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Cell Signaling

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... activating the receptor to bind a G protien and displace GDP for GTP. GTP activates the ... The enzyme is activated to trigger the signal transduction pathway ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cell Signaling


1
Cell Signaling
  • Wednesday, July 23

2
Cell Communication
  • Essential for communication between cells in
    multicellular organisms
  • Important for communication between unicellular
    organisms
  • Cells detect, process, and respond to signals
  • Chemical
  • Physical
  • Electromagnetic
  • Mechanical

3
Communication between yeast
  • Mating signals
  • Two sexes a and a
  • a cells secrete a chemical a factor, which binds
    to receptors on a cells
  • a cells secrete a chemical a factor, which binds
    to receptors on a cells
  • Transduction of the signal causes a cellular
    repsonse
  • Growth towards the opposite cell and fuse together

4
Figure 11.2 Communication among bacteria
  • Myxobacteria use chemical signaling to share
    information about nutrient supply
  • Staving cells secrete a chemical signal
  • Signal stimulates neighboring cells to aggregate
  • Cells form a thick-walled spore structure capable
    of surviving until conditions improve

Individual rod shaped cells
Aggregation in progress
Spore-forming structure
5
Figure 11.3 Local and long-distance cell
communication in animals
eg growth factors
Only specific target cells recognize and respond
to a given chemical signal
6
Figure 11.4 Communication by direct contact
between cells
Molecules passes freely between adjacent cells
without crossing the plasma membrane
Cells communicate by interactions between
molecules on their surface
7
Figure 11.5 Overview of cell signaling
Signal Reception detection of a signal coming
from outside the cell. A protein (signal) binds
a surface receptor (detection).
8
Figure 11.5 Overview of cell signaling
Signal Transduction binding the signal molecule
causes a change in the receptor which initiates a
pathway that relays the response. The
cytoplasmic molecules that transmit the signal
are termed messengers.
9
Figure 11.5 Overview of cell signaling
Signal Response the signal is transmitted to a
target molecule which causes triggers a specific
cellular response (chemical reaction, cell
movement, activation of specific genes, etc.).
10
Signal Reception
  • Chemical signals (ligands) - bind to a specific
    receptor
  • The ligand is complementary in shape to a
    specific site on the receptor
  • The signal receptor identifies the cell as the
    target
  • Ligand binding causes a conformational change in
    the receptor and activates it
  • Transmits signals from water-soluble proteins in
    the extracellular environment to the inside of
    the cell
  • Signal receptors
  • Plasma membrane proteins
  • G-protein-linked receptors
  • Tyrosine-kinase receptors
  • Ion-channel receptors
  • Intracellular Receptors

11
Figure 11.6 The structure of a G-protein-linked
receptor
Seven a-helix spanning the membrane
12
Figure 11.7 The functioning of a
G-protein-linked receptor
  • G protein functions as a switch
  • Off bound to ADP
  • On bound to ATP
  • Signal binds activating the receptor to bind a G
    protien and displace GDP for GTP
  • GTP activates the G protein
  • Activated G protein translocates along the
    membrane and binds the enzyme
  • The enzyme is activated to trigger the signal
    transduction pathway
  • G protein hydrolyzes GTP to GDP inactivating
    transduction

13
Figure 11.8 The structure and function of a
tyrosine-kinase receptor
This receptor has enzymatic activity in its
cytoplasmic region that catalyzes the transfer of
a phosphate group to a tyrosine amino acid within
a protein. Receptor activation involves the
dimerization of two individually inactive
monomers which then phosphorylate and activate
each other. Activated receptor can then
phosphorylate many specific intracellular
proteins.
This single receptor can activate many pathways
14
Figure 11.9 A ligand-gated ion-channel receptor
  • Receptors are protein pores in the membrane that
    open or close in response to a chemical signal,
    regulating the flow of specific ions (Na, Ca).
  • The opening of a channel immediately leads to a
    change in concentration of an ion in the cell
  • This concentration change triggers further steps
    in a signal pathway

15
Figure 11.10 Steroid hormone interacting with an
intracellular receptor
Intracellular Receptors
  • Chemical signals cross the membrane to bind to
    their cytosolic receptor
  • Hydrophobic signals steroid/thyroid hormones and
    NO gas
  • Target cells contain the specific receptor which
    becomes activated upon ligand binding
  • Activated receptor can then initiate the cellular
    response, such as turning on specific genes in
    the nucleus (transcription factors)

16
Signal Transduction
  • Relays signal from receptor to cellular response
    by way of protein interactions
  • Multistep pathway signal cascade
  • Amplification of signal
  • Each molecule in the pathway can activate more
    than one downstream molecule
  • A small number of extracellular signals produce a
    large cellular response
  • Opportunities for coordination and regulation

