Physiological differences in insulin-like growth factor binding protein-1 (IGFBP-1) phosphorylation in IGFBP-1 transgenic mice

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Abstract

Insulin-like growth factor binding protein (IGFBP)-1 has been shown to alter cellular responses to insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1). Human IGFBP-1 undergoes serine phosphorylation, and this enhances both its affinity for IGF-1 by six- to eightfold and its capacity to inhibit IGF-1 actions. To investigate the physiological role of IGFBP-1 in vivo, transgenic mice have been generated using either the human IGFBP-1 or rat IGFBP-1 transgene. Both lines of mice expressed high concentrations of IGFBP-1 in serum and tissues; however, human IGFBP-1 transgenic mice did not show glucose intolerance and exhibited no significant intrauterine growth retardation, whereas rat IGFBP-1 transgenic mice showed fasting hyperglycemia and intrauterine growth restriction. The aim of this study was to investigate the physiological differences in the phosphorylation state of human IGFBP-1 and rat IGFBP-1 in these transgenic mice. The phosphorylation status of IGFBP-1 in transgenic mouse serum was analyzed by nondenaturing PAGE. Almost all of the IGFBP-1 in serum from the human IGFBP-1 transgenic mice was present as a nonphosphorylated form. Most of the rat IGFBP-1 in the serum of the mice expressing the rat IGFBP-1 was phosphorylated. Immunoprecipitation showed that mouse hepatoma (Hepa 1-6) cells (exposed to [32P]H3PO4) secrete 32P-labeled IGFBP-1. When the human IGFBP-1 transgene was transfected into Hepa 1-6 cells, all of the IGFBP-1 was secreted in the nonphosphorylated form. However, when the rat IGFBP-1 transgene was transfected into these cells, phosphorylated forms of IGFBP-1 were secreted. To confirm this result, the mouse hepatoma cell protein kinase was partially purified. This kinase activity phosphorylated mouse and rat IGFBP-1 in vitro, but it did not phosphorylate human IGFBP-1. Scatchard analysis showed that the affinity of phosphorylated rat IGFBP-1 for IGF-1 was 3.9-fold higher than that of nonphosphorylated human IGFBP-1. We conclude that the mouse IGFBP-1 kinase activity cannot phosphorylate human IGFBP-1, whereas it can phosphorylate rat IGFBP-1. The phosphorylation state of human IGFBP-1 may account for part of the phenotypic differences noted in the two studies of transgenic mice, and it is an important determinant of the capacity of human IGFBP-1 to inhibit IGF-1 actions in vivo.

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Sakai, K., D’Ercole, A. J., Murphy, L. J., & Clemmons, D. R. (2001). Physiological differences in insulin-like growth factor binding protein-1 (IGFBP-1) phosphorylation in IGFBP-1 transgenic mice. Diabetes, 50(1), 32–38. https://doi.org/10.2337/diabetes.50.1.32

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