Expression and Characterization of a 70-kDa Fragment of the Insulin Receptor That Binds Insulin
MINIMIZING LIGAND BINDING DOMAIN OF THE INSULIN RECEPTOR*

Claus KristensenDagger §, Finn C. Wiberg, Lauge SchäfferDagger , and Asser S. AndersenDagger

From the Departments of Dagger  Insulin Research and  Cell Technology, Health Care Discovery, Novo Nordisk, 2880 Bagsværd, Denmark

    ABSTRACT
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

In order to characterize regions of the insulin receptor that are essential for ligand binding and possibly identify a smaller insulin-binding fragment of the receptor, we have used site-directed mutagenesis to construct a series of insulin receptor deletion mutants. From 112 to 246 amino acids were deleted from the alpha -subunit region comprising amino acids 469-729. The receptor constructs were expressed as soluble insulin receptor IgG fusion proteins in baby hamster kidney cells and were characterized in binding assays by immunoblotting and chemical cross-linking with radiolabeled insulin. The shortest receptor fragment identified was a free monomeric alpha -subunit deleted of amino acids 469-703 and 718-729 (exon 11); the mass of this receptor fragment was found by mass spectrometry to be 70 kDa. This small insulin receptor fragment bound insulin with an affinity (Kd) of 4.4 nM, which is similar to what was found for the full-length ectodomain of the insulin receptor (5.0 nM). Cross-linking experiments confirmed that the 70-kDa receptor fragment specifically bound insulin.

In summary we have minimized the insulin binding domain of the insulin receptor by identifying a 70-kDa fragment of the ectodomain that retains insulin binding affinity making this an interesting candidate for detailed structural analysis.

    INTRODUCTION
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Insulin mediates its effects by binding to specific tyrosine kinase receptors in the plasma membrane of target cells. The structure of the insulin receptor has been investigated extensively and recently reviewed (1, 2); also a number of naturally occurring mutations in the insulin receptor gene that affects receptor function have been identified and reviewed by Taylor et al. (3, 4).

The insulin receptor is a glycoprotein of a relative molecular mass of 350-400 kDa, which is synthesized as a single chain polypeptide and proteolytically cleaved yielding a disulfide-linked alpha -beta monomer insulin receptor. Two alpha -beta monomers are linked by disulfide bonds between the alpha -subunits, resulting in the beta -alpha -alpha -beta receptor subunit configuration. The exact disulfide pattern responsible for this receptor configuration was elusive for a long time until first an alpha -alpha contact was shown to connect Cys-524 of the two monomers (5), and more recently Sparrow et al. (6) described the disulfide pattern in the C terminus of the ectodomain. Along with the mutational data available (7-9), these reports suggest the IR1 ectodomain is connected by the disulfide bonds shown in Fig. 1.


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Fig. 1.   Major structural features of the insulin receptor alpha -subunit. Shown is the insulin receptor ectodomain. The diagram illustrates major domains based on sequence homology and theoretical considerations. These domains are L1 and L2 (see Bajaj et al. (11)), the cysteine-rich domain (Cys), and the alternative spliced region encoded by exon 11 (Exon11) (34). The disulfide pattern shown is supported by present data and recently published data (6). The 469-703 region deleted in the present study is indicated to the right.

The intracellular part of the beta -subunit includes the tyrosine kinase domain that acquire kinase activity upon binding of insulin to epitopes in the ectodomain. The x-ray crystal structure of the tyrosine kinase domain has been solved (10), whereas detailed three-dimensional structure of the insulin-binding site is not available, so only indirect information can be used to identify important structural features necessary for insulin binding. Predictions of the tertiary structure of the IR ectodomain have been based on alignment with epidermal growth factor receptor sequences (11, 12). The consensus from these alignments is that the insulin receptor alpha -subunits have two large homologous domains, L1 and L2, separated by a cysteine-rich region. The L1 and L2 domains are comprised of four repeats of alpha -helices followed by beta -strand, turn, and beta -strand. The best conserved feature in these repeats is a central glycine residue responsible for the turn (11). The L1 region spans amino acids 1-155 (nomenclature of Ebina et al. (13)), and the cysteine-rich region comprises residues 155-312, and L2 comprises residues 313-468 (12). Thus, the first 468 amino acids of the alpha -subunit are predicted to be well defined domains with extensive homologies to the epidermal growth factor receptor. The corresponding domain of the IGFI receptor (1-486) was expressed in C6 rat glioblastoma cells resulting in inhibited IGFI receptor signaling and inhibition of growth (14), and recently McKern et al. (15) have reported crystallization of these first three domains of the IGFI receptor (residues 1-462).

The major ligand binding determinants of the IR appear to reside in the alpha -subunit. Studies with chimeric receptors (16, 17), alanine scanning mutagenesis (18), and cross-linking studies (19) have suggested a binding epitope within the N-terminal 120 amino acids. Other cross-linking studies have identified hormone-receptor contact sites in the cysteine-rich region (20, 21) and just to the carboxyl side of the cysteine-rich domain around residue 390 (22). Finally in the C terminus of the alpha -subunit, cross-linking with photoreactive insulin derivatives (23) and alanine scanning mutagenesis (24) indicate that an important binding domain is found between amino acids 704 and 716. The insulin contact sites are apparently located exclusively in the alpha -subunit which was further verified by investigating expression of free alpha -subunit in COS cells (25). The alpha -subunit was secreted as a monomer that bound insulin with near wild-type affinity, but the expression level of free alpha -subunit was low allowing only limited characterization (25).

Insulin receptor deletion mutants have previously been expressed by two groups; Kadowaki et al. (26) described an insulin receptor deleted of amino acids 486-569, and Sung et al. (27) expressed a receptor with deletion of amino acids 485-599. Both groups found that the mutated receptors bound insulin with high affinity.

In the present study we have used site-directed mutagenesis to construct a series of insulin receptors with deletions of 112-246 amino acids in the IR region 469-729 (exons 7-11). The receptors were stably expressed in BHK cells as soluble receptor IgG fusion protein, and secreted protein was characterized in binding assays, by immunoblotting, and chemical cross-linking, and molecular weight was determined by mass spectrometry. By using this approach we succeeded in identifying and characterizing a 70-kDa fragment of the insulin receptor. This receptor fragment is a free monomeric alpha -subunit deleted of amino acids 469-703 and 718-729 that binds insulin with an affinity comparable to the intact ectodomain.

    MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Miscellaneous-- Insulin, insulin analogue X92 (A8H, B10D, B25Y-amide, and des-B26-30 insulin), and A14-125I-insulin and A14-125I-X92 were from Novo Nordisk. cDNA encoding IR-IgG fusion protein was a gift of Dr. Joseph Bass, University of Chicago. DNA restriction enzymes, T4 ligase, endo-beta -N-acetylglucosaminidase H, and PNGaseF were from New England Biolabs; Pwo polymerase was from Boehringer Mannheim. Neuraminidase was from Sigma. Preparation of plasmid DNA and agarose and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis were performed according to standard methods (28). For DNA minipreps QIAprep 8 kit was used (Qiagen). BHK cells were grown in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (Life Technologies Inc.) supplemented with 10 or 2% fetal calf serum. Staphylococcus aureus protein A was from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, and DSS (disuccinimidyl suberate) was from Pierce.

Construction of cDNA Expression Plasmids Encoding Receptor Deletion Constructs-- An overview of the deletion constructs and the abbreviations used are shown in Table I. The deletion mutants were expressed as soluble insulin receptor (IR) IgG fusion protein, consisting of the IR ectodomain fused to the Fc region of the IgG heavy chain (29). The IR-IgG fusion constructs were stably expressed in BHK cells by inserting the 3532-base pair NotI/XbaI fragment from the pBluescriptII-HIRs-Fc vector (29) into the ZEM expression vector and transfecting this into BHK cells as described previously (16, 30).

                              
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Table I
Insulin affinity of receptor deletion constructs
Affinities (Kd) of the receptor deletion constructs for insulin are shown. Each affinity is the average ± S.D. for at least three independent experiments. The data were determined from binding curves similar to those shown in Fig. 2, as described under "Materials and Methods."

