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Research Article Free access | 10.1172/JCI111102

Antireceptor antibodies as probes of insulinlike growth factor receptor structure.

M Kasuga, N Sasaki, C R Kahn, S P Nissley, and M M Rechler

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Published October 1, 1983 - More info

Published in Volume 72, Issue 4 on October 1, 1983
J Clin Invest. 1983;72(4):1459–1469. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI111102.
© 1983 The American Society for Clinical Investigation
Published October 1, 1983 - Version history
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Abstract

Insulin receptors and Type I insulinlike growth factor (IGF) receptors have a similar structure with a major binding subunit of Mr approximately 130,000 linked by disulfide bonds to other membrane proteins to form a Mr greater than 300,000 complex. Both insulin and Type I IGF receptors also interact with both insulin and IGF, although with different binding affinities. We used a panel of human and rabbit sera containing antibodies to insulin receptors to determine whether these sera also interact with Type I IGF receptors. Immunoglobulins from five of five human sera inhibited binding of 125I-insulin and 125I-IGF-I to insulin receptors and Type I IGF receptors in human placenta and human lymphocytes. The rank order of reactivity with both receptors was the same; two sera, however, appeared to be selectively less reactive with the Type I IGF receptor, especially in placenta. Sera from five of seven patients and from a rabbit immunized with purified insulin receptor effectively immunoprecipitated both placental insulin receptors and Type I IGF receptors. Of the remaining sera, one had only a low titer against the insulin receptor and did not immunoprecipitate the IGF receptor, whereas the second serum effectively immunoprecipitated cross-linked and surface-iodinated insulin receptors, but had negligible reactivity against the Type I IGF receptor. These results suggest that most antisera to the insulin receptor also contain antibodies to Type I IGF receptors. Whether both specificities are inherent in the same or different antibody molecules remains to be determined. These data support the hypothesis that the insulin and IGF-I receptors are separate but related molecules, although there remains a small possibility that both receptors are domains on the same protein.

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