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==Introduction==
==Introduction==
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The insulin receptor is a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmembrane_protein transmembrane] receptor <ref name="De Meyts"/> that resides in the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cell_membrane plasma membrane] and is activated by the binding of insulin. The insulin receptor belongs to the large class of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Receptor_tyrosine_kinase receptor tyrosine kinase] (RTKs). RTKs are found at the cell surface and have a high affinity for a particular ligand. RTKs are made up of three distinct parts: an extracellular domain with ligand binding sites, a transmembrane region, and an intracellular domain with the tyrosine kinases that initiate intracellular signaling cascades. <ref name="De Meyts"> PMID: 27512793 </ref> Downstream signaling from the insulin receptor initiates a variety of cellular pathways including glucose [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homeostasis homeostasis], regulation of lipid, protein, and carbohydrate metabolism, gene expression, and even modulation of brain neurotransmitter levels. <ref name="Tatulian"/> '''This page focuses specifically on the insulin receptor's role in glucose homeostasis.''' Through recent cryo-EM structures of the insulin receptor bound in various conformations, a complete three-dimensional understanding of this conformational changes in finally coming into focus. The discussion on this page will include an explanation of the insulin receptors' structure that lends to its ability to undergo a unique conformation change to induce signaling, as well as highlight the functionalities of the receptors' multiple binding sites.
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The insulin receptor is a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmembrane_protein transmembrane] receptor <ref name="De Meyts"/> that resides in the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cell_membrane plasma membrane] and is activated by the binding of insulin. The insulin receptor belongs to the large class of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Receptor_tyrosine_kinase receptor tyrosine kinase] (RTKs). RTKs are found at the cell surface and have a high affinity for a particular ligand. RTKs are made up of three distinct parts: an extracellular domain with ligand binding sites, a transmembrane region, and an intracellular domain with the tyrosine kinases that initiate intracellular signaling cascades. <ref name="De Meyts"> PMID: 27512793 </ref> Downstream signaling from the insulin receptor initiates a variety of cellular pathways including glucose [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homeostasis homeostasis], regulation of lipid, protein, and carbohydrate metabolism, gene expression, and even modulation of brain neurotransmitter levels. <ref name="Tatulian"/> '''This page focuses specifically on the insulin receptor's role in glucose homeostasis.''' Through recent [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmission_electron_cryomicroscopy cryo-EM] structures of the insulin receptor bound in various conformations, a complete three-dimensional understanding of this conformational changes in finally coming into focus. The discussion on this page will include an explanation of the insulin receptors' structure that lends to its ability to undergo a unique conformation change to induce signaling, as well as highlight the functionalities of the receptors' multiple binding sites.
==Structural Overview==
==Structural Overview==
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====Alpha Subunits====
====Alpha Subunits====
[[Image:Harrison Image2.png|thumb|right|260px|Figure 1: Insulin receptor apo receptor. Site L1' is colored a dark green, CR' is orange, L2' is bright blue, L2 is yellow, CR is red, L1 is dark blue, FnIII-1 is brown, and FnIII-2 is light pink. Insulin is shown bound and is colored dark pink. [http://www.rcsb.org/structure/6CE7 PDB 6CE7]]]
[[Image:Harrison Image2.png|thumb|right|260px|Figure 1: Insulin receptor apo receptor. Site L1' is colored a dark green, CR' is orange, L2' is bright blue, L2 is yellow, CR is red, L1 is dark blue, FnIII-1 is brown, and FnIII-2 is light pink. Insulin is shown bound and is colored dark pink. [http://www.rcsb.org/structure/6CE7 PDB 6CE7]]]
