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Cell Communication

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Cell Communication Chapter 7 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cell Communication


1
Cell Communication
  • Chapter 7

2
7.1 Cell Communication An Overview
  • Cells communicate with one another through
  • Direct channels of communication
  • Specific contact between cells
  • Intercellular chemical messengers

3
Apoptosis

Fig. 7-1, p. 140
4
Intercellular Chemical Messengers
  • Controlling cell
  • Releases signal molecule that causes response of
    target cells
  • Target cell processes signal in 3 steps
  • Reception, transduction, response
  • Signal transduction
  • Series of events from reception to response

5
Signal Transduction

Fig. 7-2, p. 142
6
Reception

7
7.2 Cell Communication Systems with Surface
Receptors
  • Peptide hormones and neurotransmitters
  • Primary extracellular signal molecules recognized
    by surface receptors in animals
  • Surface receptors
  • Integral membrane glycoproteins
  • Signaling molecule
  • Bound by a surface receptor
  • Triggers response pathways within the cell

8
Surface Receptors
  • Cell communication systems based on surface
    receptors have 3 components
  • (1) Extracellular signal molecules
  • (2) Surface receptors that receive signals
  • (3) Internal response pathways triggered when
    receptors bind a signal

9
Peptide Hormones
  • Peptide hormones
  • Small proteins
  • Growth factors
  • Special class of peptide hormones
  • Affect cell growth, division, differentiation

10
Neurotransmitters
  • Neurotransmitters include
  • Small peptides
  • Individual amino acids or their derivatives
  • Chemical substances

11
Surface Receptors
  • Surface receptors
  • Integral membrane proteins
  • Extend entirely through the plasma membrane
  • Binding of a signal molecule
  • Induces molecular change in the receptor that
    activates its cytoplasmic end

12
Response of Surface Receptor

13
Cellular Response Pathways (1)
  • Cellular response pathways
  • Operate by activating protein kinases
  • Protein kinases add phosphate groups
  • Stimulate or inhibit activities of target
    proteins, producing cellular response

14
Cellular Response Pathways (2)
  • Protein phosphatases
  • Reverse response
  • Remove phosphate groups from target proteins
  • Receptors are removed by endocytosis
  • When signal transduction is finished

15
Phosphorylation

16
Amplification
  • Each step of a response pathway catalyzed by an
    enzyme is amplified
  • Each enzyme activates hundreds or thousands of
    proteins that enter next step in pathway
  • Amplification
  • Allows full cellular response when few signal
    molecules bind to receptors

17
Amplification

18
7.3 Surface Receptors with Built-In Protein
Kinase Activity
  • Receptor Tyrosine Kinases

19
Receptor Tyrosine Kinases
  • Receptor tyrosine kinases bind signal molecule
  • Protein kinase site becomes active
  • Adds phosphate groups to tyrosines in the
    receptor itself, and to target proteins
  • Phosphate groups added to cytoplasmic end of
    receptor are recognition sites for proteins
    activated by binding to the receptor

20
Protein Kinase Activity

21
7.4 G-ProteinCoupled Receptors
  • G proteins Key molecular switches in
    second-messenger pathways
  • Two major G-proteincoupled receptor response
    pathways involve different second messengers

22
G-Protein-Coupled Receptors
  • G-protein-coupled receptors activate pathways
  • Binding of the extracellular signal molecule
    (first messenger) activates a site on the
    cytoplasmic end of the receptor

23
G-Protein-Coupled Receptors

Fig. 7-8, p. 147
24
G-Protein Activation
  • Activated receptor turns on a G protein, which
    acts as a molecular switch
  • G protein
  • Active when bound to GTP
  • Inactive when bound to GDP

25
Active G Protein
  • Active G protein
  • Switches on the effector of the pathway (enzyme
    that generates second messengers)
  • Second messengers
  • Small internal signal molecules
  • Activate the protein kinases of the pathway

26
Response Pathways

27
Second Messengers cAMP
  • 1st of two major pathways triggered by
    G-protein-coupled receptors
  • Effector (adenylyl cyclase) generates cAMP as
    second messenger
  • cAMP activates specific protein kinases

28
cAMP Receptor-Response Pathways

Fig. 7-10, p. 148
29
cAMP

Fig. 7-11, p. 148
30
Second Messengers IP3 and DAG (1)
  • 2nd major pathway triggered by G-proteincoupled
    receptors
  • Activated effector (phospholipase C), generates
    two second messengers, IP3 and DAG

31
Second Messengers IP3 and DAG (2)
  • IP3 activates transport proteins in the ER
  • Releasing stored Ca2 into the cytoplasm
  • Released Ca2 (alone or with DAG) activates
    specific protein kinases
  • Adds phosphate groups to target proteins

32
IP3/DAG Receptor-Response Pathways

33
Pathway Controls
  • cAMP and IP3/DAG pathways are balanced by
    reactions that eliminate second messengers
  • Stopped by protein phosphatases that continually
    remove phosphate groups from target proteins
  • Stopped by endocytosis of receptors and their
    bound extracellular signals

34
Mutations
  • Mutated systems can turn on the pathways
    permanently, contributing to progression of some
    forms of cancer

35
Gene Regulation Ras
  • Some pathways in gene regulation link certain
    receptor tyrosine kinases to a specific G protein
    (Ras)
  • When the receptor binds a signal molecule, it
    phosphorylates itself
  • Adapter proteins then bind, bridging to and
    activating Ras

36
Activated Ras
  • Activated Ras turns on the MAP kinase cascade
  • Last MAP kinase in cascade phosphorylates target
    proteins in the nucleus
  • Activates them to turn on specific genes
  • Many of these genes control cell division

37
Gene Regulation

38
7.5 Pathways Triggered by Internal Receptors
Steroid Hormone Receptors
  • Steroid hormones have widely different effects
  • Depend on relatively small chemical differences
  • Response of a cell to steroid hormones
  • Depends on internal receptors and the genes they
    activate

39
Steroid Hormone Receptors
  • Steroid hormones penetrate plasma membrane
  • Bind to receptors within the cell
  • Internal receptors
  • Regulatory proteins that turn on specific genes
    when activated by binding a signal molecule
  • Produce cellular response

40
Two Domains of Steroid Hormone Receptors
  • Steroid hormone receptors
  • One domain recognizes and binds a specific
    steroid hormone
  • One domain interacts with the controlling regions
    of target genes

41
Gene Activation Steroid Hormone Receptors

42
Cell Response
  • Cell response to a steroid hormone
  • Depends on whether it has an internal receptor
    for the hormone
  • Type of response within the cell
  • Depends on the genes that are recognized and
    turned on by an activated receptor

43
7.6 Integration of Cell Communication Pathways
  • Cross talk

44
Cross-Talk
  • Cell signaling pathways communicate with one
    another to integrate responses to cellular
    signals
  • May result in a complex network of interactions
    between cell communication pathways

45
Cross-Talk

46
Modification of Cell Response
  • Cross-talk often results in
  • Modifications of cellular responses controlled by
    the pathways
  • Fine-tuning effects of combinations of signal
    molecules binding to receptors of a cell

47
Cell Communication PathwaysIn Animals
  • Inputs from other cellular response systems also
    can become involved in the cross-talk network
  • Cell adhesion molecules
  • Molecules arriving through gap junctions
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