4.4 Article

Clathrin-dependent entry and vesicle-mediated exocytosis define insulin transcytosis across microvascular endothelial cells

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL
Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages 740-750

Publisher

AMER SOC CELL BIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E14-08-1307

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (MOP) [130493, MOP-123419]
  2. Canadian Diabetes Association [OG-3-12-3838-AK]
  3. Banting and Best Diabetes Centre of the University of Toronto
  4. Keenan Research Centre, St. Michael's Hospital

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Transport of insulin across the microvasculature is necessary to reach its target organs (e.g., adipose and muscle tissues) and is rate limiting in insulin action. Morphological evidence suggests that insulin enters endothelial cells of the microvasculature, and studies with large vessel-derived endothelial cells show insulin uptake; however, little is known about the actual transcytosis of insulin and how this occurs in the relevant microvascular endothelial cells. We report an approach to study insulin transcytosis across individual, primary human adipose microvascular endothelial cells (HAMECs), involving insulin uptake followed by vesicle-mediated exocytosis visualized by total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy. In this setting, fluorophore-conjugated insulin exocytosis depended on its initial binding and uptake, which was saturable and much greater than in muscle cells. Unlike its degradation within muscle cells, insulin was stable within HAMECs and escaped lysosomal colocalization. Insulin transcytosis required dynamin but was unaffected by caveolin-1 knockdown or cholesterol depletion. Instead, insulin transcytosis was significantly inhibited by the clathrin-mediated endocytosis inhibitor Pitstop 2 or siRNA-mediated clathrin depletion. Accordingly, insulin internalized for 1 min in HAMECs colocalized with clathrin far more than with caveolin-1. This study constitutes the first evidence of vesicle-mediated insulin transcytosis and highlights that its initial uptake is clathrin dependent and caveolae independent.

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