Johnson's Monday Lab Sandbox for Insulin Receptor

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The proper conformational change of the ectodomain of the insulin receptor is crucial for transmitting the signal into the cell. The movements extracellularly cause the two receptor tyrosine kinase domains intracellularly to become close enough to each other to autophosphorylate <ref name="Boucher" />. This autophosphorylation leads enzymes to become activated in the cell that carries out processes related to insulin signaling such as metabolism and growth <ref name="Boucher" />.
The proper conformational change of the ectodomain of the insulin receptor is crucial for transmitting the signal into the cell. The movements extracellularly cause the two receptor tyrosine kinase domains intracellularly to become close enough to each other to autophosphorylate <ref name="Boucher" />. This autophosphorylation leads enzymes to become activated in the cell that carries out processes related to insulin signaling such as metabolism and growth <ref name="Boucher" />.
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While there is an explanation for which conformational changes of the insulin receptor take place, there is no full explanation for the exact mechanism by which the conformational changes are executed <ref name="Uchikawa" />. It is known where the various domains move, but not the specifics for how this is achieved on the atomic level due do the complexity of analyzing moving structures.
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While there is an explanation for which conformational changes of the insulin receptor take place, there is no full explanation for the exact mechanism by which the conformational changes are executed in the receptor <ref name="Uchikawa" />. It is known where the various domains move, but not the specifics for how this is achieved on the atomic level due do the complexity of analyzing moving structures.
==Type II Diabetes==
==Type II Diabetes==

Revision as of 15:58, 20 April 2020

Insulin Receptor

Insulin Receptor with Four Insulin Bound - 6sof

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Maxwell Todd, Abigail Hillan, Andrew Scheel

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