
However, the insulin hormone is not a protein that is directly synthesized through translation. It is actually derived from a polypeptide known as preproinsulin which has to undergo a series of alterations and modifications in order to obtain the insulin molecule. For example, in the beta cells of the pancreas, insulin mRNA is originally translated and produced as preproinsulin which is composed of 110 amino acids. This polypeptide is then passed on to the endoplasmic reticulum where the signal peptide consisting of 24 amino acids is cleaved by enzymatic activity during insertion into the organelle. The resulting peptide is known as proinsulin which consists of an amino-terminal B chain, a carboxy-terminal A chain, and a C peptide. This polypeptide is then passed onto the golgi apparatus where the middle section consisting of 33 amino acids (C peptide) is cleaved by endopeptidases. After this cleavage we are left with “mature insulin” consisting of an A and B chain and the C peptide molecule. Both of these peptides are then packaged into vesicles within the Golgi which bud off the Golgi body and accumulate in the cytoplasm. Here, the “mature insulin” molecule is modified to its active form by enzymes within the vesicles. These vesicles which contain active insulin are stored in the cytoplasm until the beta cell is stimulated causing the release of both insulin and the C peptide into the blood via exocytosis (7).
The primary structure of the protein consists of the two separate alpha and b

In the secondary structure of the hormone, hydrogen bonds form between the peptide bonds of the two chains. This causes the amino acids of the joined chains to coil to form sh

In the tertiary structure of insulin, this three-dimensional configuration is further stabilized by disulphide bridges which form between the thiol (SH) groups on the cysteine residue

Finally, the insulin molecule can also take on a quaternary structure as a dimer or hexamer. For instance, in solution, insulin molecules have a tendency to form dimers as

In any event, even though the insulin molecule can form primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary structures, it is only active in one specific form. This is the monomer version of its tertiary structure. The reason for this is that the insulin receptor only recognizes insulin as a single molecule or monomer. Thus, it is not active as a dimer or hexamer (quaternary structures) which are actually the storage forms of the molecule. Similarly, it is also not active in its primary and secondary structures as the insulin receptor is also unable to recognize the insulin molecules in these forms. For instance, the protein has to be folded and compacted in the correct conformation before it can be recognized by the receptor. Consequently, the primary and secondary structures of the molecule do not yet have the correct conformation and are too unstable to be recognized by the insulin receptor (5).
Now that we know that the monomer form of insulin's tertiary structure is the only version of the molecule that is biologically active, we can also look at what portion of the molecule is acutally involved in the activation of the recpetor. In the case of insulin it has several surface residues including Ser-A12, Leu-A13, Glu-A17, His-B10, Glu-B13, and Leu-B17 which are all responsible for binding the hormone to the receptor. Together, these residues are collectively known as the "primary binding surface" and are most important to the function and biological activity of the insulin hormone. The reason for this is that this is the portion of the molecule that actually interacts with and binds to the receptor. Thus, it is through these residues that insulin is able to interact with the cells and initiate the appropriate biochemical response. In this way, without this "primary binding surface", insulin would not be a biologically active molecule (5).
At the same time, we also know that there is an active insulin receptor for the insulin hormone. This receptor is a transmembrane protein with tyrosine kinase activity. It has tw

Gene coding sequence for preproinsulin in humans:
1 agccctccag gacaggctgc atcagaagag gccatcaagc agatcactgt ccttctgcca
61 tggccctgtg gatgcgcctc ctgcccctgc tggcgctgct ggccctctgg ggacctgacc
121 cagccgcagc ctttgtgaac caacacctgt gcggctcaca cctggtggaa gctctctacc
181 tagtgtgcgg ggaacgaggc ttcttctaca cacccaagac ccgccgggag gcagaggacc
241 tgcaggtggg gcaggtggag ctgggcgggg gccctggtgc aggcagcctg cagcccttgg
301 ccctggaggg gtccctgcag aagcgtggca ttgtggaaca atgctgtacc agcatctgct
361 ccctctacca gctggagaac tactgcaact agacgcagcc cgcaggcagc cccacacccg
421 ccgcctcctg caccgagaga gatggaataa agcccttgaa ccagcaaaa
Comparative analysis of the protein sequences of preproinsulin in homo sapiens (humans), rattus losea (rats), and felis catus (cats):

*From this analysis one can see that the amino acid sequences for insulin is highly conserved among vertebrate species.
References:
1) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insulin
2) http://www.biotopics.co.uk/as/insulinproteinstructure.html
3) http://www.vivo.colostate.edu/hbooks/pathphys/endocrine/pancreas/insulin_struct.html
4) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insulin_receptor
5) http://images.google.ca/imgres?imgurl=http://www.betacell.org/images/CMS/structure-insulin-panel3-th.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.betacell.org/content/articles/print.php%3Faid%3D8&h=536&w=500&sz=50&hl=en&start=2&tbnid=Na2M8_NNQxwKDM:&tbnh=132&tbnw=123&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dinsulin%2Breceptor%26svnum%3D10%26hl%3Den
6) http://www.vivo.colostate.edu/hbooks/pathphys/endocrine/pancreas/insulin.html
7) http://www.betacell.org/content/articles/print.php?aid=1
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