G. Thompson Burke
City University of New York
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Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1978
G. Thompson Burke; Tibor Barka
Isoproterenol induces both the secretion of protein and the stimulation of DNA synthesis and growth in rat salivary glands. The specific binding of the labelled beta-adrenergic antagonist [3H]dihydroalprenolol has been used to measure the number of beta-adrenergic receptors in rat parotid glands during isoproterenol-induced growth. Isoproterenol-enlarged glands display no change in the specific binding capacity per gland for [3H]-dihydroalprenolol compared with normal tissue. Catecholamine sensitive adenylate cyclase activity varies independently of the number of specific [3H]dihydroalprenolol binding sites during isoproterenol-induced growth. Previously-described di-ferences in optimal isoproterenol doses which produce protein secretion and stimulation of DNA synthesis may reflect different responses to various rates of receptor occupancy, or may be due to the presence of more than one type of beta-adrenergic receptor.
Journal of Protein Chemistry | 1991
Shuhua Wang; Shi-quan Hu; G. Thompson Burke; Panayotis G. Katsoyannis
The β-turn formed by the amino acid residues 20–23 of the B-chain of insulin has been implicated as an important structural feature of the molecule. In other biologically active peptides, stabilization of β-turns has resulted in increases in activity. We have synthesized three insulin analogues containing modifications which would be expected to increase the stability of the β-turn. In two analogues, we have substituted α-aminoisobutyric acid (Aib) for the Glu residue normally present in position B21 or for the Arg residue normally present in position B22; in a third compound, we have replaced the Glu residue with its D-isomer. Biological evaluation of these compounds showed that [B21 Aib]insulin displays a potencyca. one-fourth that of natural insulin, while [B22 Aib]insulin is less than 10% as potent. In contrast, [B21 D-Glu]insulin is equipotent with natural insulin. We conclude that the β-turn region of the insulin molecule normally possesses considerable flexibility, which may be necessary for it to assume a conformation commensurate with high biological activity. If this is the case, [B21 D-Glu]insulin may exhibit a stabilized geometry similar to that of natural insulin when bound to the insulin receptor.
Journal of Protein Chemistry | 1992
Ying-Chi Chu; Lin Zong; G. Thompson Burke; Panayotis G. Katsoyannis
As part of our aim to investigate the contribution of the tyrosine residue found in the 14 position of the A-chain to the biological activity of insulin, we have synthesized six insulin analogues in which the A14 Tyr has been substituted by a variety of amino acid residues. We have selected three hydrophilic and charged residues—glutamic acid, histidine, and lysine—as well as three hydrophobic residues—cycloleucine, cyclohexylalanine, and naphthyl-(1)-alanine—to replace the A14 Tyr. All six analogues exhibit full agonist activity, reaching the same maximum stimulation of lipogenesis as is achieved with procine insulin. The potency for five of the six analogues, [A14 Glu]-, [A14 His]-, [A14 Lys]-, [A14 cycloleucine]-, and [A14 naphthyl-(1)-alanine]-insulins in receptor binding assays ranges from 40–71% and in stimulation of lipogenesis ranges from 35-120% relative to porcine insulin. In contrast, the potency of the sixth analogue, [A14 cyclohexylalanine]insulin, in both types of assays is less than 1% of the natural hormone. The retention time on reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography for the first five analogues is similar to that of bovine insulin, whereas for the sixth analogue, [A14 cyclohexylalanine]insulin, it is approximately 11 min longer than that of the natural hormone. This suggests a profound change in conformation of the latter analogue. Apparently, the A14 position of insulin can tolerate a wide latitude of structural alterations without substantial decrease in potency. This suggests that the A14 position does not participate directly in insulin receptor interaction. Only when a substitution which has the potential to disrupt the conformation of the molecule is made at this position, is the affinity for the receptor, and hence the biological potency, greatly reduced.
Journal of Protein Chemistry | 1984
Hiroshi Ogawa; G. Thompson Burke; Panayotis G. Katsoyannis
A modified insulin, in which the A chain moiety has been extended at the C-terminus with the “D region” of the insulin-like growth factor II, has been synthesized essentially by the procedures employed in this laboratory for the synthesis of insulin and analogues. This hybrid molecule displayed reduced insulin-like activities, 34.5% receptor binding, and 40.4% stimulation of lipogenesis relative to natural insulin. These findings suggest that the extension sequence (“D region”) attached at the C-terminus of the A chain may partially cover the putative receptor binding region of insulin, in support of speculations based on computer-generated models. These same models indicate that the extension peptide may interfere with one of the two regions implicated in insulin antibody recognition. In this regard, radioimmunoassay of the hybrid revealed potency even more reduced than biological activity: 18% relative to insulin. Growth factor assays of the hybrid (this laboratory, unpublished data) suggest that the “D region” of insulin-like growth factor II is not in itself the determinant of growth-promoting activity.
