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Q&A session I Dr. Sara Batelli [email protected] 08.11.2016 Lecture 1 Cells compartments Microscopy Lecture 2 Membrane composition Lecture 3 Different types of pumps Action potentials Uses of pumps and membrane potential together Lecture 4 Protein Targeting - Nucleus and ER Lecture 5 Protein Targeting - Mitochodria and Choroplasts Lecture 6 Protein Trafficking in the Secretory Pathway All Lectures – Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic cells Prokaryotic cells Much smaller The genetic material is naked within the cytoplasm Ribosomes are the only type of organelle Eukaryotic cells A double membrane-bound nucleus separates the genetic material from the rest of the cell An endomembrane system composed of different membrane-bound organelles that transport materials around the cell: the rough and smooth endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus and vesicles Energy producing organelles: mitochondria and chloroplasts, involved in metabolism and energy conversion All Lectures - Cell compartmentalization in eukaryotic cells All Lectures – Different cellular compartments Cellular compartments: Nucleus → DNA Mitochondria → ATP generation From where do they come from? Chloroplasts → capture energy from sunlight to make sugars ER → lipid synthesis/ protein synthesis, storage of Ca++ Golgi → protein modification/ targeting Endosomes → protein sorting Lysosomes → protein digestion Peroxisomes → oxidation They are all enclosed by a membrane but each compartment has specific enzymes, molecules and transport systems on the surface All Lectures – Different types of transport Gated transport (nucleus) Transmembrane transport (ER, mitochondria, chloroplasts) Vesicular transport (secretory pathway) Lecture 1 – Microscopy (light and electron microscopy) Light Microscopy - so called because it employs visible light to detect small objects Resolution is defined as the ability to distinguish two very small and closely-spaced objects as separate entities. Resolution is determined by certain physical parameters that include the wavelength of light (λ) and features of the objective lens (NA = numerical aperture) Rayleigh criterion is the general accepted criterion for the minimum resolvable detail. Two adjacent objects are resolved when the first diffraction minimum of one object coincides with the maximum of the other. Lecture 1 – Microscopy (light and electron microscopy) Different Types of light Microscopy: Bright field Dark field Phase contrast Fluorescence Microscopy A fluorescence microscope is much the same as a conventional light microscope with added features to enhance its capabilities. The conventional microscope uses visible light (400-700 nm) to illuminate; a fluorescence microscope, on the other hand, uses a much higher intensity light source which excites a fluorescent species in a sample of interest. This fluorescent species in turn emits a lower energy light of a longer wavelength that produces the magnified image. In most cases the sample of interest is labeled with a fluorescent substance known as a fluorophore and then illuminated. The illumination light is absorbed by the fluorophores (attached to the sample) and causes them to emit a longer, lower energy wavelength light. Lecture 1 – Microscopy (light and electron microscopy) Which dyes or fluorescent proteins are good for imaging? 1) High extinction coefficient (= “brightness”) 2) High quantum yield of fluorescence (= number of fluorescence photons emitted per excitation photon absorbed) 3) Little photobleaching (= loss of fluorescence signal over time) 4) Absorption in the far red (limits damage to living cells and shows low autofluorescence) Lecture 1 – Microscopy (light and electron microscopy) Fluorescence Microscopy – Wide-field vs Confocal A pinhole is in front of the detector to eliminate out-of-focus signal Low resolution in Z High time resolution High resolution in Z Low time resolution Lecture 1 – Microscopy (light and electron microscopy) Two Types of Electron Microscopy 1) Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) See details of a cell by sending an electron beam through very thin slices of a specimen. An image is formed from the interaction of the electrons transmitted through the sample. It can be coupled with antibodies to localize specific proteins 2) Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) See details of the outside of a sample. Once the electron beam hits the samples, electrons are ejected from the sample and collected by a detector. Computers are used to bring them back into a 3D image Lecture 1 – Microscopy (light and electron microscopy) Two Types of Electron Microscopy Lecture 2 – Membrane’s composition Cellular membranes Lipid bilayer Different proteins The plasma membrane contains ~ 25% protein, internal membranes (e.g ER, Golgi…) contain up to 75% protein Functions of plasma membrane: Protection from the external environment Import/export of molecules Signal transduction (sensing of external stimuli and activation of internal pathways) Cell motility Lecture 2 – Membrane’s composition Lipid bilayer Membrane lipids are AMPHIPATHIC The organization of the lipid bilayer is ENERGETICALLY FAVORABLE What’s the difference? Saturated lipids Mix of saturated and unsaturated lipids Lecture 2 – Membrane’s composition 3 different types of membrane lipids Phospholipids Sterols Glycolipids Is the composition of the two layers the same? Different in the two layers ASIMMETRY Only in the outer layer Lecture 2 – Membrane’s composition The lipid bilayer is a fluid Possible phospholipids movements Lateral diffusion, rotation, bend Flip/flop between the two layers is rare Factors that influence the lipid bilayer fluidity: Temperature Composition of the membrane - Lengh of hydrocardon tails - Presence of double bonds - Amount of Cholesterol Lecture 2 – Membrane’s composition Membrane proteins Majority Lecture 2 – Membrane’s composition What is represented here in red? The cell cortex, is a specialized layer of cytoplasmic protein on the inner face of the plasma membrane of the cell periphery. It functions as a modulator of plasma membrane behavior and cell surface properties. In most eukaryotic cells lacking a cell wall, the cortex is an actin-rich network. The cell cortex is attached to the cell membrane via membraneanchoring proteins and it plays a central role in cell shape control. The protein constituents of the cortex undergo rapid turnover, making the cortex both mechanically rigid and highly plastic, two properties essential to its function. In most cases, the cortex is in the range of 100 to 1000 nanometers thick. Lecture 3 – Different types of pumps Osmotic concentration, formerly known as osmolarity, is the measure of solute concentration, defined as the number of osmoles (Osm) of solute per litre (L) of solution (osmol/L or Osm/L). The osmolarity of a solution is usually expressed as Osm/L (pronounced "osmolar") and measures the number of osmoles of solute particles per unit volume of solution. This value allows the measurement of the osmotic pressure of a solution and the determination of how the solvent will diffuse across a semipermeable membrane (osmosis) separating two solutions of different osmotic concentration. Are ion concentrations different or not inside and outside the cell? How can you keep the different ion concentrations inside and outside? Lecture 3 – Different types of pumps Transport across the membrane: different types of transmembrane proteins Concentration gradient Pump Types of transport Passive – no energy = down the concentration gradient Active – energy required = against the concentration gradient Lecture 3 – Different types of pumps Transport across the membrane ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Membrane potential - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Pump Electrochemical gradient = concentration gradient + membrane potential Lecture 3 – Different types of pumps An electrochemical gradient is a gradient of electrochemical potential, usually for an ion that can move across a membrane. The gradient consists of two parts, the chemical gradient, or difference in solute concentration across a membrane, and the electrical gradient, or difference in charge across a membrane. When there are unequal concentrations of an ion across a permeable membrane, the ion will move across the membrane from the area of higher concentration to the area of lower concentration through simple diffusion. Ions also carry an electric charge that forms an electric potential across a membrane. If there is an unequal distribution of charges across the membrane, then the difference in electric potential generates a force that drives ion diffusion until the charges are balanced on both sides of the membrane. Lecture 3 – Different types of pumps Terminology 1) Types of transport Passive – no energy = down the concentration gradient Active – energy required = against the concentration gradient 2) Types of Membrane Transport Proteins Pump – active and slow (they transport ions against their electrochemical gradient) light or ATP driven, conformational changes P-type Pumps (Na, K, H, Ca) self phosphorylate ABC transporter – small molecule transport Carrier – mainly passive Uniporter – single substrate across membrane Symporter – transport of two solutes across the membrane Antiporter – exchange of one solute for another across the membrane Channel – passive and fast (they transport ions with their electrochemical gradient) They are ion specific pores that open and close transiently, without conformational changes Lecture 3 – Different types of pumps What is the difference between Carrier and Channel Proteins? • Solutes diffuse through the pore of channel proteins, whereas carrier proteins bind solutes on one side of membrane and release it on the other side • Compared with channel proteins, carrier proteins have very slow transport rates • Unlike carrier proteins, channel proteins contain a pore, which facilitates the solute transportation • Unlike channel proteins, carrier proteins have alternate solute-bound conformations • Channel proteins are lipoproteins, while carrier proteins are glycoproteins • Carrier proteins can mediate both active and passive transport, while channel proteins can mediate only passive transport • Carrier proteins can transport molecules or ions against the concentration gradient, while channel protein cannot. Lecture 3 – Different types of pumps Na/K Pump Conformational modification https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=awz6lIss3hQ Lecture 3 – Different types of pumps Carrier Proteins Example : Glucose Transport from gut lumen into epithelial cell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o_uDwQfbyAE Lecture 3 – Different types of pumps Stress Gated Channel (Hair Cells) In lecture we saw that channels are highly selective to ion which they transport based on size and charge. They don’t undergo a conformational modification. They open after ligand binding, membrane potential modification or mechanical stress. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zKuor6wK1uU Lecture 3 – Membrane potential Membrane potential (also transmembrane potential or membrane voltage) is the difference in electric potential between the interior and the exterior of a biological cell While this phenomenon is present in all cells, it is especially important in nerve and muscles cells, because changes in their membrane potentials are used to transmit information. When a nerve or muscle cell is at "rest", its membrane potential is called the resting membrane potential. In a typical neuron, this is about –70 millivolts (mV). The minus sign indicates that the inside of the cell is negative with respect to the surrounding extracellular fluid. If some event, such as the opening of a gated ion channel, causes the membrane potential to become less negative, this is termed depolarization. Conversely, if some factor causes the membrane potential to become more negative, this is termed hyperpolarization. Lecture 3 – Membrane potential Membrane potentials are used to propagate signals along a nerve cell without loss of signal over long distances An action potential occurs when a neuron sends information down an axon, away from the cell body. The action potential is an explosion of electrical activity that is created by a depolarizing current. This means that some event causes the resting potential to move toward 0 mV. When the depolarization reaches about -55 mV a neuron will fire an action potential. This is the threshold. If the neuron does not reach this critical threshold level, then no action potential will fire. Also, when the threshold level is reached, an action potential of a fixed size will always fire. For any given neuron, the size of the action potential is always the same. Therefore, the neuron either does not reach the threshold or a full action potential is fired - this is the "ALL OR NONE" principle. Lecture 3 – Membrane potential Generation of an action potential Na+ channels inactivation Positive feedback Na inactivation = The Na+ channels begin to close, even in the continued presence of the depolarization. Inactivation contributes to the repolarization of the action potential. However, inactivation is not enough by itself to account fully for the repolarization. Lecture 3 – Membrane potential Propagation of an action potential Due to channel inactivation and the resulting refractory period, the action potential propagates only in one direction → the membrane cannot generate a second action potential until the Na+ channels have returned from the inactivated to the closed state Lecture 3 – Membrane potential How to increase the speed of action potential propagation? Lecture 3 – Membrane potential Along the axon: The myelin sheath insulates, such that the action potential jumps from node to node At the axon terminal: Neurotransmitter Voltage-gated Ca++ receptors channelsproduce convert the changes of the electrical signal membrane potential (action potential) into according to the a chemical signal amount of (release of neurotransmitter neurotransmitters) released Lecture 3 – Membrane potential Synaptic Signaling https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=py4DZ9WRqDM Lecture 4 – Protein sorting: nucleus and ER How are proteins targeted to their specific location within the cell? Proteins are targeted to specific compartments by signal sequences that are recognized by specific receptors Different types of signal sequences (N/C terminal, internal) Signal sequences are necessary and sufficient for targeting Lecture 4 – Protein sorting: nucleus (gated transport) Nuclear pore complex: Big complex In general is formed by 8 subunits (nucleoporins) Allows the passage of proteins > 60 kDa (gated transport) The big proteins should deform in order to squeeze through the channel • Nuclear localization sequence (NLS) required for nuclear import • Export: NES = nuclear export sequence) • Also: NRS = nuclear retention signal Lecture 4 – Protein sorting: nucleus (gated transport) Nuclear import receptors (importins) To initiate nuclear import, most nuclear localization signals must be recognized by nuclear import receptors, sometimes called importins, most of which are encoded by a family of related genes. Each family member encodes a receptor protein that can bind and transport the subset of cargo proteins containing the appropriate nuclear localization signal (direct binding). Nuclear import receptors do not always bind to nuclear proteins