The deletion mutant IRDelta 599 was made by PCR amplification using the sense primer 5'-CCTCTAAGATCTTGGATCCAATCTCAGTG-3' (BglII and BamHI sites underlined) and an antisense primer downstream from EagI site (amino acid 678-680). This fragment was digested with BglII and EagI and ligated into the corresponding site of the plasmid encoding IRwt, resulting in a cDNA sequence where amino acids 485-599 are deleted. IRDelta 613 and IRDelta 629 were made using same strategy (BglII/EagI site), and the sense primers 5'-TGACAAGATCTTGAAGTGGAAACCACCCTCCG-3' and 5'-TGACAAGATCTTGGTTTTCTGGGAGAGGCAGG-3', respectively (BglII sites underlined). In the construct IRDelta 649, exons 7-9 were deleted by PCR amplification using a sense primer located upstream from Bsu36I site (amino acids 417-419) and the antisense primer 5'-AGGTCCTCGAGGGCAGCTTCAGCCCACAGGATGCCTTGTCCCC-3' (XhoI site underlined). This fragment was digested with Bsu36I and XhoI and ligated into corresponding site of the plasmid encoding IRwt, resulting in a cDNA sequence in which amino acids 469-649 are deleted. IRDelta 673 was constructed by overlap extension of fragments I and II. Fragment I was amplified using a sense primer upstream from Bsu36I site and the antisense primer 5'-CTCACAGCTAGCCTTGTCCCCATTGGTC-3' (NheI site underlined). Fragment II was amplified using sense primer 5'-GGGGACAAGGCTAGCTGTGAGTATGAGGATTCGGCCGGCG-3' (NheI site underlined) and an antisense primer downstream from the AvrII site (amino acids 728-729 in exon 11). The overlap fragment was digested with Bsu36I and AvrII and ligated into corresponding site of the plasmid encoding IRwt, resulting in a cDNA sequence deleted of amino acids 469-673, and a new silent NheI site is introduced (amino acids 466-467). IRDelta 685 was made using the sense primer 5'-GACAAGGCTAGCTGTCCAAAGACAGACTCTCAGATCC-3' (NheI site is underlined) and an antisense primer downstream from the AvrII site (amino acids 728-729). This fragment was digested with NheI and AvrII and ligated into corresponding site of the plasmid encoding IRDelta 673, resulting in a cDNA sequence deleted of amino acids 469-685.

Finally IRDelta 685* and IRDelta 703 were made by PCR amplification using a sense primer upstream from the NarI site (amino acids 450-452) and the antisense primers 5'-TTTTCCTAGGGACGAAAACCACG-3' and 5'-TTTTCCTAGGGACGAAAACCACGTTGTGCAGGTAATCCTCAAACGTACAGCTAGCCTTGTCCCC (AvrII site underlined). The fragments were digested with NarI and AvrII and ligated into the corresponding site of the plasmid encoding IRwt, resulting in cDNA sequences deleted of amino acids 469-685 + 718-729 and 469-703 + 718-729, respectively. In these two constructs a new silent AvrII site was introduced (amino acids 716-717).

Insulin Receptor Binding Assay-- Two binding assays were used, a microtiter plate assay and a polyethylene glycol precipitation assay. For the plate assay receptor, IgG fusions were immobilized on protein A-coated microtiter plates, as described in detail (31). Briefly wells were coated with protein A, washed 3 times with binding buffer (100 mM Hepes, pH 8.0, 100 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2, 0.05% (w/v) bovine serum albumin, 0.025% (w/v) Triton X-100) before a dilution of receptor fusion construct in binding buffer was added to each well. After incubation for 3 h at room temperature, the plates were washed 3 times with binding buffer. Binding experiments were performed by adding a total volume of 150 µl of binding buffer with A14-125I-insulin (5-10 pM) and varying concentrations of insulin. After 16 h at 4 °C unbound ligand was removed by aspirating the buffer and washing once with cold binding buffer, and the A14-125I-insulin bound in each well was counted in a gamma -counter.

The precipitation assay was performed by incubating a suitable dilution of BHK medium containing receptor in a total volume of 200 µl with A14-125I-insulin (5-10 pM) and varying concentrations of unlabeled ligand in binding buffer for 16 h at 4 °C. Subsequently bound counts were recovered by precipitation with 0.2% gamma -globulin and 500 µl of 25% (w/v) polyethylene glycol 8000. Bound A14-125I-insulin was counted in a gamma -counter.

In both assays the concentration of receptor was adjusted to yield 10-15% binding of tracer when no competing ligand was added in the competition assay. The binding data were fitted using nonlinear regression algorithm in GraphPad Prism 2.01 (GraphPad Software Inc., San Diego, CA).

