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Cell Physiology in Health and Disease Learning objectives BIOL2174 z z Cell structure and function z [email protected] Cells are complex! z ‘to build the most basic yeast cell .. you would have to miniaturize the same number of components as are found in a Boeing 777 and fit them in a sphere just 5 Pm across; then somehow you would have to persuade that sphere to reproduce.’ z z To understand the limitations on cell size To understand why eukaryotic cells are compartmentalized To understand the role of the cytoskeleton To understand different aspects of molecular movement within cells What determines the size and shape of a cell? Bryson B (2003). A short history of nearly everything. 1 Cells have very different shapes but are usually about the same size Structure of a motor neuron Motor neurons can be 1 metre long Neurons communicate with other cells through synapses z An axon terminal releases chemical signals which result in electrical changes in the post synaptic cell 2 The axon is surrounded by a myelin sheath which provides insulation Neurons z Neurons have very different plasma membrane protein composition at different sites – z Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease z z z z Most common inherited disease of the peripheral nervous system Affects 1 in 2500 people Loss of motor and sensory function: muscle weakness in extremities, loss of senses, loss of reflexes, wasting Due to reduced function of neurons in the peripheral nervous system. Two types: z z cell body, axon, synapse Molecules and organelles travel very long distances within a single cell What limits the size of a cell? z z z Surface to volume ratio Rate of diffusion Need to maintain adequate concentrations of metabolites Demyelinating neuropathies ( mutations affecting myelin production), 50% cases Axonal neuropathies (mutations affecting structure or function of the axon), 20-40% cases 3 Some cells have increased surface area Surface to volume ratio z As size increases, surface to volume ratio decreases – z Surface area increases as the square of length but volume increases as the cube z Cells that are specialized for nutrient uptake eg epithelial cells use membrane folds to increase surface area S/V = 6 Cells need large surface areas to allow import of nutrients and export of waste S/V = 2 Source: Alberts et al., Molecular Biology of the Cell Membranes have other functions z The plasma membrane is specialised to interact with the environment – z Transport and signalling Eukaryotic cells use internal membranes for some functions – – The plasma membrane z z z z z Interface between the cell and its environment Nutrient uptake and waste export Cell-cell signalling and contact Excitability Secretion Respiratory chain Synthesis of lipids and proteins Campbell et al, Biology 4 Mammalian cells are compartmentalised Eukaryotic cells require large amounts of internal membrane Golgi stacks Source: Alberts et al., Molecular Biology of the Cell Eukaryotic cells are compartmentalized Alberts Eukaryotic cells are compartmentalized Plus all the other stuff Golgi plus ER (yellow) Marsh et al., 2001 Vesicles (purple and white) Mitochondria (green) Ribosomes (orange) Marsh et al., 2001 5 Internal membranes are also limiting Eukaryotic cells are crowded Diffusion of molecules inside cells Rate of diffusion: how long does a molecule take to cross a cell? z Molecules are in constant motion z z z Molecules can only interact when they bump into each other, eg – – – z Enzyme and substrate Receptor and ligand Protein/protein interaction (formation of complexes) Diffusion is important within a compartment; other mechanisms are needed to move molecules between compartments z z z Diffusion is random movement Rate of diffusion depends on the size of the molecule Time taken increases as the square of the distance travelled A small organic molecule takes about 0.02 sec to travel across a small eukaryotic cell (10 Pm) BUT, 9.3 hours to move 1 cm! 6 Mitochondrial distribution in cells z Mitochondrial distribution represents a compromise between distance for diffusion of O2 from blood and distance for diffusion of ATP to where it is needed Need to maintain adequate concentrations of metabolites z The larger the cell, the more metabolite molecules there need to be to maintain the same concentration z For a 10 nM concentration: – – 10 molecule/cell in E. coli 10,000 molecules/cell in HeLa (human) cell Kinsey, S. T. et al.