Diabetes 51:2936-2943, 2002 © 2002 by the American Diabetes Association, Inc.
Skeletal Muscle Insulin Resistance in Obesity-Associated Type 2 Diabetes in Monkeys Is Linked to a Defect in Insulin Activation of Protein Kinase C-
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
/
/
) and protein kinase B (PKB) in muscles of nondiabetic monkeys. Insulin-induced increases in glucose disposal and aPKC activity diminished progressively in prediabetic and diabetic monkeys. Decreases in aPKC activation appeared to be at least partly due to diminished activation of IRS-1-dependent PI 3-kinase, but direct activation of aPKCs by the PI 3-kinase lipid product PI-3,4,5-(PO4)3 was also diminished. In conjunction with aPKCs, PKB activation was diminished in prediabetic muscle but, differently from aPKCs, seemed to partially improve in diabetic muscle. Interestingly, calorie restriction and avoidance of obesity largely prevented development of defects in glucose disposal and aPKC activation. Our findings suggest that defective activation of aPKCs contributes importantly to obesity-dependent development of skeletal muscle insulin resistance in prediabetic and type 2 diabetic monkeys.
| INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Concerning insulin signaling to the glucose transport system, it is generally accepted that 1) phosphatidylinositol (PI) 3-kinase plays a key role by generating PI-3,4,5-(PO4)3 (PIP3) in response to activation by insulin receptor- mediated tyrosine phosphorylation of insulin receptor substrate (IRS)-1 and other signaling factors, and that 2) PIP3 activates downstream effectors, viz., protein kinase B (PKB/Akt) isoforms
/ß (47) and atypical protein kinase C (aPKC) isoforms
/
/
(812). Defects in insulin activation of IRS-1-dependent PI 3-kinase have been observed in skeletal muscle of lean and obese type 2 diabetic humans (1315), and decreases in PKB activation were observed in muscle of lean (14) but not obese (15) diabetic humans (14). Information on aPKC activation is limited to a preliminary report of diminished activation of aPKCs in muscles of obese diabetic humans (16), and there is no published information on alterations of aPKCs in other primates. On the other hand, the activation of aPKCs in skeletal muscle by insulin was found to be defective in nonobese type 2 diabetic Goto-Kakazaki rats (17) and in rats fed a high-fat diet (18).
In this study, we examined the activation of IRS-1-dependent PI 3-kinase, PKB, and aPKCs (
/
/
) in skeletal muscle during hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp studies in a group of monkeys (nondiabetic, prediabetic, diabetic, and calorie-restricted) in which "prediabetes," i.e., a state of obesity and associated insulin resistance attended by compensatory ß-cell hyper-responsiveness and maintenance of relatively normal plasma glucose levels, followed by overt type 2 diabetes, occurs at high prevalence rates (>60%) in the absence of caloric restriction (1921). In these studies, which were both cross-sectional and, in some monkeys, longitudinal, we found that insulin-induced activation of aPKCs diminished partially in prediabetic monkeys and then more severely as monkeys became overtly diabetic. In contrast, insulin activation of aPKCs was largely preserved in calorie-restricted monkeys.
| RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
1011 kg (22). Chronic calorie restriction of rhesus monkeys (i.e., prevention of obesity) has been shown to prevent the development of type 2 diabetes (23) and to improve insulin sensitivity as measured during a euglycemic clamp (24). Diabetic monkeys characteristically had fasting plasma glucose levels >110 mg/dl, decreased acute insulin release, and decreased glucose disappearance rates (Kglu) during an intravenous glucose tolerance test and decreased insulin-stimulated glucose disposal rates during euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp studies (19,25). Prediabetic monkeys were obese and had increased acute insulin release rates, marked hyperinsulinemia, and decreased Kglu and insulin-stimulated glucose disposal rates (21).
Euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp studies with skeletal muscle biopsies were conducted after an overnight fast as described (26). Biopsies of the vastus lateralis muscles were obtained just before and at 90120 min of insulin administration. Muscle samples were rapidly frozen in liquid N2, lyophilized, and stored at -196°C. Activities of PKC-
/
/
, PKB, and PI 3-kinase appeared to be stable during such storage.
Enzyme assays.