Immunoblotting-- The expressed receptors were detected by immunoblotting using the monoclonal antibody mAb-F26. This antibody was raised against a peptide corresponding to amino acids 39-75, mapping at the N terminus of the insulin receptor alpha -subunit. The antibody was kindly donated by Jes Thorn Clausen, Novo Nordisk. For blotting, medium from BHK cells expressing receptor constructs was mixed with 0.33 volume of SDS-PAGE loading buffer (40% w/v sucrose, 563 mM Tris base, 423 mM Tris-HCl, 278 mM SDS, 2 mM EDTA, 0.88 mM Serva Blue G250, 0.7 mM phenol red), and 20 µl was run on a 6% SDS-polyacrylamide gel. Reduced samples were mixed with loading buffer containing 0.1 M dithiothreitol (DTT) and incubated at 70 °C for 10 min before loading 20 µl on SDS-polyacrylamide gel. After electrophoresis proteins were blotted onto Immobilon-P membrane (Millipore). The membrane was blocked by incubating with blocking buffer (5% defatted skim milk, 2% bovine serum albumin in TBS (150 mM NaCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5)) for 16 h at 4 °C. The receptor antibody mAb-F26 was diluted in blocking buffer, and after incubating with receptor antibody the membrane was washed with TBS before incubating with peroxidase-conjugated rabbit anti-mouse immunoglobins antibody (P260 from DAKO, Denmark). Finally the blot was washed with TBS and immunoreactive protein was detected using ECL reagent from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech.

Cross-linking of 125I-X92 to Receptors-- For chemical cross-linking the high affinity analogue X92 (A8H, B10D, B25Y-amide, des-B26-30 insulin) was used because the high affinity of this analogue allowed detection of receptors directly in BHK medium, and cross-linking was performed essentially as described (16, 32). Medium from BHK cells expressing receptor constructs was incubated for 60 min at room temperature with A14-125I-X92 (0.14 nM) in the presence or absence of unlabeled X92 (1 µM). DSS in dimethyl sulfoxide was added from a 10 mM stock solution to a final concentration of 0.1 mM. After 15 min on ice the reaction was stopped by adding 0.33 volume of SDS-PAGE loading buffer or 0.33 volume SDS-PAGE loading buffer with 0.1 M DTT. Reduced samples were incubated at 70 °C for 10 min before running on a 6% SDS-polyacrylamide gel. The gel was fixed in 10% acetic acid, 20% ethanol, and a PhosphorImager screen was exposed with the dried gel.

Deglycosylation and Mass Spectrometry-- The smallest receptor fragment, IRDelta 703 was purified by affinity chromatography using immobilized insulin as described previously (33). IRDelta 703 in Hepes, pH 8.0, 0.5% n-octyl glucopyranoside, was treated with a deglycosylation mixture containing neuraminidase, endo-beta -N-acetylglucosaminidase H, and PNGaseF, either in the presence or absence of 0.1% SDS, for 18 h at 37 °C. MALDI-TOF mass spectra were recorded on a Voyager DE (Perseptive Biosystems) in sinapinic acid matrix. Calibration was performed on the MH+ and MH22+[/eq] ions of human serum albumin.

    RESULTS
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Cloning and Expression of Receptor Deletion Constructs-- We initially introduced the deletion described by Sung et al. (27) into our soluble IR-IgG fusion construct; this is the IRDelta 599, deleted of amino acids 487-599. The constructs IRDelta 613 and IRDelta 629 were also deleted from amino acid 487, whereas the remaining five constructs were deleted from amino acid 469. The rationale for this is that amino acid Cys-468 is the last amino acid in exon 6 and also the last amino acid in the L2 domain; thus IR residues 1-468 are predicted to be a large domain with homology to the N-terminal domain of the epidermal growth factor receptor (11).

Receptor Deletion Constructs: Binding of Insulin-- Insulin receptor secreted into BHK medium was analyzed in two binding assays. The receptor used here is fused to the Fc region of IgG, and therefore intact receptors could be immobilized using protein A. In this way binding curves for IRwt, IRDelta 599, IRDelta 613, and IRDelta 629 receptors could be generated; the affinities of these receptors were 2-3 nM (Kd) (Table I). In contrast no binding was detectable in the protein A assay for all receptor constructs deleted of amino acids 630-649. The polyethylene glycol precipitation assay yielded binding curves for all the constructs expressed (Fig. 2 and Table I). In Fig. 2 are shown binding curves obtained when using insulin to displace A14-125I-insulin from IRwt, IRDelta 599, IRDelta 649, and IRDelta 703. The IRwt receptor displacement curve is biphasic fitting to a two-site binding model with binding affinities in the picomolar range (31) for the high affinity site and a Kd of 3.1 ± 0.9 nM for the low affinity site in the protein A assay. The binding curves for all deleted receptors were clearly one-sited (Fig. 2) with affinities ranging from 1 to 7 nM in the binding assays. The lowest Kd of 1.1 nM was observed for IRDelta 673, and the shortest construct IRDelta 703 gave a Kd of 4.4 ± 0.8 nM. For the full-length ectodomain the affinity for insulin was 5.0 ± 0.2 nM.