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The alpha subunits make up the extracellular domain ([http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ectodomain ectodomain]) of the insulin receptor and are the sites of insulin binding. The alpha subunit is comprised of two Leucine rich domains (L1 & L2), a Cysteine rich domain (CR), and a <scene name='83/832953/Alpha_c_helix/6'>C-Terminal alpha helix</scene>(Figure 1). <ref name="Scapin"> PMID 29512653 </ref> The CT-alpha helix is unique in its position that allows it to reach across the receptor and interact with the insulin at the binding site on the opposing side of the receptor. The alpha subunits are held together by a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disulfide disulfide bond] between <scene name='83/832953/Cysteine_bond/2'>cysteine residues</scene> at the CYS524 position on each alpha subunit. The disulfide bonds are important to the overall stabilization of the molecule has it binds to insulin. Two types of insulin binding sites are present in the alpha subunits, <scene name='83/832953/Sites_1_and_1_prime_location/17'>sites 1 and 1'</scene> and <scene name='83/832953/Sites_2_and_2_prime_location/13'>sites 2 and 2'</scene> (Figure 2). The sites are in pairs because of the heterodimeric nature of the receptor. Due to structural differences, as well as greater surface area and accessibility, binding sites 1 and 1' have much higher affinity than that of sites 2 and 2'. Insulin can also bind at sites 2 and 2', but the location on the back of the beta sheet of the FnIII-1 domain and lack of surface area decreases the likelihood of their binding site becoming occupied as quickly. <ref name="Uchikawa"> DOI 10.7554/eLife.48630 </ref> [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmission_electron_cryomicroscopy Cryo-EM] has imaged insulin bound structures that displayed a T-shape conformation in the alpha subunits, which make up the receptors extracellular domain region.<ref name="Uchikawa" />
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The alpha subunits make up the extracellular domain ([http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ectodomain ectodomain]) of the insulin receptor and are the sites of insulin binding. The alpha subunit is comprised of two Leucine rich domains (L1 & L2), a Cysteine rich domain (CR), and a <scene name='83/832953/Alpha_c_helix/6'>C-Terminal alpha helix</scene> (Figure 1). <ref name="Scapin"> PMID 29512653 </ref> The CT-alpha helix is unique in its position that allows it to reach across the receptor and interact with the insulin at the binding site on the opposing side of the receptor. The alpha subunits are held together by a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disulfide disulfide bond] between <scene name='83/832953/Cysteine_bond/2'>cysteine residues</scene> at the CYS524 position on each alpha subunit. The disulfide bonds are important to the overall stabilization of the molecule as it binds to insulin. Two types of insulin binding sites are present in the alpha subunits, <scene name='83/832953/Sites_1_and_1_prime_location/17'>sites 1 and 1'</scene> and <scene name='83/832953/Sites_2_and_2_prime_location/13'>sites 2 and 2'</scene> (Figure 2). The sites are in pairs because of the heterodimeric nature of the receptor. Due to structural differences, as well as greater surface area and accessibility, binding sites 1 and 1' have much higher affinity than that of sites 2 and 2'. Insulin can also bind at sites 2 and 2', but the location on the back of the beta sheet of the FnIII-1 domain and lack of surface area decreases the likelihood of their binding site becoming occupied as quickly. <ref name="Uchikawa"> DOI 10.7554/eLife.48630 </ref> Cryo-EM has imaged insulin bound structures that displayed a T-shape conformation in the alpha subunits, which make up the receptors extracellular domain region.<ref name="Uchikawa" />
[[Image:4 sites highlighted - Harrison.png|thumb|right|260px|Figure 2: The four binding sites of insulin. Sites 1 and 1' are colored green, sites 2 and 2' are colored red. [http://www.rcsb.org/structure/6SOF PDB 6SOF]]]
[[Image:4 sites highlighted - Harrison.png|thumb|right|260px|Figure 2: The four binding sites of insulin. Sites 1 and 1' are colored green, sites 2 and 2' are colored red. [http://www.rcsb.org/structure/6SOF PDB 6SOF]]]
===Beta Subunits===
===Beta Subunits===
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The beta subunit spans from the extracellular domain across the transmembrane region and into the intracellular portion of the insulin receptor. The beta subunit is composed of part of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibronectin fibronectin] domain III-2 and all of Fibronectin domain III-3. <ref name="Scapin" /> The beta subunit's FnIII-3 domain has links through the transmembrane region into the intracellular part of the membrane. Cryo-EM results have displayed clear representations of FnIII-2 and FnIII-3 domains, but lack in their ability to model the receptor structure throughout the transmembrane region and intracellular region. Although, the FnIII-3 domain is connected to these regions, so it has been proposed that the T-shape conformation extends all the way to the tyrosine kinase domain region. (see [http://www.rcsb.org/structure/4XLV PDB 4XLV]). <ref name= "Cabail"> DOI: 10.1038/ncomms7406 </ref>
