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Publication details
Characterization of insulin crystalline form in isolated beta-cell secretory granules
Authors | |
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Year of publication | 2022 |
Type | Article in Periodical |
Magazine / Source | Open Biology |
MU Faculty or unit | |
Citation | |
Web | https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsob.220322 |
Doi | http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsob.220322 |
Keywords | crystallization in vivo; peptide hormone; subcellular vesicle; electron microscopy; secretory granules; insulin secretion |
Description | Insulin is stored in vivo inside the pancreatic beta-cell insulin secretory granules. In vitro studies have led to an assumption that high insulin and Zn2+ concentrations inside the pancreatic beta-cell insulin secretory granules should promote insulin crystalline state in the form of Zn2+-stabilized hexamers. Electron microscopic images of thin sections of the pancreatic beta-cells often show a dense, regular pattern core, suggesting the presence of insulin crystals. However, the structural features of the storage forms of insulin in native preparations of secretory granules are unknown, because of their small size, fragile character and difficult handling. We isolated and investigated the secretory granules from MIN6 cells under near-native conditions, using cryo-electron microscopic (Cryo-EM) techniques. The analysis of these data from multiple intra-granular crystals revealed two different rhomboidal crystal lattices. The minor lattice has unit cell parameters (a similar or equal to b similar or equal to 84.0 angstrom, c similar or equal to 35.2 angstrom), similar to in vitro crystallized human 4Zn(2+)-insulin hexamer, whereas the largely prevalent unit cell has more than double c-axis (a similar or equal to b similar or equal to c similar or equal to 96.5 angstrom) that probably corresponds to two or three insulin hexamers in the asymmetric unit. Our experimental data show that insulin can be present in pancreatic MIN6 cell granules in a microcrystalline form, probably consisting of 4Zn(2+)-hexamers of this hormone. |
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