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Fig. 2.   Competition binding of recombinant receptors. 125I-Insulin (5 pM) was incubated with a suitable dilution of medium from transfected BHK cells and increasing concentrations of unlabeled insulin. Bound counts were recovered by precipitation with polyethylene glycol/gamma -globulin. Cells were transfected with either IRwt (bullet ), IRDelta 599 (open circle ), IRDelta 649 (black-square), or IRDelta 703 (square ). Competition binding curves for IRwt were fitted to a two-site binding model using nonlinear regression, and the other curves were fitted to a one-site model.

Two of the deletion constructs IRDelta 685 and IRDelta 685* only differ by the exon 11 region (amino acids 718-729); the affinity of IRDelta 685 for insulin was 6.4 ± 2.4 nM, and when exon 11 is deleted in IRDelta 685* the affinity was 7.3 ± 1.6 nM, so in these deletion receptors the exon 11 region does not influence binding of insulin significantly, in contrast to what has been reported for the IR holoreceptor (34) or the insulin proreceptor (35).

Detecting Receptor Fragments by Immunoblotting-- The antibody used for immunoblotting was raised against an N-terminal epitope of the insulin receptor, and thus it would be expected to recognize the alpha -subunit of all receptors deletion constructs expressed. Immunoblotting was performed on non-reduced as well as reduced samples of medium from transfected BHK cells. The immunoblots are shown in Fig. 3. On the reduced gel (Fig. 3A) the antibody detects the full-length alpha -subunit of 130 kDa in the IRwt sample, whereas the deletion constructs show a gradual decrease in size of the alpha -subunit from apparent mass of 130 kDa to approximately 80 kDa for the smallest receptor construct IRDelta 703. This receptor is also shown in its deglycosylated form after PNGaseF treatment, where it acquires an apparent mass of approximately 55 kDa comparable to what was predicted from the amino acid sequence. For immunoblotting similar volumes of BHK medium were loaded, so in addition to smaller size there seems to be better expression yields when expressing the smaller receptor fragments. Immunoblotting of the unreduced samples reveals three groups of immunoreactive bands (Fig. 3). The full-length receptor fusion IRwt has been reported to migrate as 380-kDa protein on SDS-PAGE (29) consistent with the high molecular mass band of more than 200 kDa observed on the blot (Fig. 3A). The blot shows bands that have not entered the separation gel indicating aggregation to very high molecular weight complexes, which is also consistent with the previous report on this receptor (29). IRDelta 599, IRDelta 613, and IRDelta 629 have mobility corresponding to intact receptor IgG fusion so apparently deletion of Cys-524 is well tolerated in terms of disulfide linkage of the receptor subunits, indicating that Cys-524 is not the only alpha -alpha disulfide linkage. A marked decrease in molecular weight is seen with IRDelta 649 in which residues 630-649 are deleted. The decreased size is consistent with a loss of contact between alpha - and beta -subunits suggesting that Cys-647 is responsible for the only disulfide linkage between alpha - and beta -subunits. There seems to be small amounts of monomeric alpha -subunit even in the IRDelta 649 construct and more pronounced in the IRDelta 673 construct probably because the alpha -alpha dimer is not very stable when one of the alpha -alpha disulfides (Cys-524) has been removed. Possibly interactions between the Fc regions fused to the ectodomain also stabilize the disulfide between the two alpha -subunits. Finally the constructs IRDelta 685, IRDelta 685*, and IRDelta 703 all represent free monomeric alpha -subunit fragments only. This supports that Cys-682, Cys-683, or Cys-685 is involved in the second alpha -alpha disulfide bond.


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Fig. 3.   Immunoblotting of receptor constructs secreted from BHK cells. Medium from BHK cells transfected with receptor deletion constructs was collected, and 15 µl of medium was mixed with 5 µl of SDS loading buffer, and proteins were separated on 6% SDS-polyacrylamide gel and blotted onto polyvinylidene difluoride membrane. IR alpha -subunit was detected using a monoclonal antibody specific for epitope near the N-terminal alpha -subunit as described under "Materials and Methods." The following samples were analyzed: IRwt (lane 1), IRDelta 599 (lane 2), IRDelta 613 (lane 3), IRDelta 629 (lane 4), IRDelta 649 (lane 5), IRDelta 673 (lane 6), IRDelta 685 (lane 7), IRDelta 685* (lane 8), IRDelta 703 (lane 9), and IRDelta 703 treated with PNGaseF (lane 10 in A only). Samples in A were unreduced, and in B samples were reduced by adding DTT and boiling before loading onto gel. Molecular mass markers (Rainbow from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) are indicated to the left.

