Diabetes, Vol 36, Issue 9 1054-1060, Copyright © 1987 by American Diabetes Association
Insulin and other stimulants have nonparallel translational effects on protein synthesis
Y Okabayashi, J Moessner, CD Logsdon, ID Goldfine and JA Williams
Isolated pancreatic acini from streptozocin-induced diabetic rats were used
to study the role of insulin on the synthesis of specific cellular
proteins. When acini were incubated with 0-100 nM insulin for 2 h and then
pulsed with [35S]methionine, a dose-dependent increase in [35S]methionine
incorporation into total cellular proteins was observed. When acinar cell
lysates were subjected to gel electrophoresis, 12 major newly synthesized
protein bands were resolved. Insulin (100 nM) increased the incorporation
of [35S]methionine into all bands but with significantly different rates,
varying from 84 to 216% of control. Next, specific antibodies to amylase,
trypsin, ribonuclease, myosin, and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) were used to
evaluate the biosynthesis of known proteins. Insulin stimulated labeled
amino acid incorporation into amylase by 148% over control. Insulin
stimulated the synthesis of trypsinogen to a similar degree, but
ribonuclease synthesis showed a significantly smaller increase of 53% over
control. Insulin stimulated myosin and LDH synthesis by 169 and 184%,
respectively. A differential pattern of protein synthesis was also observed
when acini were treated with two other stimulators of protein synthesis,
cholecystokinin and hemin. Both of these stimulators had a reduced effect
on ribonuclease synthesis compared with amylase and trypsinogen synthesis
but failed to increase myosin synthesis. When the RNAs extracted from
control acini and acini treated with 100 nM insulin were translated in
vitro, the proteins synthesized were quantitatively similar. This study
therefore indicates that insulin has translational effects on acinar
protein synthesis, and these effects are nonparallel for various specific
acinar cell proteins.