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Transcript
Local
regulators
–
in
the
vicinity
Chapter 11
a. Paracrine signaling – nearby
Cell
Communication
Cells
are acted on by signaling
Cell (ie. Growth factor)
b. Synaptic signaling-neurotransmitters cross the synapse (gap)
Between nerve cell and target
Long Distance Signaling
• Hormones
–Endocrine signaling
–Plant growth regulators
Figure 11.4
Plasma membranes
Gap junctions
between animal cells
(a) Cell junctions
(b) Cell-cell recognition
Plasmodesmata
between plant cells
Figure 11.5
Local signaling
Long-distance signaling
Target cell
Secreting
cell
Local regulator
diffuses through
extracellular fluid.
(a) Paracrine signaling
Electrical signal
along nerve cell
triggers release of
neurotransmitter.
Endocrine cell
Neurotransmitter
diffuses across
synapse.
Secretory
vesicle
Target cell
is stimulated.
Blood
vessel
Hormone travels
in bloodstream.
Target cell
specifically
binds
hormone.
(b) Synaptic signaling
(c) Endocrine (hormonal) signaling
The Three Stages of Cell Signaling:
A Preview
–Reception
–Transduction
–Response
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Receptors in the Plasma Membrane
• There are three main types of
membrane receptors
–G protein-coupled receptors
–Receptor tyrosine kinases
–Ion channel receptors
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
ligand-gated ion channel receptor
• acts as a gate when the receptor
changes shape
• signal molecule binds as a ligand to
the receptor
• the gate allows specific ions, such as
Na+ or Ca2+, through a channel in the
receptor
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 11.7d
1
Signaling
molecule
(ligand)
3
2
Gate
closed
Ligand-gated
ion channel receptor
Ions
Plasma
membrane
Gate closed
Gate
open
Cellular
response
G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCRs
• works with the help of a G protein
• The G protein acts as an on/off switch
• If GDP is bound to the G protein,
the G protein is inactive
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 11.7b
Plasma
membrane
G protein-coupled
receptor
CYTOPLASM
1
Activated
receptor
Signaling
molecule
Inactive
enzyme
GTP
GDP
GDP
Enzyme
G protein
(inactive)
2
GDP
GTP
Activated
enzyme
GTP
GDP
Pi
3
Cellular response
4
• Receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs)
• membrane receptors that attach
phosphates to tyrosines
• can trigger multiple signal
transduction pathways at once
• Abnormal functioning of RTKs is
associated with many types of cancers
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 11.7c
Signaling
molecule (ligand)
Ligand-binding site
 helix in the
membrane
Signaling
molecule
Tyrosines
CYTOPLASM
Tyr
Tyr
Tyr
Tyr
Tyr
Tyr
Receptor tyrosine
kinase proteins
(inactive monomers)
1
Tyr
Tyr
Tyr
Tyr
Tyr
Tyr
Tyr
Tyr
Tyr
Tyr
Tyr
Tyr
Dimer
2
Activated relay
proteins
3
Tyr
Tyr
P Tyr
Tyr P
P Tyr
Tyr P
Tyr
Tyr
P Tyr
Tyr P
P Tyr
Tyr P
Tyr
Tyr
P Tyr
Tyr P
P Tyr
Tyr P
6 ATP
Activated tyrosine
kinase regions
(unphosphorylated
dimer)
6 ADP
Fully activated
receptor tyrosine
kinase
(phosphorylated
dimer)
4
Inactive
relay proteins
Cellular
response 1
Cellular
response 2
Intracellular Receptors
• found in the cytosol or nucleus of target cells
• Small or hydrophobic chemical messengers can
activate receptors
• Examples of hydrophobic messengers are the
steroid and thyroid hormones of animals
• An activated hormone-receptor complex can
act as a transcription factor, turning on specific
genes
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• A ligand-gated ion channel receptor acts as a
gate when the receptor changes shape
• When a signal molecule binds as a ligand to the
receptor, the gate allows specific ions, such as
Na+ or Ca2+, through a channel in the receptor
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 11.7d
1
Signaling
molecule
(ligand)
3
2
Gate
closed
Ligand-gated
ion channel receptor
Ions
Plasma
membrane
Gate closed
Gate
open
Cellular
response
Intracellular Receptors
• found in the cytosol or nucleus of target cells
• Small or hydrophobic chemical messengers can
readily cross the membrane and activate
receptors
• Examples of hydrophobic messengers are the
steroid and thyroid hormones of animals
• An activated hormone-receptor complex can
act as a transcription factor, turning on specific
genes
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 11.9-5
