4.7 Article

Insulin Receptor Isoforms Differently Regulate Cell Proliferation and Apoptosis in the Ligand-Occupied and Unoccupied State

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22168729

Keywords

insulin receptor; insulin action; DNA damage; caspase 3; cell proliferation; apoptosis

Funding

  1. Fondazione AIRC (Milan, Italy) [23369, 19897]

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IR isoforms exhibit different effects on cell proliferation and survival. While both IR-A and IR-B can inhibit cell proliferation when unbound to insulin, IR-B is more effective in reducing resistance to DNA damage. In the presence of insulin, IR-A provides a selective growth advantage over IR-B, particularly at high concentrations. Insulin-bound IR-A, but not IR-B, can protect cells from cytotoxicity induced by DNA damage.
The insulin receptor (IR) presents two isoforms (IR-A and IR-B) that differ for the alpha-subunit C-terminal. Both isoforms are expressed in all human cells albeit in different proportions, yet their functional properties-when bound or unbound to insulin-are not well characterized. From a cell model deprived of the Insulin-like Growth Factor 1 Receptor (IGF1-R) we therefore generated cells exhibiting no IR (R-shIR cells), or only human IR-A (R-shIR-A), or exclusively human IR-B (R-shIR-B) and we studied the specific effect of the two isoforms on cell proliferation and cell apoptosis. In the absence of insulin both IR-A and IR-B similarly inhibited proliferation but IR-B was 2-3 fold more effective than IR-A in reducing resistance to etoposide-induced DNA damage. In the presence of insulin, IR-A and IR-B promoted proliferation with the former significantly more effective than the latter at increasing insulin concentrations. Moreover, only insulin-bound IR-A, but not IR-B, protected cells from etoposide-induced cytotoxicity. In conclusion, IR isoforms have different effects on cell proliferation and survival. When unoccupied, IR-A, which is predominantly expressed in undifferentiated and neoplastic cells, is less effective than IR-B in protecting cells from DNA damage. In the presence of insulin, particularly when present at high levels, IR-A provides a selective growth advantage.

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