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The beta subunit spans from the extracellular domain across the transmembrane region and into the intracellular portion of the insulin receptor. The beta subunit is composed of part of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibronectin fibronectin] domain III-2 and all of Fibronectin domain III-3. <ref name="Scapin" /> The beta subunit's FnIII-3 domain has links through the transmembrane region into the intracellular part of the membrane. Cryo-EM results have displayed clear representations of FnIII-2 and FnIII-3 domains, but lack in their ability to model the receptor structure throughout the transmembrane region and intracellular region. Although the FnIII-3 domain is connected to these regions, it has been proposed that the T-shape conformation extends all the way to the tyrosine kinase domain region (see [http://www.rcsb.org/structure/4XLV PDB 4XLV]). <ref name= "Cabail"> DOI: 10.1038/ncomms7406 </ref>
== Function==
== Function==
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===Binding interactions===
===Binding interactions===
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For insulin binding to induce the activation of the receptor, binding at sites 1 and 1', as well as one insulin to either binding site 2 or 2', is required <ref name= "Uchikawa" />. Although interactions at all four binding sites are highly hydrophobic, the ligand binding interactions at sites 1 and 1' are different than at sites 2 and 2'. Sites 1 and 1' are signified by interactions between <scene name='83/832953/Sites_1_and_1_prime_location/14'>PRO495, PHE497, ARG498</scene> residues from the FnIII-1 domain and particular residues on the insulin ligand. The alpha subunits also have significant <scene name='83/832953/Cysteine_bond/3'>disulfide linkages</scene> that help maintain a compact binging site. At sites 2 and 2' the FnIII-1 region has <scene name='83/832953/Sites_2_and_2_prime_location/14'>both basic residues-ARG479, LYS484, ARG488, ARG554- and hydrophobic residues- LEU486, LEU552, and PRO537-</scene> interacting with numerous residues on the surface of the insulin ligand.
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For insulin binding to induce the activation of the receptor, binding at sites 1 and 1', as well as one insulin to either binding site 2 or 2', is required. <ref name= "Uchikawa" /> Although interactions at all four binding sites are highly hydrophobic, the ligand binding interactions at sites 1 and 1' are different than at sites 2 and 2'. Sites 1 and 1' are signified by interactions between <scene name='83/832953/Sites_1_and_1_prime_location/14'>PRO495, PHE497, ARG498</scene> residues from the FnIII-1 domain and particular residues on the insulin ligand. The alpha subunits also have significant <scene name='83/832953/Cysteine_bond/3'>disulfide linkages</scene> that help maintain a compact binging site. At sites 2 and 2' the FnIII-1 region has <scene name='83/832953/Sites_2_and_2_prime_location/14'>both basic residues-ARG479, LYS484, ARG488, ARG554- and hydrophobic residues- LEU486, LEU552, and PRO537-</scene> interacting with numerous residues on the surface of the insulin ligand.
At <scene name='83/832953/Sites_1_and_1_prime_location/17'>binding sites 1 and 1'</scene>, a <scene name='83/832953/Tripartite_interaction/8'>tripartite interaction</scene> occurs between three critical parts of the alpha subunits of the insulin receptor. <ref name="Uchikawa" /> The entire interface of the tripartite interaction involves many residues that are involved with intra-protomer ionic and hydrogen bonding at the binding site. The α-CT chain and the FnIII-1 domain region become in close proximity during the conformational change of the insulin receptor and their interaction involves the following residues: <scene name='83/832953/Alpha_ct_and_fniii-1/7'>ASP496, ARG498, and ASP499 on the FnIII-1 domain</scene> and the <scene name='83/832953/Alpha_ct_and_fniii-1/9'>LYS703, GLU706, and ASP707 on the α-CT domain</scene>. This duo then interacts with the L1 region, specifically ARG14, creating an ideal <scene name='83/832953/Tripartite_interaction/9'>binding site</scene> for the insulin ligand. The FnIII-1 and α-CT are interacting from the two different alpha subunits, which displays a "cross linking" scenario where the domains of the heterodimer can intertwine with each other. The tripartite interaction between the α-CT chain, FnIII-1 domain, and the L1 region is important because it allows for a strong interaction between two subunits of the insulin receptor that maintains and stabilizes the T-shape activation state for the rest of the downstream signaling to occur. <ref name="Uchikawa" />
