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How does insulin act?

This article describes what insulin is, how it acts, and how it increase the storage of carbohydrates, fats and proteins.
© University of Southampton

What is insulin?

Insulin is a powerful hormone that acts to reduce blood glucose concentrations. It is released from the pancreatic β cells (Islets of Langerhans) during and after eating, allowing it to work at just the right time when glucose levels are increased.

Essential knowledge

Insulin acts to increase the storage of carbohydrates, fats and proteins, reducing the levels of their metabolites, such as glucose, in the bloodstream. It provided an evolutionary safety net for times when food was scarce, allowing the body to store away reserves when food was plenty.

Blood sugar diagram showing the pancreas releasing insulin to act on the liver to stimulate glycogen formation when blood glucose levels are high and the release of glucagon from the pancreas in hypoglycaemia. Figure: how does insulin act? When blood glucose concentrations are high (follow the red arrows), the pancreas releases insulin which acts on the liver to stimulate glycogen formation, reducing blood glucose concentrations. In hypoglycaemia, glucagon performs the opposite role (blue arrows).

In greater depth

Insulin release is stimulated by high glucose concentrations. Insulin is stored inside vesicles inside the β cells and when blood glucose concentrations increase, glucose is transported into the β cell by GLUT 2, where it initiates an intracellular signalling cascade, resulting in the movement of the vesicles to the plasma membrane and release of insulin.

Insulin release

Insulin release is biphasic, where the first peak is due to the release of stored insulin and the second peak is due to the release of newly synthesised insulin. Insulin release is also increased by fatty acids, amino acids, gastrointestinal hormones (such as glucagon, gastrin, and secretin), the parasympathetic nervous system and drugs including those of the sulphonylurea class.

Insulin release is inhibited by stress hormones such as somatostatin, adrenaline and nor-adrenaline and the sympathetic nervous system.

Insulin enters the bloodstream before binding to the insulin receptor, internalisation and degradation, mainly in the liver but also the kidneys and muscles. It has a half-life of 5-6 minutes.

How does insulin act?

Insulin acts to increase the storage of carbohydrates, fats and proteins, reducing the levels of their metabolites, such as glucose, in the bloodstream. It provided an evolutionary safety net for times when food was scarce, allowing the body to store away reserves when food was plenty.

Insulin has binds to the insulin receptor where it initiates a cascade of enzymatic phosphorylation, resulting in changes in key activities (see figure below):

  • Changes in glucose transport via movement of insulin-sensitive GLUT 4 to the cell surface
  • Upregulation in glucose storage and downregulation of glucose synthesis/release
  • Promotion of protein storage and inhibition of protein degradation
  • Increases in lipid storage and decreases in lipolysis

How insulin acts including insulin receptor and glut 4 vesicle diagram Insulin binds to the insulin receptor on the outside of the cell. Binding causes conformational changes in the insulin receptor, resulting in signal transduction, phosphorylation events and changes in diverse activities including storage of carbohydrates, fats and proteins.

If you’d like to learn more about insulin, check out the full online course from the University of Southampton, below.

© University of Southampton
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Understanding Insulin

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