directly. Additional adaptor proteins can form a bridge between the import receptors and the nuclear localization signals on the proteins to be transported (indirect binding). Lecture 4 – Protein sorting: nucleus How is the cargo protein released? What determines the directionality of transport? Lecture 4 – Protein sorting: nucleus Ran (GTPase) GDP (Cytoplasm) GTP (Nucleus) Lecture 4 – Protein sorting: nucleus How the Ran-GTP level is maintained high inside the nucleus? Cytoplasm Ran-GAPs and Ran-GEFs Nucleus Ran-GEF Exchange GDP with GTP Ran-GAP GTP-hydrolysis Dissociation of Ran from the transport receptor Dissociation of protein cargo from the transport receptor GAP = GTPase activating protein GEF = Guanine-nucleotide exchange factor Lecture 4 – Protein sorting: ER Protein Translocation in the Endoplasmic Reticulum https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4qf1BSXn_tk Lecture 4 – Protein sorting: ER Targeting to the ER occurs co-and post-translationally by the conserved Sec pathway SRP (= signal recognition particle) binding causes translational slow-down. It binds to SRP receptor on ER membrane). They are both GTPases Only proteins carrying a ER-signal sequence are targeted to the ER membrane; translocation occurs via the Sec 61 complex Sec 61 can open laterally and vertically to insert membrane proteins or translocate soluble proteins Start-transfer and stop-transfer sequences serve as insertion/translocation signals Lecture 4 – Protein sorting: ER What is the function of the protein BiP? Binding immunoglobulin protein (BiP) is located in the lumen of the ER, binds newly synthesized proteins as they are traslocated into the ER, and maintains them in a state competent for subsequent folding and oligomerization. BiP is also an essential component of the traslocation machinery and plays a role in retrograde transport across the ER membrane of aberrant proteins destined for degradation by the proteosome. Lecture 5 – Mitochondria and Chloroplasts 2 membranes = 2 compartments 3 membranes = 3 compartments specialized on ATP-Synthesis using energy derived from electron transport and oxidative phosphorylation specialized on ATP-Synthesis derived from photosynthesis Similarities: - contain DNA and ribosomes + other components required for protein synthesis - most of the proteins are encoded in the cell nucleus - most proteins have to be imported from the cytosol Lecture 5 – Mitochondria and Chloroplasts Protein Import https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FhJemzfF7rc Lecture 5 – Mitochondria and Chloroplasts Translocation into mitochondria: 1) Generally, N-terminal signal sequence 2) Different receptors and channels act to translocate proteins - TOM and SAM complexes translocate proteins into the outer mitochondrial membrane - TIM23 complex transports soluble proteins into the matrix and helps to insert proteins into the inner membrane - TIM22 mediates insertion in the inner membrane - OXA complex mediates insertion in the inner membrane of proteins synthesized by mitochondria - Hsp70: the cytosolic Hsp70 binds to unfolded proteins to avoid aggregation; the mitochondrial Hsp70 acts as a motor to pull the proteins into the matrix space. They both require ATP hydrolysis to be released Energy sources (ATP hydrolysis and membrane potential) TIM23 Lecture 5 – Mitochondria and Chloroplasts Protein transport into Mitochondria vs Chloroplast Mitochondria Chloroplasts - They use membrane potential and ATP as energy sources - They use GTP and ATP as energy sources for translocation - N-terminal signal sequence - They use H+ gradient (membrane potential) for translocation into the thylakoid - For translocation into the thylakoid, they have 2 N-terminal signal sequences Lecture 6 – The secretory pathway: vesicular transport Does vesicular transport occur spontaneously? How can you visualized a protein that enters the secretory pathway? Lecture 6 – The secretory pathway: vesicular transport (PM) ER (lipids and proteins synthesis): Disulfide Bonds – stabilizes protein Glycosylation – protects against degradation and aggregation, helps with correct folding and is involved in cell-cell recognition and cell signaling Quality control – misfolded proteins are recognized by chaperones Golgi: Protein sorting and distribution center Protein modification Glycosylation processing Final Destinations: Lysomes – degradation Vesicle – bind to PM to secrete or to deliver proteins to the PM Can also bind to endosomes ER resident proteins and proteins that are destined to other compartments, enter the ER Lecture 6 – The secretory pathway: vesicular transport Quality control in the ER (I) Proteins synthesized in ER are checked by a chaperone for accurate folding without abnormalities so that only proteins with normal folding are transported to the Golgi apparatus. Lecture 6 – The secretory pathway: vesicular transport Quality control in the ER (II) Calnexin and Calreticulin work with two enzymes to repair unfolded proteins. These enzymes are: a) Glucosidase b) Glycosyl-transferase They achieve this by the following pathway: 1) Glucosidase I removes the terminal glucose from the unfolded protein 2) Glucosidase II removes the second glucose 