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Journal of Endocrinology (1981) 88, 271-281    DOI: 10.1677/joe.0.0880271
© 1981 Society for Endocrinology

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INDEPENDENT DOWN-REGULATION OF INSULIN AND CALCITONIN RECEPTORS ON A HUMAN TUMOUR CELL LINE

D. M. FINDLAY, M. DE LUISE, V. P. MICHELANGELI and T. J. MARTIN

A human lung cancer cell line (BEN cells) with a calcitonin receptor and calcitonin-responsive adenylate cyclase also possesses an insulin receptor. This has been characterized and found to have properties similar to those of other mammalian cell insulin receptors. A receptor number of 58 000 per cell was calculated from curvilinear Scatchard plots, and dissociation of bound labelled insulin by dilution was facilitated by the addition of unlabelled insulin, consistent with negatively co-operative interactions among binding sites.

Preincubation of cells with either calcitonin or insulin led to loss of hormone binding in washed cells. In the case of calcitonin this was associated with loss of adenylate cyclase response. For each hormone the state of down-regulation was characterized by a decrease in receptor number, and for calcitonin there was also a loss in sensitivity of adenylate cyclase. Down-regulation to calcitonin was more rapid than that to insulin and in each case recovery had occurred by 16 h after removal of the hormone. Induction of down-regulation was specific, in that preincubation with one hormone did not influence the subsequent binding or response of the other. Such data are consistent with independent modulation of peptide receptors in the same cell.







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Copyright © 1981 by the Society for Endocrinology.