Signal Transduction - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 55
About This Presentation
Title:

Signal Transduction

Description:

Figure 19-1a Classification of hormones. ... Adrenergic receptors are typical. Note desensitization by phosphorylationby protein kinase A ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:36
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 56
Provided by: mtu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Signal Transduction


1
  • Signal Transduction
  • BL 4010 12.07.06

2
(No Transcript)
3
(No Transcript)
4
Outline
  • Extracellular signals
  • Signal-Transducing Receptors
  • single membrane spanning receptors
  • 7 TMS receptors
  • Intracellular Second Messengers
  • cAMP
  • Calcium
  • G-proteins
  • Enzyme cascades

5
Additional resources
  • http//www.signaling-gateway.org/
  • http//web.indstate.edu/thcme/mwking/signal-transd
    uction.html
  • http//stke.sciencemag.org/

6
Extracellular Signals
  • Light
  • Small molecules
  • hormones
  • toxins
  • metabolites
  • Large molecules
  • oligosaccharides
  • proteins

7
Transcriptional activation
8
Interferon
9
The phosphorelay system
10
Phosphorelay system
11
Figure 19-1a Classification of hormones. (a)
Endocrine signals are directed at distant cells
through the intermediacy of the bloodstream.
Page 658
12
Figure 19-1b Classification of hormones. (b)
Paracrine signals are directed at nearby cells.
Page 658
13
Figure 19-1c Classification of hormones. (c)
Autocrine signals are directed at the cell that
produced them.
Page 658
14
Classes of Hormones
15
Figure 19-3a Binding of ligand to receptor. (a) A
hyperbolic plot.
Page 660
16
Figure 19-3b Binding of ligand to receptor. (b) A
Scatchard plot.
Page 660
17
Classes of Hormones - Steroid Hormones
  • Derived from cholesterol- (e.g.
    Glucocorticoids,vitamin D, sex hormones)
  • regulate metabolism, salt/water balances,
    inflammation, sexual function. May bind to PM
    receptor or enter nucleus directly
  • May either act at nucleus or at plasma membrane
  • Steroids are hydrophobic and cannot diffuse
    freely to nucleus
  • Receptor proteins carry steroids to the nucleus
  • Steroid receptor proteins are all apparently
    members of a gene superfamily and have evolved
    from a common ancestral precursor

18
Classes of Hormones - Steroid Hormones
19
Classes of Hormones - Nonsteroid hormones
  • Amino Acid Derived Hormones (e.g. epinephrine)
    bind to PM receptors
  • regulate smooth muscle , blood pressure, cardiac
    rate, lipolysis, glycogenolysis

20
Effects of epinephrine
  • Receptor Molecule Effect
  • Alpha1 Epinephrine, Norepinphrine Increased Ca2
  • Alpha2 Epinephrine, Norepinphrine Decreased cAMP
  • Beta1 Epinephrine, Norepinphrine Increased cAMP
  • Beta2 Epinephrine Increased cAMP
  • Increased rate and force of contraction of heart
    muscle predominantly an effect of epinephrine on
    beta receptors.
  • Constriction of blood vessels increased blood
    pressure.
  • Dilation of bronchioles assists in pulmonary
    ventilation.
  • Stimulation of lipolysis in fat cells provides
    fatty acids for energy production and conserves
    dwindling blood glucose.
  • Increased metabolic rate
  • Inhibition of certain "non-essential" processes
    e.g. inhibition of gastrointestinal secretion and
    motor activity.
  • Dilation of the pupils particularly important in
    situations where you are surrounded by
    velociraptors under conditions of low ambient
    light

21
Classes of Hormones - Nonsteroid hormones
  • Peptide Hormones (e.g. insulin) - bind to PM
    receptors
  • regulate many processes in all tissues -
    including release of other hormones
  • All secreted polypeptide hormones are synthesized
    with a signal sequence (which directs them to
    secretory granules)
  • Usually synthesized as inactive preprohormones
    ("pre-pro" implies at least two precessing
    steps)
  • Proteolytic processing produces the prohormone
    and the hormone

22
Insulin is a peptide hormone
23
Secretion of insulin
24
Single TMS Receptors
  • What is a receptor?
  • Three main classes
  • Extracellular domain to interact with hormone
  • Single transmembrane segment
  • Intracellular domain with enzyme activity
  • Activity is usually tyrosine kinase or guanylyl
    cyclase
  • Each of these has a "nonreceptor" counterpart
  • src gene kinase - pp60v-src was first known
  • Two posttranslational modifications

25
(No Transcript)
26
(No Transcript)
27
Receptor Tyrosine Kinases
  • Membrane-associated allosteric enzymes
  • How do single-TMS receptors transmit the signal
    from outside to inside??
  • Oligomeric association is the key!
  • Extracellular ligand binding

28
(No Transcript)
29
Protein-Tyrosine Phosphatases
  • The enzymes that dephosphorylate Tyr
  • Some PTPases are integral membrane proteins
  • But there are also lots of soluble PTPases
  • Cytoplasmic PTPases have N-term. catalytic
    domains and C-terminal regulatory domains
  • Membrane PTPases all have cytoplasmic catalytic
    domain, single transmembrane segment and an
    extracellular recognition site