(2007) J Exp Biol ;210:3505-3512 Cells are compartmentalized z z z z z Can increase concentrations of metabolites in an organelle (smaller volume) Can separate potentially harmful or interfering reactions Increased specialization Generate more membrane BUT, there must be coordination between the functions of different organelles – Transport, communication, regulation Functions of organelles ¾Mitochondria ¾Peroxisome ¾Cytosol Energy metabolism Oxidative metabolism Metabolism, anabolism, protein synthesis ¾Nucleus DNA replication, transcription ¾Endoplasmic reticulum Protein synthesis, quality control ¾Golgi Protein delivery, glycosylation ¾Endosome Protein degradation, recycling ¾Lysosome Degradation ¾Plasma membrane Signal transduction, excitability cell-cell contact, secretion ¾Cytoskeleton Cell shape, compartmentation 7 How is the compartmentalization maintained? z z z How is the organelle generated or maintained? How do organelles receive a specific set of proteins and lipids? How do metabolites (substrates) enter and leave organelles? Delivering proteins to organelles Organelles divide and are inherited z ‘the spatial organization in a cell is not (entirely) written in the genetic blueprint; it emerges from the interplay of genetically specified molecules . constrained by heritable structures’ z Harold, FM (2005) Microbiol Mol Biol Rev: 69: 544 Some organelles have their own genome z Mitochondria and chloroplasts z Needs communication between the nuclear and other genome z Replication of the organelle involves DNA replication as well as division of the organelle Gated transport Transmembrane transport Vesicular transport 8 Mitochondria: powerhouse of the cell Mitochondria generate ATP by oxidative phosphorylation Source: Lodish et al., Molecular Cell Biology Evolution of mitochondria: the endosymbiont hypothesis z Mitochondria evolved when an ancestral eukaryotic cell engulfed a bacterium – – – Mitochondria surrounded by a double membrane Mitochondria have their own genome (circular) Protein synthesis in mitochondria is bacterialike (sensitive to the same antibiotics) The mitochondrial genome: coordination of expression between mitochondria and nucleus z Small – just 13 proteins encoded by mammalian mitochondrial DNA z Mitochondria require complete transcription and translation machinery to produce these 13 proteins – – z z All 13 are components of the respiratory chain Estimated that about 25% of the proteins found in mitochondria are there to produce these 13 proteins RNA polymerase, ribosomal proteins etc are encoded by nuclear genes and the proteins imported into mitochondria Mitochondrial DNA encodes 2 rRNAs and 22 tRNAs Source: Alberts et al., Molecular Biology of the Cell 9 Nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins are synthesised in the cytosol and then delivered to mitochondria Coding of mitochodrial complex subnunits Blue: nuclear Orange: mito Pink: either, in different species Gated transport Transmembrane transport Vesicular transport Cytoplasmic inheritance of mitochondria Genetics of mitochondrial diseases z Mitochondrial diseases may show: – – z Mendelian inheritance if the gene affected is in the nuclear genome Maternal inheritance if the gene affected is in the mitochondrial genome Mitochondrial dysfunction is important in aging – – Mitochondrial genomes accumulate mutations in somatic tissue DNA in mitochondria has a higher error rate than nuclear DNA (fewer repair mechanisms and increased oxidative stress) 10 Mitochondrial diseases z Symptoms of mitochondrial diseases are usually seen in organs with high energy requirements – – – z Muscle Nervous system eyes Leber’s hereditary optic neuropathy Electron transport chain component z MERRF (myoclonic epilepsy with ragged red fibres) z – z Mitochondrial mutations are a factor in aging – Mitochondrial tRNA Mitochondria fuse and divide Source: Alberts et al., Molecular Biology of the Cell Mitochondrial DNA polymerase was replaced with a mutant form that lacks proofreading Higher mutation rate of mitochondrial DNA leads to premature aging and death. Mitochondria fuse and divide Source: Alberts et al., Molecular Biology of the Cell 11 Fusion of mitochondria requires mitofusin 2 Mitochondrial fission and disease: Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease z z z Summary z z z Cell size is limited Cells can increase in complexity by using organelles for specialised functions Organelles: – – – May have their own genomes Divide and are inherited by daughter cells Receive proteins and metabolites from the cytoplasm Loss of motor and sensory function: muscle weakness in extremities, loss of senses, loss of