17
Mechanism of Signal Transduction
  • Phosphorylation induced conformational change of
    protein messengers
  • Protein kinases enzyme that transfers a
    phosphate group from ATP to amino acids on a
    substrate protein
  • Tyrosine kinase
  • Serine/Threonine kinase
  • Protein Phosphatases enzyme that removes a
    phosphate group from proteins
  • Signal regulation depends on the balance between
    active kinase molecules and active phosphatase
    molecules in the cell

18
Figure 11.11 A phosphorylation cascade
19
Figure 11.12 Cyclic AMP
Components of Signaling Pathways
  • Proteins (G prtoteins, enzymes, transcription
    factors)
  • Second messengers (small molecules and ions that
    can spread rapidly through the cell by diffusion)
  • Cyclic AMP
  • Calcium ions and inositol trisphosphate

Membrane enzyme activated by ligand binding
Inactivates cAMP
20
Figure 11.13 cAMP as a second messenger
Phosphorylates other proteins depending on the
cell type
21
Figure 11.14 The maintenance of calcium ion
concentrations in an animal cell
Secondary Messenger Ca
  • Ca is maintained at a much lower concentration
    inside the cytosol
  • Ca is actively pumped out of the cytosol and
    into the extracellular fluid or into the ER
  • A signal may cause cytosolic Ca to rise by its
    release from the ER

22
Figure 11.15 Pathway Leading to Calcium Release
PLC may be activated by G protein receptor or
Tyrosine kinase pathways
Activated PLC cleaves PIP2 into DAG
(diacylglycerol) and IP3 (inositol trisphosphate)
23
Figure 11.15 Pathway Leading to Calcium Release
IP3 acts as a second messenger that diffuses
through the cytosol and binds a ligand-gated Ca
channel in the ER membrane, causing it to open.
Ca ions flow out of the ER into the cytosol and
activate the next protein in the pathway (usually
Calmodulin, a Ca binding protein)
24
Figure 11.15 Pathway Leading to Calcium Release
Calmodulin-Ca can then activate one or more
signaling pathways resulting in a cellular
response
25
Cellular Response
  • Regulate activities in the cytoplasm (eg
    response to epinephrine)
  • Activate enzymatic activity
  • Open or close an ion channel
  • Regulate transcription in the nucleus (eg
    response to a growth factor)
  • Activate transcription of a gene
  • Synthesis of enzymes or other proteins
  • Inhibit transcription of a gene

26
Cytoplasmic response to a signal stimulation of
glycogen breakdown by epinephrine
27
Cellular Response
  • Regulate activities in the cytoplasm (eg
    response to epinephrine)
  • Activate enzymatic activity
  • Open or close an ion channel
  • Regulate transcription in the nucleus (eg
    response to a growth factor)
  • Activate transcription of a gene
  • Synthesis of enzymes or other proteins
  • Inhibit transcription of a gene

28
Fig. 11.17 Nuclear response to a signal
activation of a specific gene by a growth factor
29
Signaling Pathways
  • Multistep pathway signal cascade
  • Amplification of signal
  • Each molecule in the pathway can activate more
    than one downstream molecule
  • Proteins persist in an active form long enough to
    process numerous molecules of substrate before
    they become inactive again
  • Specificity of signal
  • Cells respond to some signals and ignore others
  • Different cells produce different responses to
    the same signal
  • Response of a particular cell to a signal depends
    on its unique collection of signal receptors,
    messengers, and response proteins

30
Figure 11.18 The specificity of cell signaling
Four cells respond differently to the same
signal Different sets of proteins possessed by
each cell determines what signal molecules it
responds to and the nature of the response.
Different pathways may have some molecules in
common.
31
Efficiency of Signaling
  • How do signaling molecules in the cytoplasm find
    their substrate?
  • Scaffolding proteins large relay proteins to
    which several other relay proteins are
    simultaneously attached
  • Facilitates a specific signal cascade
  • Enhances speed and efficiency of signal
  • May permanently hold together networks of
    signaling-pathway proteins

32
Figure 11.19 A scaffolding protein
Scaffolding proteins binds a membrane receptor
and 3 different protein kinases
33
Regulating Signals
  • Cells must inactivate a signal response
  • Each participating molecules must be short-lived
    in order to enable the cell to respond quickly to
    many incoming signals
  • The changes that a signal produces are reversible
  • When the signal is removed, receptor revert to an
    inactive form
  • Relay molecules return to their inactive forms
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