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. 1985 Mar 21;844(3):377-92.
doi: 10.1016/0167-4889(85)90140-5.

Studies of insulin action on the amphibian oocyte plasma membrane using NMR, electrophysiological and ion flux techniques

Studies of insulin action on the amphibian oocyte plasma membrane using NMR, electrophysiological and ion flux techniques

G A Morrill et al. Biochim Biophys Acta. .

Abstract

Insulin (0.1-10 microM) reinitiates the meiotic divisions in Rana oocytes and produces a 14-20 mV negative-going hyperpolarization of the plasma membrane as well as a 0.25 unit increase in intracellular pH during the first 90 min. During hyperpolarization, the Na+ conductance of the membrane decreases by 40-50% with a concomitant increase in 22Na+ uptake from the medium. The increased uptake of Na+ during a period of decreasing Na+ conductance is apparently due to an increase in fluid phase turnover associated with insulin-mediated endocytosis. Both membrane hyperpolarization and increase in pHi are Na+-dependent and are blocked by the serine proteinase inhibitor, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride. The membrane potential of the prophase oocyte has a significant electrogenic component with potential but not conductance sensitive to glycosides and substitution of Li+ for Na+. Insulin hyperpolarizes Li+ or glycoside-treated oocytes whereas glycosides do not affect insulin-hyperpolarized oocytes. [3H]Ouabain binding by the plasma membrane of the untreated oocyte shows at least two K+-sensitive components (Kd = 42 and 2000 nM) linked to inhibition of the Na+ pump. Insulin-treated oocytes show a single class of intermediate-affinity ouabain sites (Kd = 490 nM) which appear to result from insulin-induced internalization of membrane-bound ouabain. [125I]Insulin binding to the plasma membrane shows a class of high-affinity sites (Kd = 87 nM) with 40-50 pump sites per insulin-binding site. Our results suggest that insulin-induced mediator peptides stimulate Na+-H+ exchange resulting in an increase in intracellular pH and Na+ uptake concomitant with an increase in receptor-mediated endocytosis and a decrease in Na+ conductance and associated membrane hyperpolarization. The net result appears to be a down-regulation of the Na+ pump which together with a decrease in Na+ conductance may divert high-energy phosphate compounds from cation regulation to anabolic processes of meiosis.

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