Lecture 10 Cell Communication Chapter 9
Lecture 10 Cell Communication Chapter 9
Cell Communication
Communication between cells requires:
ligand: the signaling molecule
receptor protein: the molecule to which the
receptor binds
- may be on the plasma membrane or within
the cell
Cell Signaling
Cell Signals
Direct contact
Paracrine signaling
Endocrine signaling
hormones
Synaptic signaling
neurotransmitters
Cell Communication
Direct contact
molecules on the
surface of one cell are
recognized by
receptors on the
adjacent cell
Cell Communication
Paracrine signaling
signal released
from a cell has an
effect on
neighboring cells
Cell Communication
Endocrine signaling
hormones
released from a
cell affect other
cells throughout
the body
Cell Communication
Synaptic signaling nerve
cells release the signal
(neurotransmitter) which
binds to receptors on
nearby cells
Signal transduction
Events within the cell that occur in response
to a signal
When a ligand binds to a receptor protein, the
cell has a response
Different cell types can respond differently to
the same signal
Epinephrine example
Cell Communication
A cells response to a signal often involves
activating or inactivating proteins.
Phosphorylation is a common way to
change the activity of a protein.
protein kinase an enzyme that adds a
phosphate to a protein
phosphatase an enzyme that removes a
phosphate from a protein
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Protein
Phosphorylation
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Receptor Protein
Receptor proteins have a three-dimensional
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Receptor Types
Receptors can be defined by their location.
intracellular receptor located within the
cell
cell surface receptor or membrane receptor
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Enzymatic receptors
GPCR
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G proteins
Ras and Trimeric G protein
Ras is monomeric
Trimeric has 3 subunits alpha, beta and
gamma
Both of them bind GTP in their active form
and bind GDP in their inactive form
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glycerol)
Both act as second messengers
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cAMP Signaling
Pathway
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Calcium
Ca2+ serves widely as
second messenger
Intracellular levels
normally low
Extracellular levels
quite high
Endoplasmic reticulum
has receptor proteins
that act as ion
channels to release
Ca2+
Most common receptor
binds IP3
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second messengers
Hormones glucagon and epinephrine can both
stimulate liver cells to mobilize glucose
Different signals, same effect
Both act by same signal transduction pathway
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cytoplasmic domains
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Intracellular Receptors
A steroid hormone receptor has three
functional domains:
1. hormone-binding domain
2. DNA binding domain
3. domain that interacts with co-activators
to affect gene expression
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Intracellular Receptors
Intracellular receptors are located within
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Intracellular Receptors
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Coactivators
Target cells response to a lipid-soluble cell
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Insulin receptor
Activated receptor
has phosphorylated
sites that allow
docking
Insulin is a hormone
that helps to
maintain a constant
blood glucose level
Lowers blood
glucose
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Kinase cascade
Mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases
Important class of cytoplasmic kinases
Mitogens stimulate cell division
Activated by a signaling module called a
phosphorylation cascade or kinase cascade
Series of protein kinases that phosphorylate
each other in succession
Amplifies the signal because a few signal
molecules can elicit a large cell response
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Ras proteins
Small GTP-binding protein (G protein)
Link between the RTK and the MAP kinase
cascade
Ras protein is mutated in many human
tumors, indicative of its central role in linking
growth factor receptors to their cellular
response
Ras can regulate itself stimulation by growth
factors is short-lived
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Scaffold proteins
Thought to organize the
components of a kinase
cascade into a single
protein complex
Binds to each individual
kinase such that they
are spatially organized
for optimal function
Benefit in efficiancy
Disadvantage in
reducing amplification
effect
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