[HTML][HTML] Mosaic analysis of insulin receptor function

T Kitamura, Y Kitamura, J Nakae… - The Journal of …, 2004 - Am Soc Clin Investig
T Kitamura, Y Kitamura, J Nakae, A Giordano, S Cinti, CR Kahn, A Efstratiadis, D Accili
The Journal of clinical investigation, 2004Am Soc Clin Investig
Insulin promotes both metabolism and growth. However, it is unclear whether insulin-
dependent growth is merely a result of its metabolic actions. Targeted ablation of insulin
receptor (Insr) has not clarified this issue, because of early postnatal lethality. To examine
this question, we generated mice with variable cellular mosaicism for null Insr alleles. Insr
ablation in approximately 80% of cells caused extreme growth retardation, lipoatrophy, and
hypoglycemia, a clinical constellation that resembles the human syndrome of …
Insulin promotes both metabolism and growth. However, it is unclear whether insulin-dependent growth is merely a result of its metabolic actions. Targeted ablation of insulin receptor (Insr) has not clarified this issue, because of early postnatal lethality. To examine this question, we generated mice with variable cellular mosaicism for null Insr alleles. Insr ablation in approximately 80% of cells caused extreme growth retardation, lipoatrophy, and hypoglycemia, a clinical constellation that resembles the human syndrome of leprechaunism. Insr ablation in 98% of cells, while resulting in similar growth retardation and lipoatrophy, caused diabetes without β-cell hyperplasia. The growth retardation was associated with a greater than 60-fold increase in the expression of hepatic insulin-like growth factor binding protein-1. These findings indicate that insulin regulates growth independently of metabolism and that the number of insulin receptors is an important determinant of the specificity of insulin action.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation