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Publication : Insulin receptor substrate 3 is not essential for growth or glucose homeostasis.

First Author  Liu SC Year  1999
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  274
Issue  25 Pages  18093-9
PubMed ID  10364263 Mgi Jnum  J:55667
Mgi Id  MGI:1339188 Doi  10.1074/jbc.274.25.18093
Citation  Liu SC, et al. (1999) Insulin receptor substrate 3 is not essential for growth or glucose homeostasis. J Biol Chem 274(25):18093-9
abstractText  The insulin receptor substrates (IRS) 1 and 2 are required for normal growth and glucose homeostasis in mice. To determine whether IRS-3, a recently cloned member of the IRS family, is also involved in the regulation of these, we have generated mice with a targeted disruption of the IRS-3 gene and characterized them. Compared with wild-type mice, the IRS-3-null mice showed normal body weight throughout development, normal blood glucose levels in the fed and fasted state and following an oral glucose bolus, and normal fed and fasted plasma insulin levels. IRS-3 is most abundant in adipocytes and is tyrosine-phosphorylated in response to insulin in these cells. Therefore, isolated adipocytes were analyzed for changes in insulin effects. Insulin-stimulated glucose transport in the adipocytes from the IRS-3-null mice was the same as in wild-type cells. The extent of tyrosine phosphorylation of IRS-1/2 following insulin stimulation was similar in adipocytes from IRS-3-null and wild-type mice, and the insulin-induced association of tyrosine-phosphorylated IRS-1/2 with phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and SHP-2 was not detectably increased by IRS-3 deficiency. Thus, IRS-3 was not essential for normal growth, glucose homeostasis, and glucose transport in adipocytes, and in its absence no significant compensatory augmentation of insulin signaling through IRS-1/2 was evident.
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