissues. Drosophila which has insulin-like hormones and insulin receptor homologues, also expresses an insulin degrading enzyme with properties that are very similar to those of mammalian insulin protease. In the present study, the insulin cleavage products generated by the Drosophila insulin degrading enzyme were identified and compared with the products generated by the Drosophila insulin degrading enzyme were identified and compared with the products generated by the mammalian insulin protease. Both purified enzyme were incubated with porcine insulin specifically labeled with 125I on either the A19 or B26 position, and the degradation products were analyzed by HPLC before and after sulfitolysis. Isolation and sequencing of the cleavage products indicated that both enzymes cleave the A chain of intact insulin at identical sites between residues products indicated that both enzymes cleave the A chain of intact insulin at identical sites between residues A13 and A14 and A14 and A15. Sequencing of the B chain fragments demonstrated that the Drosophila enzyme cleaves the B chain of insulin at four sites between residues B10 and B11,B14 and B15, B16 and B17, and B25 and B26. These cleavage sites correspond to four of the seven cleavage sites generated by the mammalian insulin protease. These results demonstrate that all the cleavage sites generated by the Drosophila insulin degrading enzyme are shared in common with the mammalian insulin protease. These data support the hypothesis that there is evolutionary conservation of the insulin degrading enzyme and further suggest that this enzyme plays an important role in cellular function.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Acquisition of insulin-dependent protein tyrosine kinase activity during Drosophila embryogenesis.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1985
- Amino-Terminal Amino Acid Sequence of the Silkworm Prothoracicotropic Hormone: Homology with InsulinScience, 1984
- Selective Effects of Inhibitors of Hormone Processing on Insulin Action in Isolated Hepatocytes*Endocrinology, 1984
- Insulin Receptor: Evidence That It Is a Protein KinaseScience, 1983
- Insulin Stimulates the Phosphorylation of the 95,000-Dalton Subunit of Its Own ReceptorScience, 1982
- Electrophoretic resolution of three major insulin receptor structures with unique subunit stoichiometries.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1980
- Isolation of material displaying insulin-like immunological biological activity from the brain of the blowfly Calliphora vomitoriaBiochemical Journal, 1979
- Insulin receptor: covalent labeling and identification of subunits.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1979
- Immunofluorescent localization of insulin-like material in the median neurosecretory cells of the blowfly, Calliphora vomitoria (Diptera)Cell and tissue research, 1979
- Glucagon-like and insulin-like hormones of the insect neurosecretory systemBiochemical Journal, 1976