Cross-linking of 125I-X92 to Receptors-- Chemical cross-linking of A14-125I-X92 insulin analogue was performed using BHK medium directly. After cross-linking, samples were run under reduced as well as non-reduced conditions (Fig. 4). Both reduced and non-reduced gels show a cross-linking pattern similar to the immunoblotting pattern, demonstrating that all receptor fragments that are recognized by the antibody specific for IR alpha -subunit bind insulin. On the reduced gel (Fig. 4B) faint bands are visible, with apparent molecular mass of more than 200 kDa, and they appear in the first four constructs; this is probably due to intrareceptor cross-linking artifacts. For these cross-linking experiments similar volumes of medium were applied, and thus the intensity of the bands reflects affinity as well as amount of receptor so quantitative conclusions cannot be drawn directly. Nevertheless, considering the similar affinities found in the binding assay (Fig. 2 and Table I), the IRDelta 703 receptor fragment appears to be very efficiently expressed in the BHK cells. The non-reduced gel (Fig. 4A) shows that in several of the deletion constructs a mixture of beta -alpha -alpha -beta , alpha -alpha dimers, and free alpha -subunits appear, but the binding data clearly suggest that there is a homogenous population of insulin-binding sites in all constructs (nM affinity). The structure of this nanomolar binding site appears very stable, as it is not influenced by the large deletions in the 469-703 region, nor does insulin binding depend on alpha -beta or alpha -alpha -subunit contacts.


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Fig. 4.   Covalent cross-linking of 125I-X92 insulin analogue to receptor deletion constructs. Autoradiograph of 6% SDS-polyacrylamide gel showing the receptors covalently cross-linked with DSS to iodinated insulin analogue. Receptors secreted from BHK cells were cross-linked to 125I-X92 using 0.2 mM DSS in the absence (-) or presence (+) of 1 µM unlabeled X92. The following samples were analyzed: IRwt (lane 1), IRDelta 599 (lane 2), IRDelta 613 (lane 3), IRDelta 629 (lane 4), IRDelta 649 (lane 5), IRDelta 673 (lane 6), IRDelta 685 (lane 7), IRDelta 685* (lane 8), and IRDelta 703 (lane 9). Samples in A were unreduced, and in B samples were reduced by adding DTT and boiling before loading onto gel. Molecular mass markers (14C-Rainbow from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) are indicated to the left.

Deglycosylation and Mass Spectrometry-- The mass of IRDelta 703 was found by mass spectrometry to be 70.5 kDa (Fig. 5A) which is somewhat lower than the apparent molecular mass observed by SDS-PAGE (Fig. 3). The band was fairly broad, presumably due to glycosylation heterogeneity. Complete deglycosylation in the presence of 0.1% SDS gave a sharper peak at 54.5 kDa (Fig. 5C) which is in good agreement with the calculated value of 55.2 kDa. Partial deglycosylation gave a series of peaks with a spacing of 1.5-2.0 kDa corresponding to the core protein with 0-5 remaining carbohydrate chains (Fig. 5B). The difference in molecular weights between the native and the completely deglycosylated forms is consistent with extensive use of the 10 potential N-glycosylation sites.


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Fig. 5.   MALDI-TOF mass spectra of IRDelta 703. Mass spectra of native IRDelta 703 protein (A) or IRDelta 703 treated with a deglycosylation mixture containing neuraminidase, endo-beta -N-acetylglucosaminidase H, and PNGaseF. Complete deglycosylation was obtained in the presence of 0.1% SDS (C), and in the absence of SDS only partial deglycosylation was obtained (B).