reflexes, wasting Some patients have an axonal neuropathy due to a mutation in the gene encoding mitofusin 2 Large clumps of mitochondria form in nerve cells, mitochondria cannot travel down axons and this might lead to loss of function of nerve cells Delivering proteins, membranes and organelles to other parts of the cell The secretory pathway and cytoskeleton 12 The secretory pathway: delivering proteins and lipids to the PM Physiological functions of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) z Synthesis of plasma membrane proteins Synthesis of lysosomal proteins Synthesis of secreted proteins Quality control and protein degradation Synthesis of membrane lipids z Calcium homeostasis z z z z Source: Alberts et al., Molecular Biology of the Cell Moving proteins and membranes in the cell z z z Vesicles transport proteins, signalling molecules and lipids The ER and Golgi (secretory pathway) play a central role in the synthesis and trafficking of lipids as well as proteins Proteins and lipids are moved from the ER and Golgi to other destinations by vesicle trafficking Vesicles are also used to internalise plasma membrane proteins and extracellular compounds Alberts Fig 13.2 13 Exocytosis and endocytosis Alberts Fig 13.1 Directing lipid composition of a membrane The ER synthesizes phospholipids Source: Lodish et al., Molecular Cell Biology Mitochondria may receive their lipids from the ER ER (yellow) Mitochondria (green) Alberts Fig 12.58 Marsh et al., 2001 14 Three exit pathways start from the Golgi Vesicle trafficking in neurons Source: Lodish et al., Molecular Cell Biology Synaptic vesicles Alberts Fig 13.73 Problems! z How can the vesicles move such a long distance without getting lost? z How do the vesicles ‘know’ which part of the membrane to fuse with? z How are vesicle contents made specific for each destination? 15 Reference for vesicle trafficking in neurons z http://icarus.med.utoronto.ca/neurons/index.swf – – The cytoskeleton z Gives cells: – Chapters 2 and 6 Chapter 1 for review of neuron structure and function – – – z Structure Strength Ability to move Ability to move and rearrange organelles Dynamic: the cytoskeleton allows cells to respond to environmental signals by moving, dividing, changing shape Source: Alberts et al., Molecular Biology of the Cell Three types of filaments constitute the cytoskeleton z Actin filaments – – z Cell shape and structure Cell movement (muscles, whole cell locomotion) Microtubules – – z Composition of the cytoskeleton Intracellular movement (vesicles and organelles) Cell division Intermediate filaments – Mechanical strength Source: Alberts et al., Molecular Biology of the Cell z z Cytoskeleton filaments are made from proteins (different for each filament type) Monomer subunits make multiple non-covalent interactions to form a strong and stable protein filament 16 The cytoskeleton determines cell shape z z z z z The cytoskeleton is dynamic Muscle contraction Cell motility Cell shape (e.g. microvilli) Cell polarity Fixation of membrane proteins Source: Lodish et al., Molecular Cell Biology Membrane proteins are attached to the cytoskeleton Source: Alberts et al., Molecular Biology of the Cell Duchenne muscular dystrophy ¾Muscle degeneration and fibrosis ¾Creatine kinase levels elevated ¾Totally disabled at the age of 12 ¾Death at the age of 20 Source: Lodish et al., Molecular Cell Biology Lodish Figure 19.35 17 Membrane proteins are localised by the cytoskeleton Membrane proteins are localised by the cytoskeleton Newpher et al 2008 Luscher and Keller (2004) Pharm and Ther: 195-221, 102 The cytoskeleton and membrane proteins z The cytoskeleton is important in maintaining heterogeneity in plasma membrane protein content: – – Biology of the Cell www.biolcell.org Clustering proteins with the same or related functions in the membrane (actin) Delivering proteins to particular locations in the plasma membrane (microtubules) Biol. Cell (2007) 99, 297297-309 18 Myosin: the actin motor protein z The microtubules Myosin uses ATP hydrolysis to do mechanical work (movement) Source: Lodish et al., Molecular Cell Biology Microtubules contribute to different cell shapes and to cell division Source: Lodish et al., Molecular Cell Biology Cytoskeleton in neurons Source: Lodish et al., Molecular Cell Biology 19 Functions of microtubules z Kinesins: the molecular motors that drive vesicle transport Microtubules form ‘tracks’ and use motor proteins to move organelles and vesicles within the cell z Source: Lodish et al., Molecular Cell Biology Kinesins use the energy from ATP