Journal of Protein Chemistry | 1983
Nicolaos Ferderigos; G. Thompson Burke; Kouki Kitagawa; Panayotis G. Katsoyannis
Two analogs of sheep insulin, both differing from the native material by a single amino acid in the A chain, have been synthesized and isolated in highly purified form by procedures developed in this laboratory. In one case, the glutamine residue in position A5 was replaced by leucine ([Leu5-A]); in the other, the tyrosine residue in position A19 was replaced by phenylalanine ([Phe19-A]). The biological behavior of these analogs was compared with natural bovine insulin inin vitro tests and in receptor-binding assays, as well as in radioimmunoassay. In the stimulation of glucose oxidation by rat adipocytes, the analogs gave relative potencies of 30% and 7.8% for [Leu5-A] and [Phe19-A], respectively. Receptor-binding assays in rat liver plasma membranes showed similar behavior for both analogs. In radioimmunoassay, [Leu5-A] displayed a relative potency of 27.9%, while [Phe19-A] showed a relative potency of 19–27%, compared with bovine insulin. At high concentration, both analogs displayed the same maximal activity as bovine insulin, and the dose-response curves are essentially parallel. It is speculated that the interaction between the glutamine residue in position 5 and the tyrosine residue in position 19 of the A chain of insulin are important in maintaining a three-dimensional structure commensurate with high biological activity. The full intrinsic activity of both analogs at high concentrations and the similarity of the potency figures in receptor-binding and glucose-oxidation assays permit the further conclusion that the reduced potency in the latter assay can be ascribed wholly to the reduced binding affinity toward insulin receptors caused by the substitutions made in the analogs. The receptor-analog complexes are fully capable of triggering the next event in the chain leading to the biological response.
Journal of Protein Chemistry | 1995
William R. Laws; Gerald P. Schwartz; Elena Rusinova; G. Thompson Burke; Ying-Chi Chu; Panayotis G. Katsoyannis; J. B. Alexander Ross
Use of insulins intrinsic tyrosine absorption and fluorescence to monitor its interaction with the insulin receptor is limited because the spectral properties of the receptor tryptophan residues mask the spectral properties of the hormone tyrosine residues. We describe the synthesis of an insulin analog where A14 tyrosine is replaced by a tryptophan analog, 5-hydroxytryptophan. This insulin is spectrally enhanced since 5-hydroxytryptophan has an absorption band above 300 nm which is at lower energies than the absorption of tryptophan. Steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence parameters indicate that 5-hydroxytryptophan reports the same information about the environment of the A14 side chain as does the corresponding tryptophan-containing insulin. The synthetic hormone is a full agonist compared to porcine insulin, but has slightly reduced specific activity. Consequently, this spectrally enhanced insulin analog will be useful for hormone-receptor interaction studies since it can be observed by both absorption and fluorescence even in the presence of the tryptophan-containing receptor.
Diabetes | 1986
Monique A. De Vroede; Matthew M. Rechler; S. Peter Nissley; Hiroshi Ogawa; Satish Joshi; G. Thompson Burke; Panayotis G. Katsoyannis
Insulin and the insulin-like growth factors IGF-I and IGF-II are thought to exert their mitogenic effects in cultured chick embryo fibroblasts and human skin fibroblasts via IGF receptors rather than via insulin receptors. These effects appear to be mediated by the type I subtype of IGF receptor, which is structurally similar to the insulin receptor and exhibits significant cross-reactivity with insulin. As a first step in our longrange goal of defining those features of the IGF-I and IGF-II molecules that confer enhanced mitogenic activity and reactivity with these mitogenic type I IGF receptors, we have prepared two hybrid insulin-IGF molecules and examined their mitogenic and binding activities: (1) A27-insulin, containing an elongated 27- residue A-chain (in which the 6-residue D-domain of IGF-II was added to the carboxy-terminus of the 21-residue A-chain of insulin) combined with the B-chain of insulin; and (2) Ainsulin-BIGF-I, containing the A-chain of insulin and the synthetic 30-residue B-domain of IGF-I. Both hybrid molecules stimulated DNA synthesis and inhibited 125I-IGF-I binding to type I IGF receptors in both chick embryo and human fibroblast cultures. A27- insulin had considerably greater mitogenic potency and binding potency than Ainsulin-BIGF-I. Neither hybrid molecule was more potent in these assays than insulin, indicating that the presence of DIGF-II,or BIGF-I, by itself was not sufficient to increase the mitogenic potency of insulin in fibroblasts. By contrast, Ainsulin-BIGF-I showed enhanced reactivity with an antiserum to IGF-I. A27-insulin retained significant insulin-like metabolic activity despite the presence of the D-domain of IGF-II.