30
(No Transcript)
31
Guanylyl Cyclases
  • Soluble or Membrane-Bound
  • Membrane-bound GCs are the other group of
    single-transmembrane-segment receptors (besides
    RTKs)
  • Peptide hormones activate the membrane-forms
  • Note speract and resact, from mammalian ova
  • Activation may involve oligomerization of
    receptors, as for RTKs

32
(No Transcript)
33
Soluble Guanylyl Cyclases
  • Receptors for Nitric Oxide
  • NO is a reactive, free-radical that acts either
    as a neurotransmitter or as a second messenger
  • NO relaxes vascular smooth muscle (and is thus
    involved in stimulation of penile erection)
  • NO also stimulates macrophages to kill tumor
    cells and bacteria
  • NO binds to heme of GC, stimulating GC activity
    50-fold
  • Read about NO synthesis and also see box on
    Alfred Nobel

34
(No Transcript)
35
(No Transcript)
36
(No Transcript)
37
Types of Receptors
  • 7-TMS receptors (G protein receptors)
  • extracellular site for hormone (ligand)
  • intracellular site for GTP-binding protein
  • Single-transmembrane segment receptors
  • extracellular site for hormone (ligand)
  • intracellular catalytic domain - e.g. kinase or
    guanylyl cyclase
  • Oligomeric ion channels

38
Second Messengers
  • Many and there may be more!
  • The hormone is the "first messenger"
  • The second messenger - Ca2, cAMP or other - is
    released when the hormone binds to its
    (extracellular) receptor
  • The second messenger then activates (or inhibits)
    processes in the cytoplasm or nucleus
  • Degradation and/or clearance of the second
    messenger is also (obviously) important

39
Steroid Receptor Proteins
  • Hydrophobic domain near C-terminus that interacts
    with steroid itself
  • Central, hydrophilic domain that binds to DNA
  • Central DNA-binding domains are homologous to one
    another, with 9 conserved Cys residues
  • Three pairs of Cys residues are in Cys-X-X-Cys
    sequences - as in Zinc-finger domains
  • Steroid-receptor complex may bind to DNA or to
    transcription factors
  • Thyroid hormone receptor proteins are similar

40
Steroid Receptor Proteins
41
Steroid Receptor Proteins
42
(No Transcript)
43
cAMP and Glycogen Phosphorylase
  • Earl Sutherland discovers the first second
    messenger
  • In the early 1960s, Earl Sutherland showed that
    the stimulation of glycogen phosphorylase by
    epinephrine involved cyclic adenosine-3',5'-monoph
    osphate
  • He called cAMP a "second messenger"
  • cAMP is synthesized by adenylyl cyclase and
    degraded by phosphodiesterase

44
(No Transcript)
45
How are the hormone receptor and AC coupled?
  • Purified AC and purified receptor, when
    recombined, are not coupled.
  • Rodbell showed that GTP is required for hormonal
    activation of AC
  • In 1977, Elliott Ross and Alfred Gilman at Univ.
    of Virginia discovered a GTP-binding protein
    which restored hormone stimulation to AC
  • Hormone stimulates receptor, which activates
    GTP-binding protein, which activates AC

46
Heterotrimeric G Proteins
  • A model for their activity
  • Binding of hormone, etc., to receptor protein in
    the membrane triggers dissociation of GDP and
    binding of GTP to ?-subunit of G protein
  • G?-GTP complex dissociates from G?? and migrates
    to effector sites, activating or inhibiting
  • But it is now clear that G?? also functions as a
    signalling device

47
Figure 19-13 Activation/deactivation cycle for
hormonally stimulated AC.
Page 674
48
Signalling Roles for G(??)
  • A partial list
  • Potassium channel proteins
  • Phospholipase A2
  • Yeast mating protein kinase Ste20
  • Adenylyl cyclase
  • Phospholipase C
  • Calcium channels
  • Receptor kinases

49
Stimulatory and Inhibitory G
  • G proteins may either stimulate or inhibit an
    effector.
  • In the case of adenylyl cyclase, the stimulatory
    G protein is known as Gs and the inhibitory G
    protein is known as Gi
  • Gi may act either by the Gi? subunit binding to
    AC or by the Gi?? complex complexing all the Gi?
    and preventing it from binding to AC

50
(No Transcript)
51
Figure 19-16 Mechanism of receptor-mediated
activation/ inhibition of AC.
Page 676
52
(No Transcript)
53
The ras Gene and p21ras
  • An oncogene and its product
  • a gene first found in rat sarcoma virus
  • Normal cellular ras protein activates cellular
    processes when GTP is bound and is inactive when
    GTP has been hydrolyzed to GDP
  • Mutant (oncogenic) forms of ras have severely
    impaired GTPase activity, so remain active for
    long periods, stimulating
  • excessive growth and metabolic activity - causing
    tumors to form

54
(No Transcript)
55
G-protein coupled receptors
  • Receptors that interact with G proteins
  • Seven putative alpha-helical transmembrane
    segments
  • Extracellular domain interacts with hormone
  • Intracellular domain interacts with G proteins
  • Adrenergic receptors are typical
  • Note desensitization by phosphorylationby protein
    kinase A
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com