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CELL SIGNALING Lecture 1 Course Contents • • • • • • • • • Overview of cell signaling Principles of cell signaling Types of ligands and receptors Signaling through enzyme liked cell-surface receptors Receptor tyrosine kinases and non-receptor tyrosine kinases Signaling via receptor tyrosine kinases Signaling via tyrosine kinase associated receptors Signaling via receptor serine-/threonine kinases Signaling through G protein linked receptors – Small GTPases – G protein coupled receptors – Lipid (2nd messengers)-mediated cell signaling • Synaptic signaling • • • • • ATP-signaling Purinergic (P2X and P2Y) signaling iNOS signaling Cell adhesion molecules Plant cell signaling (role of growth factors, hormones and pheromones) • Plant defense mechanism • Signaling in microbes BOOKS RECOMMENDED • Molecular Biology of the Cell by Bruce Albert and Dennis Bray, 4th Ed. Garland Publishing Inc, New York and London • Handbook of Cell Signaling Vol 1-3, by Ralph Bradshaw, and Edward Dennis • Signal Transduction by Bastien D. Gomperts • The Biochemistry of Cell Signalling (Paperback)by Ernst J. M. Helmreich INTRODUCTION • No cell lives in isolation • Eukaryotic organisms like yeast and molds also secrete molecules known as Pheromones • Higher animals secrete extracellular molecules that function within an organism • Ligand • Receptor • The overall process of converting signals into cellular responses as well as the individual steps in this process is termed as SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF CELL SIGNALING Extracellular Signaling Molecules are Recognized by Specific Receptors on or in Targets Cells • • • • • • • • Cells in higher animals communicate through hundreds of signalling molecules, including Proteins Small peptides Amino acids Nucleotides Steroids Retinoids Fatty acids derivatives and even Gases like nitric oxide and carbon monoxide • Most of these molecules are secreted by the signaling cell through 1. Exocytosis 2. Diffusion through plasma membrane, or 3. Remain tightly bound to the cell surface • Regardless of the nature of the signaling molecule, the target cell responds by means of a specific protein known as the RECEPTOR • Extracellular signaling molecules act at very low concentrations ( < 10 -8 M) • While the receptors that recognize them bind them with very high affinity • In most cases the receptors are transmembrane proteins that upon activation trigger a cascade of signaling events • However some receptors lie inside the cell • And the LIGAND needs to diffuse inside the cell to activate it • In these cases the ligand is usually a small and hydrophobic molecule Secreted Molecules Mediate 3 Forms of Signaling 1. 2. 3. Paracrine, Synaptic and Endocrine • Type of signaling path mediated depends upon the distance that the signaling molecule is required to cover Paracrine Signaling • The secreted molecule must not be allowed to diffuse too far • Often rapidly taken up by target neighboring cells • Destroyed by extracellular enzymes, or • Immobilized by extracellular matrix Synaptic Signaling • • • • Sets of specialized cells have evolved with a specific role in signaling between widely separated parts of the body of complex organisms Most sophisticated are the nerve cells Upon activation the signal is transmitted in the form of action potential as an electrical impulse At the nerve terminal a chemical signal (neurotransmitter) is released The signal is transmitted through special cell junctions known as Chemical Synapses Endocrine Signaling • Another example of specialized cells operating over a distance are endocrine cells • Secrete signaling molecules known as HORMONES • Into the blood stream (animals) or • The sap (plants) Contrast • Endocrine signaling is slow since it relies on diffusion and blood flow • Nerve cells can achieve much higher speed and precision • 100 meters per second • A neurotransmitter has to diffuse less than 100nm to the target cell • This process takes less than a millisecond • Hormones are greatly diluted and act at very low concentrations while neurotransmitters can achieve high local concentrations • Acetylcholine concentration at a synaptic cleft can reach a conc. of 5 x 10 -4 M • Correspondingly neurotransmitter receptors have low affinity for their ligands as compared to hormones Autocrine Signaling can Coordinate Decisions by Groups of Identical Cells • Cells not only communicate to other types of cells but also to their own types • And can also send signals to themselves AUTOCRINE SIGNALING • Thus a secreted molecule can bind receptors on the cell itself • When carried out simultaneously by neighboring cells, autocrine signaling can direct cells to take the same decision e.g during differentiation (developmental decisions) • Also known as COMMUNITY EFFECT Eicosanoids are molecules secreted in mature mammals • Are fatty acid derivatives • There are four major classes of eicosanoids • prostaglandins, prostacyclins, thromboxanes,and leukotrienes • Are continuously synthesized in the plasma membrane and released to the cell exterior • Where they are degraded by enzymes Involved in various biological activities • Contraction of smooth muscles • Aggregation of platelets • Pain and inflammatory responses It has been observed that in case of tissue damage or any other chemical signal the rate of eicosanoid synthesis increases • Influencing both the synthesizing cell and also its neighbors • The synthesis of all but the leukotrienes involves the enzyme cyclooxygenase; the synthesis of leukotrienes involves the enzyme lipoxygenase • These synthetic pathways are targets for a large number of therapeutic drugs, since eicosanoids play an important part in pain, fever, and inflammation • Corticosteroid hormones such as cortisone, which inhibit the activity of the phospholipase in the first step of the eicosanoid synthesis pathway, are widely used clinically to treat noninfectious inflammatory diseases • Nonsteroid anti-inflammatory drugs such as aspirin and ibuprofen, by contrast, block the first oxidation step, which is catalyzed by cyclooxygenase. • Certain prostaglandins that are produced in large amounts in the uterus at the time of childbirth to stimulate the contraction of the uterine smooth muscle cells are widely used as pharmacological agents to induce abortion.