Journal of Protein Chemistry | 1985
Gerald P. Schwartz; Diana Wong; G. Thompson Burke; Monique A. De Vroede; Matthew M. Rechler; Panayotis G. Katsoyannis
An analogue of insulin in which the naturally occurring tyrosine residue in position B16 is replaced by a glutamine residue has been synthesized. Glutamine appears in the corresponding position in the B-domain of the insulin-like growth factors. This analogue displays 9% of the potency of insulin in binding to the insulin receptor from rat liver plasma membranes, 17% in stimulating the conversion of [3-3H] glucose into lipids in rat adipocytes, and 23% in insulin radioimmunoassay, but 40% of the potency of insulin in stimulating DNA synthesis in cultured chick fibroblasts. The analogue is a more potent mitogen than is a hybrid molecule which contains the A-chain of insulin and the entire B-domain sequence of IGF-I.
Journal of Protein Chemistry | 1993
Ying-Chi Chu; G. Thompson Burke; J. B. Alexander Ross; Panayotis G. Katsoyannis
In continuation of our efforts to study the solution structure and conformational dynamics of insulin by time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy, we have synthesized and examined the biological activity of five insulin analogues in which selected naturally occurring residues in the A-chain have been replaced with the strongly fluorescent tryptophan residue. The potency of these analogues was evaluated in lipogenesis assays in isolated rat adipocytes, in receptor binding assays using rat liver plasma membranes, and in two cases, in receptor binding assays using adipocytes. [A3 Trp]insulin displays a potency of 3% in receptor binding assays in both liver membranes and in adipocytes, but only 0.06% in lipogenesis assays as compared to porcine insulin. [A10 Trp] insulin displays a potency ofca. 40% andca. 25% in rat liver receptor binding and lipogenesis assays, respectively. [A13 Trp]insulin displays a potency ofca. 39% in rat liver receptor binding assays, but onlyca. 9% in receptor binding in adipocytes; in lipogenesis assays, [A13 Trp] insulin displays a potency ofca. 12%, comparable to its potency in adipocyte receptor binding assays. [A15 Trp]insulin exhibits a potency of 18% and 9% in rat liver receptor binding and lipogenesis assays, respectively. The doubly substituted analogue, [A14 Trp, A19 Trp] insulin, displays a potency ofca. 0.7% in both rat liver receptor binding assays and lipogenesis assays. These data suggest two major conclusions: (1) the A3 and A15 residues lie in sensitive regions in the insulin molecule, and structural modifications at these positions have deleterious effects on biological activity of the hormone; and (2) [A13 Trp]insulin appears to be a unique case in which an insulin analogue exhibits a higher potency when assayed in liver tissue than when assayed in fat cells.
Journal of Protein Chemistry | 1982
Gerald P. Schwartz; G. Thompson Burke; Panayotis G. Katsoyannis
An analog of human insulin, which differs from the parent molecule in that the histidine residue at position 10 of the B chain (B10) is replaced by lysine, has been synthesized and isolated in purified form. This analog, [10-lysine-B] insulin ([Lys10-B] insulin), in stimulating lipogenesis and in radioimmunoassays, exhibited potencies of 14.2% and 14.7%, respectively, as compared to the natural hormone. In insulin receptor binding in rat liver membranes, [Lys10-B] insulin was found to possess a potency of ∼17% compared to insulin. We have shown previously that substitution of the B10 polar residue histidine with the nonpolar leucine results in an analog exhibiting inin vivo assays ∼50% of the activity of the parent molecule. It is speculated that in insulin the relative size of the amino acid residue at B10, rather than its polarity, is the most important factor in maintaining a structure commensurate with high biological activity.