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Binding of Biosynthetic Human Insulin to Erythrocytes of Normal and Insulin-dependent Diabetic Subjects: Comparison with Pork and Human Pancreatic Insulin

  1. Werner Bachmann,
  2. Caspar Sieger,
  3. Florian Lacher and
  4. Norbert Lotz
  1. Diabetes Research Unit and Schwabing City Hospital 8000 Munich 40, Kölner Platz 1, Germany
  1. Address reprint requests to W. Bachmann, III. Medizinische Abteilung, Krankenhaus München-Schwabing, Kölner Platz 1, 8000 München 40, Germany.

Abstract

Biosynthetic human insulin (BHI) was compared with highly purified human pancreatic and pork insulin with regard to its ability to bind to erythrocytes of normal and insulin-dependent diabetic subjects (type I diabetes). The binding affinity or capacity of erythrocyte from both normal and diabetic subjects were comparable for biosynthetic and pancreatic human insulin. In contrast, binding of pork insulin to erythrocytes was significantly decreased at low insulin concentrations in normal as well as in diabetic subjects due to a reduced receptor affinity. The affinity of the “empty sites” was 5.25 × 10−8 M−1 with pork insulin in normal subjects and 6.1 × 10−8 M−1 in diabetic subjects; with both human insulins, the affinities were 6.9 × 10−8 M−1 in normal subjects and 8.6 × 10−8 M−1 in diabetic subjects. The number of insulin receptors per erythrocyte was calculated as being 30 in normal subjects and 35 in diabetic patients.

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This Article

  1. doi: 10.2337/diacare.4.2.215 Diabetes Care March/April 1981 vol. 4 no. 2 215-219
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