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Diabetes, Vol 34, Issue 2 121-128, Copyright © 1985 by American Diabetes Association


ARTICLES

Cytosolic insulin-degrading activity in islet-derived tumor cell lines and in normal rat islets

SJ Bhathena, KI Timmers, HK Oie, NR Voyles and L Recant

RIN-m cells, cultured from a rat insulinoma, not only bind and secrete but also degrade insulin (Diabetes 1982; 31:521-31). The insulin-degrading activity resides in the cytosol and is similar to the insulin-specific proteases previously described in muscle and other tissues. It has an apparent Km of 0.15 microM for porcine insulin in crude cell-free extracts, a competitive inhibition constant for proinsulin that is close to the Km, and a lower but measurable affinity for glucagon. The enzyme is inactive at pHs below 6.0, indicating that it is not lysosomal, is completely inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide, and exhibits apparent competitive inhibition constants (microM) for the following peptides: desoctapeptide insulin, 0.043; guinea pig insulin, 0.048; proinsulin, 0.64; insulin B-chain, 1.17; glucagon, 7.0; and cyclic somatostatin, 8.6. Highly active insulin-degrading activity was found using cell suspensions of 22 cloned and 8 subcloned cell lines derived from RIN-m as well as 11 other continuous cell lines derived from a variety of nonislet tissues of rat, mouse, and human origin. Homogenates of the original rat islet tumor and cytosol of normal rat islets also contained insulin-degrading activity. Although insulin protease is present in a variety of tissues, it may have an additional regulatory function in cells that are actively synthesizing, storing, and secreting insulin.
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R. G. Bennett, F. G. Hamel, and W. C. Duckworth
An Insulin-Degrading Enzyme Inhibitor Decreases Amylin Degradation, Increases Amylin-Induced Cytotoxicity, and Increases Amyloid Formation in Insulinoma Cell Cultures
Diabetes, September 1, 2003; 52(9): 2315 - 2320.
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R. G. Bennett, W. C. Duckworth, and F. G. Hamel
Degradation of Amylin by Insulin-degrading Enzyme
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