    DISCUSSION
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

We wanted to characterize the domains of the IR that are essential for ligand binding. Characterizing the binding domains was approached indirectly by investigating which domains could be deleted from the IR without compromising insulin binding. The deletion constructs were expressed as fusion protein of IR ectodomain and Fc, the constant region of IgG heavy chain, which allows immobilization for binding assay. This construct (IRwt) has been described in detail by Bass et al. (29), and we have previously reported that this receptor fusion construct binds insulin with biphasic binding curves (31), and the high affinity component of this receptor has affinity that is similar to what is found for the holoreceptor. The high affinity of the holoreceptor has been ascribed to the presence of two binding epitopes on the insulin molecule which are required to bridge the two receptor alpha -subunits to attain picomolar affinity binding (36, 37). In contrast to the biphasic binding curves obtained with the intact IRwt receptor, all deletion constructs yielded one-site binding curves with nanomolar affinity (Fig. 2 and Table I), similar to what is found for the intact IR ectodomain secreted from BHK cells. The loss of high affinity binding in the IR ectodomain has been suggested to be due to loss of contact between the two alpha -subunits so that insulin cannot bridge the two alpha -subunits (36, 37), and certainly in several of our constructs the alpha -alpha contact is lost resulting in monomeric alpha -subunit fragments.

In contrast to previous attempts to express free IR alpha -subunits (25), we have achieved good expression levels allowing characterization of deleted alpha -subunit fragments without purification. Two groups have previously expressed deletion mutants of the insulin holoreceptor. Kadowaki et al. (26) described an insulin receptor deleted of amino acids 486-569, and Sung et al. (27) expressed a receptor deleted of amino acids 485-599. Kadowaki et al. (26) found a 3-fold decrease in insulin affinity when deleting amino acids 486-569; furthermore, the Scatchard plots were nearly linear indicating that the deletion caused loss of high affinity binding also in the holoreceptor. Sung et al. (27) reported unchanged ligand binding with the deleted IR but a blunted tyrosine autophosphorylation response and concluded that the deleted region was a regulatory domain for insulin regulation of beta -subunit functions. The two reports on deleted holoreceptors demonstrated that domains of the IR alpha -subunit can be deleted without compromising insulin binding, and we pursued this concept by deleting up to 246 amino acids and succeeded in identifying an insulin-binding receptor fragment of only 70 kDa (Fig. 6).


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Fig. 6.   The IRDelta 703 protein. The 70-kDa protein secreted from BHK cells expressing IRDelta 703 consists of the first three domains of the IR (L1, cysteine-rich domain (CYS), and L2) and 16 amino acids from the C terminus of the alpha -subunit.

The receptor region investigated here (amino acids 469-685) has been suggested to contain cysteines that are responsible for alpha -alpha and alpha -beta disulfides in the beta -alpha -alpha -beta -subunit composition (Fig. 1) (5, 8, 9). The importance of this region for subunit interactions is clearly evident from the stepwise decomposition of the receptor that we observe using the deletion strategy. The first deletion constructs IRDelta 599, IRDelta 613, and IRDelta 629 have intact beta -alpha -alpha -beta structure, whereas IRDelta 649 and IRDelta 673 primarily are secreted as alpha -alpha dimers, and IRDelta 685, IRDelta 685*, and IRDelta 703 are monomeric alpha -subunits. The five cysteines found within residues 469-703 are at positions 524, 647, 682, 683, and 685. The data on the present deletion constructs including insulin binding, immunoblotting, and cross-linking show that the alpha -beta contact is lost in all constructs where Cys-647 is deleted, but intact in all other constructs indicating that Cys-647 is involved in the only disulfide contact between alpha - and beta -subunits. This is in accordance with Cheatham and Kahn (9), who found that mutating Cys-647 to Ser resulted in alpha -alpha dimeric receptor fragments when expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells.

Cysteine 524 has been reported to be involved in alpha -alpha contact (class one disulfide bond) (5) but is apparently not the only residue involved in the disulfide-bonded IR dimer (7, 26). In the present constructs alpha -alpha contact seems to be completely lost when residues 637-685 are deleted, resulting in secretion of monomeric alpha -subunits only. This strongly suggests that one of the cysteines 682, 683, or 685 is also involved in alpha -alpha contact, in accordance with reports by Lu and Guidotti (8) and more recently by Sparrow et al. (6). At least two groups have suggested alpha -alpha disulfide contact in the N-terminal 200 amino acids (12, 38), but the present data do not support this.

In summary we suggest that there are two disulfides connecting the two alpha -subunits, one involving Cys-524 and one involving one of cysteines 682, 683, or 685. The alpha -beta disulfide connection we suggest involves only residue Cys-647. The resulting disulfide pattern shown in Fig. 1 is in accordance with mutational data (8, 9), and the recent identification of the disulfide bonds in the C terminus of the ectodomain by Sparrow et al. (6), who suggested that Cys-647 in the alpha -subunit is connected to Cys-872 in the beta -subunit and that beta -chain residues 798 and 807 are connected leaving Cys-884 as a buried thiol in the soluble ectodomain (6).