hydrolysis to ‘walk’ along microtubules Source: Lodish et al., Molecular Cell Biology Figure 18.20 Vesicle trafficking in neurons Biology of the Cell www.biolcell.org Biol. Cell (2007) 99, 297297-309 Alberts Fig 13.73 20 How are vesicles specifically targetted to particular locations? z Coated vesicle budding Protein/protein interactions – – – – Vesicles have protein coats (important for the budding process and for targetting) Vesicles contain destination-specific binding proteins that bind ‘cargo’ proteins and deliver them to the appropriate destination Receptors in destination membranes bind vesicles Budding and fusion of vesicles is regulated by GTPases z Coat proteins bind to membranes in such a way as to bend them z Coat proteins also bind transmembrane receptors for cargo proteins Lodish Figure 14.6a Different coat proteins have different functions Budding and uncoating of a vesicle Alberts Fig 13.4 21 GTPases are involved Vesicle budding z z z z Fusion of a vesicle to a target membrane z Caused by distortion of membrane by binding of coat proteins (clathrin, COPI, COPII) Coat proteins interact with transmembrane receptors that bind cargo molecules GTP hydrolysis drives conformational changes Once a vesicle has budded, it is uncoated and interacts with kinesins for transport Docking and fusion of transport vesicles Vesicles dock through the interaction of SNARE proteins – – v-SNAREs on the vesicle t-SNAREs on the target membrane 22 Vesicle fusion Vesicle fusion z z z Different coat proteins mediate trafficking to different compartments Specific membrane proteins on the vesicle exterior interact with docking proteins on the target membranes (SNAREs) This leads to fusion with the target membrane (may be regulated eg Ca2+ regulates fusion of synaptic vesicles) Soluble contents are released and membrane proteins can diffuse laterally into the target membrane Specificity z All of the proteins involved in vesicle budding and fusion are members of gene families z All perform the same function but different members target vesicles to different locations 23 Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease z Caused by mutations in genes that affect trafficking of organelles and vesicles – – z Kinesin-like protein, probably involved in mitochondrial transport GTPase from vesicle fusion (Rab) family Keeping cells the same size z Vesicle fusion leads to an increase in cell surface area which must be balanced by loss of membrane (if the cell is not growing) z Endocytosis and exocytosis must be balanced Neurons cannot function without axonal transport Intermediate filaments Diseases due to mutations in intermediate filament genes: keratins z z Source: Lodish et al., Molecular Cell Biology Mutations in keratins cause epidermal blistering due to rupturing of cells Consistent with a role for keratins in the response to mechanical stress Source: Lodish et al., Molecular Cell Biology 24 Diseases due to mutations in intermediate filament genes: lamins z More than 230 mutations in the lamin A gene cause at least 13 different diseases – – – – z Muscular dystrophy Cardiomyopathies Premature aging Charcot-Marie-Tooth Cytoskeleton summary z The cytoskeleton filaments contribute to cell shape, structure and strength z Actin and microtubules have associated motor proteins that drive movement – – Links between function and disease not well understood z Actin, whole cell locomotion, muscle contraction Microtubules, cell division, intracellular trafficking Intermediate filaments provide structure and strength to cells and do not have associated motor proteins Charcot-Marie-Tooth subtypes Cell size and shape Disease subtype CMT2A1 Gene mutated KIF1B Protein encoded Likely function z Kinesin-like protein z CMT2A2 MFN2 Mitofusin 2 CMT2B RAB7 CMT2B1 LMNA Ras-related protein Rab-7 Lamin A/C Mitochondrial transport Mitochondrial fusion GTPase – vesicles Cell structure Cells vary in shape more than in size Size is constrained by: – – – z Surface area: volume ratio Diffusion Concentration of molecules Shape is determined by the cytoskeleton 25 Subcellular specialisation z Cells are compartmentalised: different parts of cells perform different functions – – – z z Organelles Different parts of the same structure, eg plasma membrane Internal and external membranes are specialised for different functions Energy is required to maintain subcellular organisation and communication (diffusion is not sufficient for the movement of vesicles and organelles) The cytoskeleton plays an important role in maintaining cell size, shape and function 26