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Diabetes, Vol 36, Issue 3 335-340, Copyright © 1987 by American Diabetes Association


ARTICLES

New, simple insulin-receptor assay with universal application to solubilized insulin receptors and receptors in broken and intact cells

EK Frandsen and RA Bacchus

A new, simple insulin-receptor-binding assay has been devised. The assay is based on the separation of free and receptor-bound 125I-labeled insulin in 80% ethanol. It was found that the insulin-receptor complex was fully stable at this ethanol concentration, regardless of the source of the receptor employed. The assay has been evaluated with solubilized insulin receptors and membrane-bound receptors from human placenta and porcine liver as well as intact cells with the IM-9 cell line. The assay is simple, rapid, and has large capacity. Comparisons of the ethanol-based assay to the conventionally employed assays with polyethylene glycol or microfuge centrifugation for the separation of free and bound 125I-insulin revealed large discrepancies between the assays. The ethanol-based assay always appeared to provide a better separation. Microfuge centrifugation of placental membranes precipitated approximately 3% of the ethanol-precipitable insulin-receptor complex, while polyethylene glycol precipitation of solubilized insulin receptors varied between 40 and 80% of the ethanol precipitability, depending on the receptor concentration employed.
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Mol. Biol. CellHome page
T. S. Ramalingam, A. Chakrabarti, and M. Edidin
Interaction of Class I Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA-I) Molecules with Insulin Receptors and Its Effect on the Insulin-Signaling Cascade
Mol. Biol. Cell, December 1, 1997; 8(12): 2463 - 2474.
[Abstract] [Full Text]




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Copyright © 1987 by the American Diabetes Association.