Hormone
(testosterone)
EXTRACELLULAR
FLUID
Plasma
membrane
Receptor
protein
Hormonereceptor
complex
DNA
mRNA
NUCLEUS
CYTOPLASM
New protein
Signal Transduction Pathways
• mostly proteins
• Produces a domino affect
• At each step, the signal is transduced
into a different form, usually a shape
change in a protein
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Protein Phosphorylation and
Dephosphorylation
• Protein kinases transfer phosphates
from ATP to protein, a process called
phosphorylation
• Protein phosphatases remove the
phosphates from proteins, a process
called dephosphorylation
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 11.10
Signaling molecule
Receptor
Activated relay
molecule
Inactive
protein kinase
1
Active
protein
kinase
1
Inactive
protein kinase
2
ATP
ADP
Pi
P
Active
protein
kinase
2
PP
Inactive
protein kinase
3
ATP
ADP
Pi
Active
protein
kinase
3
PP
Inactive
protein
P
ATP
P
ADP
Pi
PP
Active
protein
Cellular
response
Figure 11.10a
Activated relay
molecule
Inactive
protein kinase
1
Active
protein
kinase
1
Inactive
protein kinase
2
ATP
ADP
P
Active
protein
kinase
2
PP
Pi
Inactive
protein kinase
3
ATP
ADP
Pi
Active
protein
kinase
3
PP
Inactive
protein
P
ATP
P
ADP
Pi
PP
Active
protein
Cyclic AMP
• Adenylyl cyclase, an enzyme in the plasma
membrane, converts ATP to cAMP in response
to an extracellular signal
• Cholera – regulating G protein for salt and water
secretion. No GTP to GDP stimulates more
cAMP
• cGMP – relaxes smooth muscles – effects of
viagra
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 11.11
Adenylyl cyclase
Phosphodiesterase
H2O
Pyrophosphate
P
ATP
Pi
cAMP
AMP
Calcium Ions and Inositol Triphosphate
(IP3)
• Calcium is an important second messenger
because cells can regulate its
concentration
• Lower in cytosol than extracellular
(10,000x)
• Active transport of Ca++ out or from
cytosol to ER and mitochondria (IP3 and
DAG)
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 11.13
EXTRACELLULAR
FLUID
Plasma
membrane
ATP
Ca2
pump
Mitochondrion
Nucleus
CYTOSOL
Ca2
pump
ATP
Key
High [Ca2 ]
Ca2
pump
Endoplasmic
reticulum
(ER)
Low [Ca2 ]
• A signal relayed by a signal transduction
pathway may trigger an increase in calcium in
the cytosol
• Pathways leading to the release of calcium
involve inositol triphosphate (IP3) and
diacylglycerol (DAG) as additional second
messengers
Animation: Signal Transduction Pathways
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Nuclear and Cytoplasmic Responses
regulate the synthesis of enzymes or
other proteins, usually by turning
genes on or off in the nucleus
• The final activated molecule in the
signaling pathway may function as a
transcription factor
•
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 11.15
Growth factor
Reception
Receptor
Phosphorylation
cascade
Transduction
CYTOPLASM
Inactive
transcription
factor
Active
transcription
factor
P
Response
DNA
Gene
NUCLEUS
mRNA
Fine-Tuning of the Response
• There are four aspects of fine-tuning to consider
– Amplifying the signal (and thus the response)
– Specificity of the response (liver/heart)
– Overall efficiency of response, enhanced by
scaffolding proteins (brain)
– Termination of the signal
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 11.18
Signaling
molecule
Receptor
Relay
molecules
Response 1
Cell A. Pathway leads
to a single response.
Activation
or inhibition
Response 2
Response 3
Cell B. Pathway branches,
leading to two responses.
Response 4
Cell C. Cross-talk occurs
between two pathways.
Response 5
Cell D. Different receptor
leads to a different
response.
Figure 11.19
Signaling
molecule
Plasma
membrane
Receptor
Three
different
protein
kinases
Scaffolding
protein
Concept 11.5: Apoptosis integrates
multiple cell-signaling pathways
• Apoptosis is programmed or controlled cell
suicide
• Components of the cell are chopped up and
packaged into vesicles that are digested by
scavenger cells
• Apoptosis prevents enzymes from leaking out of
a dying cell and damaging neighboring cells
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 11.20
2 m
Apoptotic Pathways and the Signals That
Trigger Them
• Caspases - the main proteases that carry
out apoptosis
• triggered by
– An extracellular death-signaling ligand
– DNA damage in the nucleus
– Protein misfolding in the endoplasmic
reticulum
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.