Muscle samples were homogenized with a polytron in appropriate buffers as described (17,27). In all aPKC and PKB assays, two to four replicates of basal and insulin-stimulated samples from two to four diabetic, prediabetic, and/or calorie-restricted monkeys were directly compared with replicates from two to four nondiabetic monkeys.
aPKC activity was measured as described (17,27). In brief, aPKCs
,
, and
were immunoprecipitated from cell lysates with a rabbit polyclonal antiserum (Santa Cruz Biotechnologies) that recognizes the nearly identical COOH-termini of PKC-
, -
, and -
. (Note that it is currently not possible to separately measure activity of the individual aPKCs, but they apparently function interchangably during insulin-stimulated glucose transport [11].) Precipitates were collected on Sepharose-AG beads and incubated for 8 min at 30°C in 100 µl buffer containing 50 mmol/l Tris/HCl (pH 7.5), 100 µmol/l Na3VO4, 100 µmol/l Na4 P2O7, 1 mmol/l NaF, 100 µmol/l PMSF (phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride), 4 µg phosphatidylserine (Sigma), 50 µmol/l [
-32P]ATP (NEN Life Science Products), 5 mmol/l MgCl2, 1 mmol/l EGTA, and, as substrate, 40 µmol/l serine analog of the PKC-
pseudosubstrate (BioSource), a preferred substrate for aPKCs. In some assays, PIP3 (Matreya) was added to activate aPKCs, as described (10). After incubation, 32P-labeled substrate was trapped on P-81 filter paper and counted. Note that we found that the amounts of aPKCs recovered in these immunoprecipitates were equal, regardless of whether lysates were prepared from nondiabetic, calorie-restricted, prediabetic, or diabetic muscles, which were found (see below) to contain different concentrations of specific aPKC isoforms. This equal precipitation of aPKCs with anti-COOH-terminal antiserum may be due to the fact that, as originally reported (8), the immunoprecipitation is not quantitative and the recovery of aPKC is
5060% when precipitated according to the instructions provided by the supplier. (In fact, much higher amounts of antiserum are needed to more fully precipitate aPKCs.) Thus, anti-aPKC antibodies may have been limiting. In any event, because equal amounts of aPKC were precipitated, the presently reported levels of aPKC activity reflect the specific activity of the enzyme.
PKB enzyme activity was measured using a kit obtained from Upstate Biotechnologies (Lake Placid, NY), as described previously (17,27). In brief, PKB
was immunoprecipitated with sheep polyclonal anti-PKB
antiserum (Upstate Biotechnologies), collected on Sepharose-AG beads, and assayed as per kit directions. PKB activation was also assessed by immunoblotting for phosphorylation of serine-473 and, in some instances, threonine-308, as described (17,27).
Immunoprecipitable IRS-1-dependent PI 3-kinase (rabbit polyclonal antiserum was purchased from Upstate Biotechnologies) was determined as previously described (17). In this case, samples from each monkey were assayed simultaneously, and results (as determined in a BioRad PhosphorImager/Molecular Analyst Program) were expressed relative to the nondiabetic control (i.e., unstimulated) samples developed on the same thin-layer chromatography plate.
Western analyses.
Lysate proteins were resolved by SDS-PAGE, transferred to nitrocellulose membranes, and immunoblotted as described (17,27). Antibodies used for blotting included rabbit polyclonal anti- COOH-terminal PKC-
/
/
antiserum (Santa Cruz Biotechnologies) (PKCs
,
, and
have nearly identical COOH-termini that are recognized by this antiserum), mouse monoclonal isoform-specific anti-PKC-
/
antibodies that recognize both PKC-
and -
, which are 98% homologous (Transduction Labs), rabbit polyclonal isoform-specific anti-NH2-terminal PKC-
antiserum (kindly supplied by Dr. Todd Sacktor), sheep polyclonal anti-PKB
antiserum (Upstate Biotechnologies), sheep polyclonal anti-3-phosphoinositide-dependent protein kinase-1 (PDK-1) antiserum (Upstate Biotechnologies), rabbit polyclonal anti-p85 subunit/PI 3-kinase antiserum (Upstate Biotechnologies), rabbit polyclonal anti-IRS-1 antiserum (Upstate Biotechnologies), rabbit polyclonal anti- phospho-ser-473-PKB antiserum (Cell Signaling, Beverly, MA), and rabbit polyclonal anti-phospho-thr-308-PKB antiserum (Biosource, Camarillo, CA). Immunoblots were quantified by measurement of chemiluminescence in a BioRad Molecular Analyst Chemilumunescence/Phosphorescence Imaging System.
Statistical methods.