In the present study we have deleted 234 amino acids in the central part of the IR alpha -subunit without compromising ligand binding. The fact that this large domain can be deleted indicates that the N and C termini that are known to be important for binding of insulin (16-18, 23, 24) must remain in close contact in the IR structure. The deleted region (469-703) is apparently not essential for the insulin binding region, and what actually keeps the C-terminal 16 amino acids of the 70-kDa receptor fragment (Fig. 6) in close contact to the N-terminal 468 amino acids is not clear. By using alanine scanning mutagenesis Mynarcik et al. (24) found that 7 alanine mutations in the 704-716 region were deleterious to insulin binding (loss of more than 100-fold on Kd). Clearly all of these effects cannot be direct effects on ligand-receptor interaction, and it may be that some of these residues are essential for docking the C terminus of the alpha -subunit in close contact to regions N-terminal to amino acid 468, i.e. maintaining the insulin-binding pocket intact.

In the region deleted it has been suggested that residues 485-599 contain a regulatory domain for insulin regulation of beta -subunit functions (27); this was based on observations of a blunted tyrosine autophosphorylation response in a holoreceptor deleted of residues 485-599. We only expressed soluble receptors so we cannot argue for regulatory functions, but deleting a region including one of the cysteines (Cys-524) involved in subunit interaction and in close proximity to other important cysteines could likely modify the conformational changes needed for tyrosine kinase activation.

The deleted region has also been implied in some cases of insulin resistance because it contains a major immunogenic region (amino acids 450-601) that includes an epitope recognized by anti-receptor antibodies (40). Zhang and Roth (40) found that several monoclonal antibodies and anti-receptor autoantibodies from all 15 patients with type B insulin resistance recognized epitopes within amino acids 450-601.

Another approach that has given valuable information on IR function is the naturally occurring IR mutants observed in patients (3, 4). Of the approximately 30 mutations described in the insulin receptor ectodomain, most are found in the first 412 residues. There are three mutations in the extracellular part of the beta -subunit, and one in the proteolytic cleavage site (alpha -beta junction), but only one mutation is recognized within residues 469-703, and this is a premature stop codon. This again indicates that this region is not of major importance for receptor function.

The best characterized ligand receptor interaction is that of growth hormone binding to its receptor. For this receptor system a naturally occurring receptor fragment has been identified in serum (41); this receptor fragment comprises the 246 amino acids ectodomain of the GH receptor. Upon binding of GH the receptor fragment dimerize like the full-length receptor, and also the binding affinity of the full-length receptor is intact. By using a recombinant version of this receptor fragment (residues 1-238) expressed in Escherichia coli the crystal structure of GH in complex with GH receptor fragment was solved (42). In the insulin receptor system the ectodomain is much larger (almost 1900 amino acids, 350-400 kDa); it is dimeric also in the absence of ligand, and no naturally occurring ligand binding fragment has been identified. Attempts to obtain smaller IR fragments that bind insulin have not been met with much success; only the full-length ectodomain has been expressed and purified in substantial quantities (16, 33). Given the size and complexity of the ectodomain protein, the identification of a minimal ligand-receptor complex is expected to facilitate generation of crystals suitable for detailed structural analysis by x-ray crystallography. In the present study we tried to minimize the ligand binding domain of the insulin receptor by deleting regions of the IR alpha -subunit. We succeeded in obtaining a 70-kDa monomeric receptor fragment that binds insulin with an affinity similar to what is found for the soluble ectodomain of the insulin receptor.

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank Durita Simonsen, Ulla M. Jørgensen, Jytte Topp-Radzikowska, and Lene Drube for excellent technical assistance and Dr. Joseph Bass (University of Chicago) for providing IR-IgG cDNA.

    FOOTNOTES

* The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

§ To whom correspondence should be addressed: Insulin Research, Novo Nordisk, Novo Allé, 6B1.90, 2880 Bagsværd, Denmark. Tel.: 45 4442 3572; Fax: 45 4444 4250; E-mail clak{at}novo.dk.

1 The abbreviations used are: IR, insulin receptor; BHK, baby hamster kidney; DSS, disuccinimidyl suberate; GH, growth hormone; IGFI, insulin-like growth factor I; MALDI-TOF, matrix associated laser desorption ionization-time of flight; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; PAGE, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; DTT, dithiothreitol; TBS, Tris-buffered saline; PNGase, peptide N-glycosidase.

    REFERENCES
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

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