Cell Communication Chapter 11. An overview of Cell Signaling.

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Cell Communication Chapter 11

Transcript of Cell Communication Chapter 11. An overview of Cell Signaling.

Page 1: Cell Communication Chapter 11. An overview of Cell Signaling.

Cell Communication

Chapter 11

Page 2: Cell Communication Chapter 11. An overview of Cell Signaling.

An overview of Cell Signaling

Page 3: Cell Communication Chapter 11. An overview of Cell Signaling.

Signal-transduction pathway

• Process by which a signal on a cell’s surface is converted into a specific cellular response is a series of steps called signal-transduction pathway

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Evolutionary connection

• Scientists think that signaling mechanisms evolved in ancient prokaryotes and single celled eukaryotes• They were adopted for new uses

by multicellular descendents

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• Local regulator – a substance that influences cells in its vicinity• Transmitting cells can secrete

molecules of a local regulator to communicate with nearby cells

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Paracrine signaling

• Paracrine signaling is a type of local signaling in animals in which numerous cells can simultaneously receive and respond to the signal of a single cell in their vicinity

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Examples of local regulators that uses paracrine signaling

• Growth factors in animal cells are compounds that stimulate nearby target cells to grow and multiply

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Synaptic Signaling

• Specialized type of local signaling that occurs in animal nervous systems• An electrical signal that is

transmitted the length of a nerve cell to its target cell without touching the target cell

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Example of synaptic signaling• Nerve cells produce a

chemical signal called a neurotransmitter that diffuses to a single target cell that is almost touching the signaling cell

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Page 11: Cell Communication Chapter 11. An overview of Cell Signaling.

Long distance signaling

• Plants and animals use chemicals called hormones for signaling

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• In animals – hormonal signaling is called endocrine signaling–Hormone molecules are

released into vessels of the circulatory system and travel to other parts of the body

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• In plants – sometimes they move through

vessels–More often they are diffused

through the air as a gas•Example: plant hormone ethylene is a gas that helps promote fruit ripening

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Direct Contact• Both plants and animals have cell

junctions that promote the direct contact between 2 cells• Signaling substances dissolve in the

cytosol and can pass freely between adjacent cells• Animal cells can communicate directly

between the molecules on their cell surfaces

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Three stages of cell signaling

• Earl W. Sutherland discovered how the hormone epinephrine acts on cells

• Sutherland suggested that cells receiving signals went through three processes:–Reception–Transduction–Response

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Reception

• First step when the target cell detects a signal coming from outside the cell• Chemical signals are detected when

they bind to a cellular protein in the cell membrane of the target cell

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Transduction• In this stage the signal is converted

into a form that can bring about a specific cellular response• Transduction can occur in a single

step or multiple steps of the signal-transduction pathway.• Molecules involved in the pathway

are often called relay molecules

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Response

• Transduced signal triggers a specific cellular response• Cellular response can be anything

from activation of certain genes in the nucleus to catalysis by an enzyme

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Signal Reception and the Initiation of Transduction

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Signal molecule binds to a receptor protein causing the protein to change shape

• Signal molecules are complementary in shape to a specific site on the receptor and attaches there• Like a lock and key

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Signal molecule behaves as a ligand• A ligand is a small molecule that

specifically binds to a larger one• Sometimes causes receptor protein

to change shape• For some, this shape change

activates the receptor

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Signal receptors• Most signal are water soluble

molecules that are too large to pass freely through the cell membrane• They must utilize a signal receptor

protein embedded in the cell membrane to transmit information from the extracellular environment to the inside of the cell

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3 major types of membrane receptors

• G-protein-linked receptors• Tyrosine-kinase receptors• Ion-channel receptors

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G-protein-linked receptors

• Large family of receptor proteins that all have 7 transmembrane helices

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G-proteins

• Act as an on/off switch• If GDP (guanosine diphosphate) is

bound – the G-protein is inactive• If GTP (guanosine triphosphate) is

bound – it is active

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• G-protein receptor systems are diverse in function• They can be shutdown quickly when

the signal molecule is no longer present

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Tyrosine-Kinase Receptors

• These receptors are commonly used for growth factors

• Characterized by having enzymatic activity• Tyrosine kinase is an enzyme that catalyzes

the transfer of phosphate groups from ATP to the amino acid tyrosine on a substrate protein

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Page 30: Cell Communication Chapter 11. An overview of Cell Signaling.

Different from G-protein receptors

• Binding of a signal molecule does not cause the shape of the receptor to change like in the G-protein receptors• Can activate more than 1 cellular

response (unlike G-proteins)

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How it works

• The ligand binding causes phosphate groups from ATP (adenosine triphosphate) to aggregate (combine) with the tyrosines forming a phosphorylated dimer (a protein consisting of 2 polypeptides)

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• This aggregation activates the tyrosine-kinase receptor to bind to specific intracellular relay proteins• The activation of the relay proteins

initiates a signal-transduction pathway leading to a variety of specific cellular responses

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Ligand gated ion-channel receptors• Protein pores that open or close in

response to a chemical signal• Important in the nervous system

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Intracellular Receptors• Some receptors are proteins in the

cytosol or on the nucleus of a cell• In order for these to work, the signal

must be able to pass through the cell membrane

• Many of these signals are hydrophobic so they can pass through easily

• Examples include steroid and thyroid hormones

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Protein phosphorylation• Most proteins are activated by

adding one or more phosphate groups to it – this is called phosphorylation• Protein kinase is the enzyme that

commonly transfers phosphate groups from ATP to a protein

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Phosphorylation cascade• Protein kinases are often the relay

molecules in the signal-transduction pathway• They often act on each other to

trigger another protein to be phosphylated • This can occur numerous times

until finally triggering the target protein to elicit a cellular response

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