PEDIATRICS Vol. 66 No. 3 September 1980, pp. 385-390
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Erythrocyte Insulin Binding in Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus: Lack of Relationship to Duration and Control of Diabetes in Children and Adolescents

Michael S. Kappy MD, PhD1, Leslie P. Plotnick MD1, Joann C. Findlay BA1, and Richard D. Kayne MD1

1 Division of Pediatric Endocrinology, Department of Pediatrics, The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore

Insulin binding was measured in the erythrocytes (RBCs) of four children and 12 adolescents with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in the basal (fasting, nonketotic) state. Children and adolescents with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus showed normal binding of insulin to their RBCs when expressed as the total insulin bound over the physiologic range of insulin concentrations. The insulin receptor concentration and receptor binding affinity for insulin were also normal. These parameters of insulin binding were not correlated with either the duration of diabetes or the degree of diabetic control in the patients. Since insulin binding by erythrocytes has been shown to reflect binding by traditional target tissues (liver, fat), the data suggest that alterations in binding of insulin to cells in children and adolescents with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus probably play little, if any, role in the response of these patients to exogenous insulin or in the control of their glucose metabolism in the basal state.

Submitted on October 29, 1979
Accepted on December 26, 1979