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Cell Growth and Development

Intrasteric Inhibition of ATP Binding Is Not Required To Prevent Unregulated Autophosphorylation or Signaling by the Insulin Receptor

, , , , , & show all
Pages 4197-4207 | Received 13 Jun 2000, Accepted 02 Apr 2001, Published online: 28 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Receptor tyrosine kinases may use intrasteric inhibition to suppress autophosphorylation prior to growth factor stimulation. To test this hypothesis we made an Asp1161Ala mutant in the activation loop that relieved intrasteric inhibition of the unphosphorylated insulin receptor (IR) and its recombinant cytoplasmic kinase domain (IRKD) without affecting the activated state. Solution studies with the unphosphorylated mutant IRKD demonstrated conformational changes and greater catalytic efficiency from a 10-fold increase in k cat and a 15-fold-lowerK m ATP althoughK m peptide was unchanged. Kinetic parameters of the autophosphorylated mutant and wild-type kinase domains were virtually identical. The Asp1161Ala mutation increased the rate of in vitro autophosphorylation of the IRKD or IR at low ATP concentrations and in the absence of insulin. However, saturation with ATP (for the IRKD) or the presence of insulin (for the IR) yielded equivalent rates of autophosphorylation for mutant versus wild-type kinases. Despite a biochemically more active kinase domain, the mutant IR expressed in C2C12 myoblasts was not constitutively autophosphorylated. However, it displayed a 2.5-fold-lower 50% effective concentration for insulin stimulation of autophosphorylation and was dephosphorylated more slowly following withdrawal of insulin than wild-type IR. In tests of the regulation of the unphosphorylated basal state, these results demonstrate that neither intrasteric inhibition against ATP binding nor suppression of kinase activity is required to prevent premature autophosphorylation of the IR. Finally, the lower rate of dephosphorylation suggests invariant residues of the activation loop such as Asp1161 may function at multiple junctures in cellular regulation of receptor tyrosine kinases.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work was supported by NIH grant DK59522 (R.A.K.), and the Coherent laser was obtained through NSF Instrument Development award DBI 9724330 to William R. Laws.

We thank Henry B. Sadowski and his laboratory for guidance on transient transfections and handling C2C12 cells, and Henry B. Sadowski and Mitchell Goldfarb for helpful discussions and critical reading of the manuscript.

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