Data are expressed as means ± SE. Basal versus insulin-stimulated means were compared by Students t test for paired samples. Group differences were compared by a one-way ANOVA and subsequently by the least-significant difference multiple comparison method. Pearsons correlation coefficient was used to test for significant linear relationships between variables.
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
|
|
Decreases in insulin-stimulated aPKC activity in diabetic muscles could not have resulted from decreases in levels of aPKCs and subsequently diminished availability of aPKCs to serve as activation targets for PI 3-kinase and PDK-1. As seen in Fig. 3 and Table 2, the content of the major aPKC in monkey muscle, viz., PKC-
, as measured by specific anti-NH2-terminal antibodies, was increased significantly (by 60%, P < 0.01) in diabetic muscles but not significantly in prediabetic muscles. The content of PKC-
/
, the less abundant aPKC, as assessed by a specific antibody, seemed to be increased slightly but not significantly in diabetic and prediabetic muscles. Note that 1) PKC-
, as indicated by blotting with the isoform-specific anti- NH2-terminal anti-PKC-
antiserum, migrated on SDS-PAGE largely at 80 kDa, corresponding to the more abundant higher Mr aPKC seen on blots developed with the anti-COOH-terminal antiserum, which does not distinguish between PKC-
, -
, and -
; and 2) PKC-
and -
, which are 98% homologous and recognized similarly by the presently used
/
-specific monoclonal antibodies, migrated largely at a lower Mr of 75 kDa, corresponding to the less abundant lower band seen with anti-COOH-terminal antiserum. However, also note that, as measured with anti-COOH-terminal antiserum, the upper 80-kDa band was increased and the lower 75-kDa band was slightly decreased in the blots (Fig. 3), and the total aPKC level, as measured by this antiserum, was increased slightly but not significantly, viz., 22 ± 13% (Table 2).
|
|
Alterations in PKB-
activation in vastus lateralis muscles.
PKB-
activity increased nearly fourfold in response to insulin administration during the clamp in nondiabetic monkeys (Fig. 2D). (Note that we did not measure PKB-ß activity, as it is very low in skeletal muscle, and, moreover, knockout of the PKB-ß gene in mice does not impair insulin-stimulated glucose transport at high maximally effective insulin concentrations [28] that would be comparable to the high maximally effective levels of plasma insulin achieved during the present clamps.) Interestingly, the activation of PKB-
by insulin was significantly diminished in obese prediabetic (P < 0.05) but not diabetic (P = 0.21) monkeys. Similarly, insulin-stimulated PKB-
/ß phosphorylation, as judged by immunoblotting for phospho-serine-473 content, was diminished by 67% in muscles of prediabetic monkeys and 36% in diabetic monkeys (Fig. 3 and Table 2); however, because of wide variations within groups, changes in PKB phosphorylation were not statistically significant.
In calorie-restricted monkeys, insulin-stimulated phosphorylation of serine-473 of PKB-
/ß (Fig. 3 and Table 2) was well maintained relative to nondiabetic monkeys, but, surprisingly, insulin-stimulated PKB enzyme activity was significantly (P < 0.01) diminished (fold-wise, however, it was still very responsive to insulin) (Fig. 2D). This decrease in PKB enzyme activity in calorie-restricted monkeys could not be explained by an altered effect of insulin on phosphorylation of the threonine-308 activation loop site of PKB, as this PDK-1-dependent phosphorylation, like that of serine-473, was comparable in muscles of nondiabetic and calorie-restricted monkeys (Fig. 3).
There were no significant differences between immunoreactive PKB-
levels in muscles of any of the groups (Fig. 3 and Table 2).
Alterations in insulin-stimulated glucose disposal rates.
Insulin-stimulated glucose disposal rates were diminished slightly but not significantly (P = 0.64) in calorie-restricted monkeys, moderately (P < 0.005) in obese prediabetic monkeys, and more severely (P < 0.0001) in diabetic monkeys (Fig. 2B). These changes in glucose disposal rates were similar to those of aPKC activation. Both glucose disposal rates in the hyperinsulinemic clamp procedures and glucose disappearance rates in the intravenous glucose tolerance test correlated well with insulin-induced increments in aPKC activity (Fig. 4).
|
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
With further progression of the prediabetic to an overtly diabetic state, there was a drop in serum insulin levels, apparently reflecting diminished insulin secretion. However, there was an added worsening of insulin resistance, as evidenced by further decreases in insulin-stimulated glucose disposal and muscle aPKC activation. As PKB activation did not diminish further and, in fact, may have improved during progression from the prediabetic to the diabetic state, the observed decreases in skeletal muscle aPKC activation, rather than alterations in PKB activation, seemed more likely to have contributed to the deterioration in insulin-stimulated glucose disposal in the diabetic state. However, it is possible that a specific pool(s) of PKB, or its coupling to metabolic processes such as glucose transport and glycogen synthesis, may have been altered in the diabetic state.