At <scene name='83/832953/Sites_1_and_1_prime_location/17'>binding sites 1 and 1'</scene>, a <scene name='83/832953/Tripartite_interaction/8'>tripartite interaction</scene> occurs between three critical parts of the alpha subunits of the insulin receptor. <ref name="Uchikawa" /> The entire interface of the tripartite interaction involves many residues that are involved with intra-protomer ionic and hydrogen bonding at the binding site. The α-CT chain and the FnIII-1 domain region become in close proximity during the conformational change of the insulin receptor and their interaction involves the following residues: <scene name='83/832953/Alpha_ct_and_fniii-1/7'>ASP496, ARG498, and ASP499 on the FnIII-1 domain</scene> and the <scene name='83/832953/Alpha_ct_and_fniii-1/9'>LYS703, GLU706, and ASP707 on the α-CT domain</scene>. This duo then interacts with the L1 region, specifically ARG14, creating an ideal <scene name='83/832953/Tripartite_interaction/9'>binding site</scene> for the insulin ligand. The FnIII-1 and α-CT are interacting from the two different alpha subunits, which displays a "cross linking" scenario where the domains of the heterodimer can intertwine with each other. The tripartite interaction between the α-CT chain, FnIII-1 domain, and the L1 region is important because it allows for a strong interaction between two subunits of the insulin receptor that maintains and stabilizes the T-shape activation state for the rest of the downstream signaling to occur. <ref name="Uchikawa" />

Current revision

Homo sapiens Insulin Receptor

An interactive view of the human insulin receptor. The alpha subunits are pink and purple, the beta subunits are green and teal blue, and the insulins bound are light blue. (PDB Code 6SOF)

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 De Meyts P. The Insulin Receptor and Its Signal Transduction Network PMID:27512793
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Tatulian SA. Structural Dynamics of Insulin Receptor and Transmembrane Signaling. Biochemistry. 2015 Sep 15;54(36):5523-32. doi: 10.1021/acs.biochem.5b00805. Epub , 2015 Sep 3. PMID:26322622 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.5b00805
  3. Hubbard SR. Crystal structure of the activated insulin receptor tyrosine kinase in complex with peptide substrate and ATP analog. EMBO J. 1997 Sep 15;16(18):5572-81. PMID:9312016 doi:10.1093/emboj/16.18.5572
  4. 4.0 4.1 Scapin G, Dandey VP, Zhang Z, Prosise W, Hruza A, Kelly T, Mayhood T, Strickland C, Potter CS, Carragher B. Structure of the Insulin Receptor-Insulin Complex by Single Particle CryoEM analysis. Nature. 2018 Feb 28. pii: nature26153. doi: 10.1038/nature26153. PMID:29512653 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature26153
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 Uchikawa E, Choi E, Shang G, Yu H, Bai XC. Activation mechanism of the insulin receptor revealed by cryo-EM structure of the fully liganded receptor-ligand complex. Elife. 2019 Aug 22;8. pii: 48630. doi: 10.7554/eLife.48630. PMID:31436533 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.48630
  6. Cabail MZ, Li S, Lemmon E, Bowen ME, Hubbard SR, Miller WT. The insulin and IGF1 receptor kinase domains are functional dimers in the activated state. Nat Commun. 2015 Mar 11;6:6406. doi: 10.1038/ncomms7406. PMID:25758790 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms7406
  7. 7.0 7.1 White MF, Kahn CR. The insulin signaling system. J Biol Chem. 1994 Jan 7;269(1):1-4. PMID:8276779
  8. McKern NM, Lawrence MC, Streltsov VA, Lou MZ, Adams TE, Lovrecz GO, Elleman TC, Richards KM, Bentley JD, Pilling PA, Hoyne PA, Cartledge KA, Pham TM, Lewis JL, Sankovich SE, Stoichevska V, Da Silva E, Robinson CP, Frenkel MJ, Sparrow LG, Fernley RT, Epa VC, Ward CW. Structure of the insulin receptor ectodomain reveals a folded-over conformation. Nature. 2006 Sep 14;443(7108):218-21. Epub 2006 Sep 6. PMID:16957736 doi:10.1038/nature05106
  9. Weis F, Menting JG, Margetts MB, Chan SJ, Xu Y, Tennagels N, Wohlfart P, Langer T, Muller CW, Dreyer MK, Lawrence MC. The signalling conformation of the insulin receptor ectodomain. Nat Commun. 2018 Oct 24;9(1):4420. doi: 10.1038/s41467-018-06826-6. PMID:30356040 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-06826-6
  10. Boucher J, Kleinridders A, Kahn CR. Insulin receptor signaling in normal and insulin-resistant states. Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol. 2014 Jan 1;6(1). pii: 6/1/a009191. doi:, 10.1101/cshperspect.a009191. PMID:24384568 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/cshperspect.a009191
  11. Wilcox G. Insulin and insulin resistance. Clin Biochem Rev. 2005 May;26(2):19-39. PMID:16278749
  12. Riddle MC. Treatment of diabetes with insulin. From art to science. West J Med. 1983 Jun;138(6):838-46. PMID:6351440

Student Contributors

  • Harrison Smith
  • Alyssa Ritter
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