화학공학소재연구정보센터
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.365, No.3, 433-438, 2008
SH3 domain of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase regulatory subunit is responsible for the formation of a sequestration complex with insulin receptor substrate-1
Class IA phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase), which is composed of a 110 kDa catalytic subunit and a regulatory subunit, plays a key role in most insulin dependent cellular responses. To date, five mammalian regulatory subunit isoforms have been identified, including two 85 kDa proteins (p85 alpha and p85 beta), two 55 kDa proteins (p55 gamma and p55 alpha), and one 50 kDa protein (p50 alpha). In the present study, we overexpressed these recombinant proteins, tagged with green fluorescent proteins (GFP), in CHO-IR cells and investigated intracellular localizations in both the presence and the absence of insulin stimulation. Interestingly, in response to insulin, only p85 alpha and p85 beta redistributed to isolated foci in the cells, while both were present throughout the cytoplasm in quiescent cells. In contrast, p55s accumulated in the perinuclear region irrespective of insulin stimulation, while p50 alpha behaved similarly to control GFP. Immunofluorescent antibodies against endogenous IRS-1 revealed IRS-1 to be co-localized in the p85 foci in response to insulin. As both insulin receptors and p110 alpha catalytic subunits were absent from these foci on immunofluorescence study, only p85 and IRS-1 were suggested to form a sequestration complex in response to insulin. To determine the domain responsible for IRS-1 complex formation, we prepared and overexpressed the SH3 domain deletion mutant of p85 alpha in CHO-IR cells. This mutant failed to form foci, suggesting the SH3 domain of regulatory subunits to be responsible for formation of the p85-IRS-1 sequestration complex. In conclusion, our study revealed the SH3 domain of PI 3-kinase to play a critical role in intracellular localizations, including formation of foci with IRS-1 in response to insulin. (c) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.