Taken together, our findings suggested that defective activation of aPKCs in skeletal muscle by insulin played an important role in the pathogenesis of peripheral insulin resistance in both obese prediabetic and diabetic monkeys. Most likely, the importance of aPKCs in this pathogenetic process reflected the apparent requirement for aPKCs during insulin-stimulated glucose transport, as deduced from studies of expression of kinase-inactive PKC-
or -
in both rodent (812,27) and human cell types (29). This does not necessarily imply that alterations in aPKCs did not influence parameters of glucose metabolism other than transport, and in this respect, although it is unlikely that glycogen synthesis per se is activated by aPKCs, it remains a possibility that glycolysis and/or glucose oxidation may be regulated by aPKCs.
We have previously shown that 1) activation of skeletal muscle glycogen synthase during the euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp is diminished in insulin-resistant prediabetic and diabetic monkeys (26,30) and 2) chronic calorie restriction significantly increases basal skeletal muscle glycogen synthase fractional activity and apparent affinity of glycogen synthase for glucose-6-PO4, relative to all (i.e., normal, prediabetic, and diabetic) ad libitum-fed monkeys (30,31). Thus, previously reported changes in glycogen synthase do not appear to correlate well with presently observed changes in PKB activation in monkey muscle. However, as discussed above, changes in overall PKB activation may not be reflective of PKB pools that are important for specific metabolic processes.
As a further indication of the inconclusive nature of the present PKB findings, the lower activity but normal phosphorylation of basal and insulin-stimulated PKB in calorie-restricted monkeys deserves further comment. First, the normal phosphorylation state of PKB in calorie-restricted monkeys is probably an accurate reflection of its activation by upstream activators, including IRS-1, PI 3-kinase, and PDK-1, whose activation appears to be essentially normal, as determined by measurement of IRS-1-dependent PI 3-kinase and phosphorylation of the threonine-308 activation loop site in PKB. Second, the decrease in PKB enzyme activity in calorie-restricted monkeys is more difficult to assess because the in vitro assay does not necessarily reflect the ability of PKB to phosphorylate endogenous substrates. Third, insulin-stimulated increases in PKB activity were, fold-wise, comparable to those observed in nondiabetic monkeys. Finally, such a dichotomy between PKB enzyme activity and phosphorylation is not without precedent, e.g., during high-fat feeding in rats, PKB phosphorylation was maintained despite a 50% decrease in PKB enzyme activity (18). Obviously, further studies are needed to evaluate the cause and significance of alterations in PKB enzyme activity in calorie-restricted monkeys.
A particularly notable aspect of the present studies was our ability to examine insulin signaling mechanisms in skeletal muscles of primates who have an extraordinarily high prevalence rate for development of obesity-dependent insulin resistance and overt type 2 diabetes. With this predictable outcome in monkeys fed an unrestricted chow diet, we were able to study relevant insulin signaling mechanisms before, during, and after the development of the obesity/type 2 diabetes syndrome. Accordingly, the defect in insulin signaling via aPKCs to the glucose transport system in this obesity/diabetes syndrome in monkeys appeared to be acquired, at least in the sense that this defect became apparent only with development of obesity in prediabetic monkeys. Moreover, since this defect in signaling via aPKCs was largely prevented by caloric restriction and avoidance of obesity, it is plausible to suggest that it may have been secondary to obesity per se. However, it remains possible that the signaling defect contributed to the development of obesity, either as a primary initiating factor or a secondary compounding factor.
As alluded to, the defects in activation of aPKCs by insulin in muscles of prediabetic and diabetic monkeys appeared to be at least partly due to defective activation of IRS-1-dependent PI 3-kinase. However, there also appeared to be a defect in the direct activation of aPKCs by PIP3, presumably the major relevant lipid product of PI 3-kinase. As previously reported (32), PIP3 activates aPKCs through at least three mechanisms that become operative upon binding of PIP3 to the regulatory domain of aPKCs and presumed molecular unfolding, viz., increased phosphorylation of the activation loop site by PDK-1, increased auto(trans)phosphorylation, and release of the catalytic domain from autoinhibition by the pseudosubstrate sequence present in the regulatory domain. Further studies are needed to determine the reason for the presently observed defect in responsiveness of aPKCs to PIP3 in muscles of diabetic monkeys.
