4.5 Article

Arsenic disrupts neuronal insulin signaling through increasing free PI3K-p85 and decreasing PI3K activity

Journal

TOXICOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 349, Issue -, Pages 40-50

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.toxlet.2021.06.002

Keywords

Arsenic; Insulin signaling; PI3K; Neurons

Categories

Funding

  1. Chulabhorn Research Institute
  2. Chulabhorn Graduate Institute
  3. Center of Excellence on Environmental Health and Toxicology (EHT), Ministry of Higher Education, Science, Research and Innovation, Thailand
  4. Royal Golden Jubilee Ph.D. Program (RGJ Ph.D. Program) [PHD/0174/2557]

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Arsenic impairs neuronal insulin signaling by reducing IR autophosphorylation, increasing free PI3K-p85 levels, and inhibiting PI3K activity.
Previously, we reported that prolonged arsenic exposure impaired neuronal insulin signaling. Here we have further identified novel molecular mechanisms underlying neuronal insulin signaling impairment by arsenic. Arsenic treatment altered insulin dose-response curve and reduced maximum insulin response in differentiated human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells, suggesting that arsenic hindered neuronal insulin signaling in a non-competitive like manner. Mechanistically, arsenic suppressed insulin receptor (IR) kinase activity, as witnessed by a decreased insulin-activated autophosphorylation of IR at Y1150/1151. Arsenic decreased the level of insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS1) but increased the protein ratio between PI3K regulatory subunit, p85, and PI3K catalytic subunit, p110. Interestingly, coimmunoprecipitation demonstrated that arsenic did not alter a level of PI3K-p110/PI3K-p85 complex while increased PI3K-p85 levels in a PI3K-p110 depletion supernatant resulted from PI3K-p110 immunoprecipitation. These results indicated that arsenic increased PI3K-p85 which was free from PI3Kp110 binding. In addition, arsenic significantly increased interaction between IRS1 and PI3K-p85 but not PI3K-p110, suggesting that there may be a fraction of free PI3K-p85 interacting with IRS1. In vitro PI3K activity demonstrated that arsenic lowered PI3K activity in both basal and insulin-stimulated conditions. These results suggested that the increase in free PI3K-p85 by arsenic might compete with PI3K heterodimer for the same IRS1 binding site, in turn blocking the activation of its catalytic subunit, PI3Kp110. Taken together, our results provide additional insights into mechanisms underlying the impairment of neuronal insulin signaling by arsenic through the reduction of IR autophosphorylation, the increase in free PI3K-p85, and the impeding of PI3K activity. (c) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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