3) This allows for binding of the membrane bound Calnexin (or Calreticulin) which induces protein folding 4) Glucosidase II removes the final glucose 5) If the protein is now folded correctly it can exit from the ER 6) If the protein is misfolded, it interacts with soluble Calreticulin and then glucosyl-transferase adds three new Glucose residues onto the protein, meaning it is passed around the cycle once more. Lecture 6 – The secretory pathway: vesicular transport Proteins synthesized in ER are folded with the aid of a chaperone. Accurate and complete folding of the completed protein is also confirmed. Proteins not completely folded are stopped and folding is once again attempted. This is because abnormal proteins occur when folding is inaccurate or incomplete, which can lead to abnormal cellular functions or aggregate formation. Proteins that have been folded are then transported to the Golgi body as part of the next step. However, proteins that could not be successfully folded because of some sort of abnormality are transported from ER to the cytoplasm, where they are degraded by a protein degradation apparatus called the proteasome. This series of reactions is called protein quality control. If the protein is properly folded, it can continue its journey into the Golgi. Lecture 6 – The secretory pathway: vesicular transport The secretory pathway is a transport system that shuttles macromolecules between the different compartments in a cell. Movement between intracellular compartments is carried out by transport vesicles (coated vesicles) that bud from one compartment and fuse with another in a highly organized manner allowing movement of cargo in a unidirectional, prescribed pattern. Which are the functions of the coats (cages of proteins)? 1) Protein concentration 2) Shaping of the vesicle Which vesicular coats have been identified so far? 1) Clathrin-coated vesicles 2) COP-I-coated vesicles 3) COP-II-coated vesicles They are present in different compartments Lecture 6 – The secretory pathway: vesicular transport How do vesicles find their right destination? Membrane fusion requires bringing two lipid membranes to within 1.5 nm of each other so that they can join • Water must be displaced from the hydrophilic surface of the membrane – energetically highly unfavorable Rab proteins (GTPases) on the surface of the vesicles are recognized by specific proteins on the surface of the target membrane v-SNARE proteins on the surface of the vesicles mediate fusion of the 2 lipid bilayers (of the vesicle and of the target membrane) through interaction with t-SNARE proteins on the target membrane (SNARE proteins mediate membrane fusion) Lecture 6 – The secretory pathway: vesicular transport What does it happen to resident ER proteins that escape in the Golgi? Retrograde transport to the ER 1) Soluble resident proteins of the ER contain the tetrapeptide KDEL at the C-terminus. The KDEL signal of the escaped ER proteins is recognized and bound by receptors in the Golgi. Binding triggers the return of the KDEL proteins by retrograde vesicular transport. In the ER, the retrieved proteins dissociate and the unoccupied KDEL receptors return to the Golgi. 2) Many ER transmembrane proteins, on the other hand, contain a dilysine (KKXX) motif at their C-terminus cytosolic tail. This is also a retrieval signal that allows recognition and subsequent retrograde transport. Lecture 6 – The secretory pathway: vesicular transport Trans Golgi Network (TGN) Different protein destinations: 1) Secretory storage granules 2) Cell surface 3) Endosomes 4) Lysosomes 5) Back to Golgi Lecture 6 – The secretory pathway: vesicular transport Ways macromolecules enter the cell Endocytosis: 3 types Phagocytosis Pinocytosis Process by which certain cells called phagocytes ingest or engulf other cells or particles. In higher animals, phagocytosis is mainly a defensive reaction against infection and invasion of the body by foreign substances (antigens). Internalization of extracellular fluid Receptor-mediated endocytosis Import of specific extracellular macromolecules (e.g. cholesterol) All lectures: possible questions Which are the main features of lipid bilayers? Describe the features of pumps, channel and carriers. How can cells be visualized with fluorescence? Which are the characteristics of good dyes? How is an action potential generated and propagated? What is myelin? Explain the differences between a prokaryotic and eukaryotic cell Which are the three main transport mechanisms? How are proteins targeted to the right location? Describe the structure of the nuclear pore How is the directionality of the nuclear transport maintained? Post-translational and co-translational ER transport. Explain Mitochondria and chloroplasts: similarities and differences Which are the principal energy sources for the translocation into mitochondria? Explain the main functions of ER and Golgi Which is the main function of calreticulin and calnexin proteins? What does mediate the recognition of a transport vesicle by the target membrane? Explain the functions of vesicle coating and which are the three types of coating What is the retrograde transport? How can macromolecules enter the cell?