It should be noted that some of the present findings may not be relevant to certain groups of humans in whom type 2 diabetes prevalence rates are much lower and that the development of obesity does not necessarily lead to significant insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes. Indeed, in a comparable hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp study of humans who were nondiabetic or had impaired glucose tolerance or frank diabetes, we observed that, unlike monkeys, there were diminished rather than increased levels of PKC-
in muscles of glucose intolerant and diabetic humans (M. Beeson, M.P.S., Y.K., Jennifer Powe, G.B., M.L.S., R.V.F., unpublished observations). Nevertheless, similar to the situation in monkeys, aPKC activation is severely compromised in vastus lateralis muscles of both obese/glucose intolerant and type 2 diabetic human subjects.
In summary, the activation of aPKCs in skeletal muscle during euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp procedures was progressively impaired as monkeys developed obesity-dependent insulin resistance and overt type 2 diabetes. This defect in aPKC activation 1) appeared to be partly a result of defects in IRS-1-dependent PI-3-kinase activation and diminished responsiveness of aPKCs to the major lipid product of PI 3-kinase, PIP3, and 2) correlated well with defects in glucose disposal rate and Kglu in diabetic monkeys. Of particular interest, defects in muscle aPKC activation and the development of insulin resistance and diabetes were largely prevented by calorie restriction and avoidance of obesity.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
The authors wish to acknowledge the excellent scientific and technical support of Dr. Nori Bodkin, Theresa Alexander, Michelle Izuka, Holly Jermyn, and Laura Kretchmen.
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
Received for publication 7 December 2001 and accepted in revised form 16 July 2002.
aPKC, atypical protein kinase C; IRS, insulin receptor substrate; Kglu, glucose disappearance rate; PDK-1, 3-phosphoinositide-dependent protein kinase-1; PI, phosphatidylinositol; PIP3, PI-3,4,5-(PO4)3; PKB, protein kinase B.
| REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
, ß, and
) by insulin in 3T3/L1 cells: transfection studies suggest a role for PKC-
in glucose transport.
J Biol Chem272
:2551
2558,1997
and noninvolvement of diacylglycerol-sensitive PKCs in insulin-stimulated glucose transport in L6 myotubes.
Endocrinology138
:4721
4731,1997
as a downstream effector of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase during insulin stimulation in rat adipocytes: potential role in glucose transport.
J Biol Chem272
:30075
30082,1997
,
), conventional (
, ß) and novel (
,
) protein kinase C isoforms on insulin-stimulated translocation of epitope-tagged Glut4 glucose transporters in rat adipocytes: specific interchangeable effects of protein kinases C-
and C-
.
Biochem J337
:461
470,1999
for insulin stimulation of glucose uptake but not for Akt activation in 3T3/L1 adipocytes.
Mol Cell Biol18
:6971
6982,1998
/
activity is impaired in muscle of insulin-resistant subjects (Abstract).
Diabetes50 (Suppl. 2)
:A62
,2001
/
by insulin in vastus lateralis muscles and adipocytes of diabetic rats.
Endocrinology142
:1595
1605,2001
/
) activities.
Diabetes50
:1901
1910,2001
on insulin-stimulated glucose transport in L6 myotubes.
Endocrinology141
:4120
4127,2000
mediates insulin effects on glucose transport in cultured pre-adipocyte-derived human adipocytes.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab87
:716
723,2002
: by mechanisms that are both dependent and independent of phosphorylation of activation loop (T410) and autophosphorylation (T560) sites.
