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Alpha-actinin-4 is selectively required for insulin-induced GLUT4 translocation

Authors: 
Talior-Volodarsky I.
Randhawa VK.
Zaid H.
Klip A.
Journal Name: 
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume: 
283
Issue: 
37
Pages From: 
25115
To: 
25123
Date: 
Friday, September 12, 2008
Abstract: 
Insulin induces GLUT4 translocation to the muscle cell surface. Using differential amino acid labeling and mass spectrometry, we observed insulin-dependent co-precipitation of actinin-4 (ACTN4) with GLUT4 (Foster, L. J., Rudich, A., Talior, I., Patel, N., Huang, X., Furtado, L. M., Bilan, P. J., Mann, M., and Klip, A. (2006) J. Proteome Res. 5, 64–75). ACTN4 links F-actin to membrane proteins, and actin dynamics are essential for GLUT4 translocation. We hypothesized that ACTN4 may contribute to insulin-regulated GLUT4 traffic. In L6 muscle cells insulin, but not platelet-derived growth factor, increased co-precipitation of ACTN4 with GLUT4. Small interfering RNA-mediated ACTN4 knockdown abolished the gain in surface-exposed GLUT4 elicited by insulin but not by platelet-derived growth factor, membrane depolarization, or mitochondrial uncoupling. In contrast, knockdown of α-actinin-1 (ACTN1) did not prevent GLUT4 translocation by insulin. GLUT4 colocalized with ACTN4 along the insulin-induced cortical actin mesh and ACTN4 knockdown prevented GLUT4-actin colocalization without impeding actin remodeling or Akt phosphorylation, maintaining GLUT4 in a tight perinuclear location. We propose that ACTN4 contributes to GLUT4 traffic, likely by tethering GLUT4 vesicles to the cortical actin cytoskeleton.