Biochemistry40
:249
255,2001[Medline]This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
A. O. Chavez, J. C. Lopez-Alvarenga, M. E. Tejero, C. Triplitt, R. A. Bastarrachea, A. Sriwijitkamol, P. Tantiwong, V. S. Voruganti, N. Musi, A. G. Comuzzie, et al. Physiological and Molecular Determinants of Insulin Action in the Baboon Diabetes, April 1, 2008; 57(4): 899 - 908. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
C. Frosig, M. P. Sajan, S. J. Maarbjerg, N. Brandt, C. Roepstorff, J. F. P. Wojtaszewski, B. Kiens, R. V. Farese, and E. A. Richter Exercise improves phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5-trisphosphate responsiveness of atypical protein kinase C and interacts with insulin signalling to peptide elongation in human skeletal muscle J. Physiol., August 1, 2007; 582(3): 1289 - 1301. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. P Corcoran, S. Lamon-Fava, and R. A Fielding Skeletal muscle lipid deposition and insulin resistance: effect of dietary fatty acids and exercise Am. J. Clinical Nutrition, March 1, 2007; 85(3): 662 - 677. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
K. A. Al-Regaiey, M. M. Masternak, M. S. Bonkowski, J. A. Panici, J. J. Kopchick, and A. Bartke Effects of Caloric Restriction and Growth Hormone Resistance on Insulin-Related Intermediates in the Skeletal Muscle J. Gerontol. A Biol. Sci. Med. Sci., January 1, 2007; 62(1): 18 - 26. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
V. Wong, L. Szeto, K. Uffelman, I G. Fantus, and G. F Lewis Enhancement of muscle glucose uptake by the vasopeptidase inhibitor, omapatrilat, is independent of insulin signaling and the AMP kinase pathway. J. Endocrinol., August 1, 2006; 190(2): 441 - 450. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
K. J. Nadeau, L. B. Ehlers, L. E. Aguirre, R. L. Moore, K. N. Jew, H. K. Ortmeyer, B. C. Hansen, J. E. B. Reusch, and B. Draznin Exercise training and calorie restriction increase SREBP-1 expression and intramuscular triglyceride in skeletal muscle Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab, July 1, 2006; 291(1): E90 - E98. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
L.-Z. Liu, H.-L. Zhao, J. Zuo, S. K.S. Ho, J. C.N. Chan, Y. Meng, F.-D. Fang, and P. C.Y. Tong Protein Kinase C{zeta} Mediates Insulin-induced Glucose Transport through Actin Remodeling in L6 Muscle Cells Mol. Biol. Cell, May 1, 2006; 17(5): 2322 - 2330. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
R. V. Farese, M. P. Sajan, and M. L. Standaert Insulin-Sensitive Protein Kinases (Atypical Protein Kinase C and Protein Kinase B/Akt): Actions and Defects in Obesity and Type II Diabetes Experimental Biology and Medicine, October 1, 2005; 230(9): 593 - 605. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
E. A Richter, B. Vistisen, S. J Maarbjerg, M. Sajan, R. V Farese, and B. Kiens Differential effect of bicycling exercise intensity on activity and phosphorylation of atypical protein kinase C and extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase in skeletal muscle J. Physiol., November 1, 2004; 560(3): 909 - 918. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. P. Sajan, M. L. Standaert, A. Miura, C. R. Kahn, and R. V. Farese Tissue-Specific Differences in Activation of Atypical Protein Kinase C and Protein Kinase B in Muscle, Liver, and Adipocytes of Insulin Receptor Substrate-1 Knockout Mice Mol. Endocrinol., October 1, 2004; 18(10): 2513 - 2521. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. P. Sajan, M. L. Standaert, A. Miura, G. Bandyopadhyay, P. Vollenweider, D. M. Franklin, R. Lea-Currie, and R. V. Farese Impaired Activation of Protein Kinase C-{zeta} by Insulin and Phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5-(PO4)3 in Cultured Preadipocyte-Derived Adipocytes and Myotubes of Obese Subjects J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab., August 1, 2004; 89(8): 3994 - 3998. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. L. Standaert, M. P. Sajan, A. Miura, Y. Kanoh, H. C. Chen, R. V. Farese Jr., and R. V. Farese Insulin-induced Activation of Atypical Protein Kinase C, but Not Protein Kinase B, Is Maintained in Diabetic (ob/ob and Goto-Kakazaki) Liver: CONTRASTING INSULIN SIGNALING PATTERNS IN LIVER VERSUS MUSCLE DEFINE PHENOTYPES OF TYPE 2 DIABETIC AND HIGH FAT-INDUCED INSULIN-RESISTANT STATES J. Biol. Chem., June 11, 2004; 279(24): 24929 - 24934. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
J. M. Zabolotny, F. G. Haj, Y.-B. Kim, H.-J. Kim, G. I. Shulman, J. K. Kim, B. G. Neel, and B. B. Kahn Transgenic Overexpression of Protein-tyrosine Phosphatase 1B in Muscle Causes Insulin Resistance, but Overexpression with Leukocyte Antigen-related Phosphatase Does Not Additively Impair Insulin Action J. Biol. Chem., June 4, 2004; 279(23): 24844 - 24851. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||