Title: Warm-Up
1Warm-Up
- Why do you communicate?
- How do you communicate?
- How do you think cells communicate?
- Do you think bacteria can communicate? Explain.
- Compare the structure function of these
receptor proteins GPCR, tyrosine kinase and
ligand-gated ion channels. - What is a second messenger? What are some
examples of these molecules? - What are the possible responses to signal
transduction in a cell?
2Cell CommunicationCh 11
- What you should know
- The 3 stages of cell communication reception,
transduction, and response. - How G-protein-coupled receptors receive signals
and start transduction. - How receptor tyrosine kinase receive cell signals
and start transduction. - How a cell signal is amplified by a
phosphorylation cascade. - How a cell response in the nucleus turns on genes
while in the cytoplasm it activates enzymes. - What apoptosis means and why it is important to
normal functioning of multicellular organisms.
3External signals are converted into responses
within the cell
- What does a talking cell say to a listening
cell, and how does the latter cell respond to the
message? - Microbes are a window on the role of cell
signaling in the evolution of life - One topic of cell conversation is sex. An
example would be yeast (used for making beer,
wine, and bread). Yeast cells identify their
mates by chemical signaling.
4Communication between mating yeast cells
a factor
Exchange of mating factors
Receptor
- Exchange of mating factors- Each cell type
secretes a mating factor that binds to receptors
on the other cell type - Mating- Binding of the factors to receptors
induces changes in the cells that lead to their
fusion - New cell- The nucleus is a fused cell that
includes all the genes from the original cells
a
a
a factor
Yeast cell, mating type a
Yeast cell, mating type a
Mating
a
a
New a/a cell
a/a
5Evolution of Cell Signaling
- A signal-transduction pathway is a series of
steps by which a signal on a cells surface is
converted into a specific cellular response - Signal transduction pathways convert signals on a
cells surface into cellular responses - Pathway similarities suggest that ancestral
signaling molecules evolved in prokaryotes and
have since been adopted by eukaryotes
6Local and Long-Distance Signaling
- Cells in a multicellular organisms communicate by
chemical messengers - Animal and plant cells have cell junctions that
directly connect the cytoplasm of adjacent cells - In local signaling, animal cells may communicate
by direct contact - In many other cases, animal cells communicate
using local regulators, messenger molecules that
travel only short distances - In long-distance signaling, plants and animals
use chemicals called hormones
7Cell Signaling
- Animal cells communicate by
- Direct contact (gap junctions)
- Secreting local regulators (growth factors,
neurotransmitters) - Long distance (hormones)
8Communication by direct contact between
cells(a) Cell Junctions- Both animals and
plants have cell junctions that allow molecules
to pass readily between adjacent cells without
crossing plasma membranes.(b) Cell-Cell
recognition- Two cells in an animal may
communicate by interaction between molecules
protruding from their surfaces.
Plasma membranes
Gap junctions between animal cells
Plasmodesmata between plant cells
Cell junctions
Cell-cell recognition
9(a) Paracrine signaling- A secreting cell acts on
nearby target cells by discharging molecules of a
local regulator (a growth factor, for example)
into the extracellular fluid.
Local signaling
Long-distance signaling
Target cell
Endocrine cell
Blood vessel
Electrical signal along nerve cell triggers
release of neurotransmitter
Neurotransmitter diffuses across synapse
Secreting cell
Secretory vesicle
Hormone travels in bloodstream to target cells
Local regulator diffuses through extracellular
fluid
Target cell
Target cell is stimulated
Paracrine signaling
Synaptic signaling
Hormonal signaling
(b) Synaptic signaling- A nerve cell releases
neurotransmitter molecules into a synapse,
stimulating the target cell
(c) Hormonal signaling- specialized endocrine
cells secrete hormones into body fluids, often
the blood. Hormones may reach virtually all body
cells
103 Stages of Cell Signaling
- Reception Detection of a signal molecule
(ligand) coming from outside the cell - Transduction Convert signal to a form that can
bring about a cellular response - Response Cellular response to the signal
molecule
11EXTRACELLULAR FLUID
CYTOPLASM
Plasma membrane
Reception
Transduction
Receptor
Signal molecule
1. Reception- Reception is the target cells
detection of a signal molecule coming from
outside the cell. A chemical signal is detected
when it binds to a receptor protein located at
the cells surface or inside the cell
122. Transduction- The binding of the signal
molecule changes the receptor protein in some
way, initiating the process of transduction. The
transduction stage converts the signal to a form
that can bring about the specific cellular
response. Transduction sometimes occurs in a
single step but more often requires a sequence of
changes in a series of different molecules- a
signal transduction pathway. The molecules in the
pathway are often called relay molecules.
EXTRACELLULAR FLUID
CYTOPLASM
Plasma membrane
Reception
Transduction
Receptor
Relay molecules in a signal transduction pathway
Signal molecule
133. Response- In the third stage of cell
signaling, the transduced signal finally triggers
a specific cellular response. The response may be
almost any imaginable cellular activity- such as
catalysis by an enzyme, rearrangement of the
cytoskeleton, or activation of specific genes in
the nucleus.The cell signaling process helps
ensure that crucial activities like these occur
in the right cells, at the right time, and in
proper coordination with the other cells of the
organism.
EXTRACELLULAR FLUID
CYTOPLASM
Plasma membrane
Reception
Transduction
Response
Receptor
Activation of cellular response
Relay molecules in a signal transduction pathway
Signal molecule
141. Reception
- Binding between signal molecule (ligand)
receptor is highly specific. - Types of Receptors
- Plasma membrane receptor
- water-soluble ligands
- Intracellular receptors (cytoplasm, nucleus)
- hydrophobic or small ligands
- Eg. testosterone or nitric oxide (NO)
- Ligand binds to receptor protein ? protein
changes SHAPE ? initiates transduction signal
15Receptors in the Plasma Membrane
- Most water-soluble signal molecules bind to
specific sites on receptor proteins in the plasma
membrane - There are three main types of membrane receptors
- G-protein-linked receptors
- Receptor tyrosine kinases
- Ion channel receptors
16G-Protein-Coupled Receptor
- A G-protein-linked receptor is a plasma membrane
receptor that works with the help of a G protein - The G-protein acts as an on/off switch If GDP is
bound to the G protein, the G protein is inactive - These are extremely widespread and diverse in
their functions, including roles in embryonic
development and sensory reception - They are also involved in many human diseases,
including bacterial infections. Up to 60 of all
medicines used today exert their effects by
influencing G-protein pathways
17G-Protein-Coupled Receptor
18Receptor Tyrosine Kinase
- Receptor tyrosine kinases are membrane receptors
that attach phosphates to tyrosines - A receptor tyrosine kinase can trigger multiple
signal transduction pathways at once
19Receptor Tyrosine Kinase
201. Many receptor tyrosine kinases have the
structure depicted schematically here. Before
the signal molecule binds, the receptors exist as
individual polypepitides. Notice that each has an
extracellular signal-binding site, and alpha
helix spanning the membrane, an intracellular
tail containing multiple tyrosines.
2. The binding of a signal molecule (such as a
growth factor) causes two receptor polypeptides
to associate closely with each other, forming a
dimer (dimerization)
4. Now that the receptor protein is fully
activated, it is recognized by specific relay
proteins inside the cell. Each such protein binds
to a specific phosphorylated tyrosine, undergoing
a resulting structural change that activates the
bound protein. Each activated protein triggers a
transduction pathway, leading to a cellular
response.
3. Dimerization activates the tyrosine-kinase
region of each polypeptide each tyrosine kinase
adds a phosphate from an ATP molecule to a
tyrsine on the tail of the other polypeptide.
EXPLANATION OF STEPS ON PREVIOUS SLIDE
21Ligand-Gated Ion Channel
- An ion channel receptor acts as a gate when the
receptor changes shape - When a signal molecule binds as a ligand to the
receptor, the gate allows specific ions, such as
Na or Ca2, through a channel in the receptor
221. Here we show a ligand-gated ion channel
receptor in which the gate remains closed until a
ligand binds to the receptor2. When the
ligand binds to the receptor and the gate opens,
specific ions can flow through the channel and
rapidly change the concentration of that
particular ion inside the cell. This change may
directly affect the activity of the cell in some
way.3. When the ligand dissociates from this
receptor, the gate closes and ions no longer
enter the cell.
Gate closed
Signal molecule (ligand)
Ions
Plasma membrane
Ligand-gated ion channel receptor
Gate open
Cellular response
Gate closed
23Plasma Membrane ReceptorsOverview
G-Protein Coupled Receptor (GPCR) Tyrosine Kinase Ligand-Gated Ion Channels
7 transmembrane segments in membrane Attaches (P) to tyrosine Signal on receptor changes shape
G protein GTP activates enzyme ? cell response Activate multiple cellular responses at once Regulate flow of specific ions (Ca2, Na)
24Intracellular Receptors
- Some receptor proteins are intracellular, found
in the cytosol or nucleus of target cells - Small or hydrophobic chemical messengers can
readily cross the membrane and activate receptors - Examples of hydrophobic messengers are the
steroid and thyroid hormones of animals - An activated hormone-receptor complex can act as
a transcription factor, turning on specific genes
25LE 11-6
EXTRACELLULAR FLUID
Hormone (testosterone)
The steroid hormone testosterone passes
through the plasma membrane.
Steroid hormone interacting with an intracellular
receptor
Plasma membrane
Testosterone binds to a receptor protein in
the cytoplasm, activating it.
Receptor protein
Hormone- receptor complex
The hormone- receptor complex enters the
nucleus and binds to specific genes.
DNA
The bound protein stimulates
the transcription of the gene into mRNA.
mRNA
NUCLEUS
New protein
The mRNA is translated into a specific
protein.
CYTOPLASM
262. Transduction
- Cascades of molecular interactions relay signals
from receptors ? target molecules - Protein kinase enzyme that phosphorylates and
activates proteins at next level - Phosphorylation cascade enhance and amplify
signal - These multistep pathways provide more
opportunities for coordination and regulation
27Signal Transduction Pathways
- The molecules that relay a signal from receptor
to response are mostly proteins - Like falling dominoes, the receptor activates
another protein, which activates another, and so
on, until the protein producing the response is
activated - At each step, the signal is transduced into a
different form, usually a conformational change - In many pathways, the signal is transmitted by a
cascade of protein phosphorylations - Phosphatase enzymes remove the phosphates
- This phosphorylation and dephosphorylation system
acts as a molecular switch, turning activities on
and off
28LE 11-8
Signal molecule
1. A relay molecule activates protein kinase 1
Receptor
Activated relay molecule
2. Active protein kinase 1 transfers a phosphate
from ATP to an inactive molecule of protein
kinase 2, thus activating this second kinase
Inactive protein kinase 1
Active protein kinase 1
3. Active Protein kinase 2 then catalyzes the
phosphorylation (and activation) of protein
kinase 3
Phosphorylation cascade
Inactive protein kinase 2
ATP
ADP
P
Active protein kinase 2
PP
P
i
5. Enzymes called protein phosphatases (PP)
catalyze the removal of phosphate groups from the
proteins, making them inactive and available for
reuse.
4. Finally, active protein kinase 3
phosphorylates a protein (pink) that brings about
the cells response to the signal
Inactive protein kinase 3
ATP
ADP
P
Active protein kinase 3
PP
P
i
Inactive protein
ATP
P
ADP
Cellular response
Active protein
PP
P
i
29Small Molecules and Ions as Second Messengers
- Second messengers are small, nonprotein,
water-soluble molecules or ions - The extracellular signal molecule that binds to
the membrane is a pathways first messenger - Second messengers can readily spread throughout
cells by diffusion - Second messengers participate in pathways
initiated by G-protein-linked receptors and
receptor tyrosine kinases
30Second Messengers
- small, nonprotein molecules/ions that can relay
signal inside cell - Second messengers participate in pathways
initiated by G-protein-linked receptors and
receptor tyrosine kinases - Eg. cyclic AMP (cAMP), calcium ions (Ca2),
inositol triphosphate (IP3)
31Cyclic AMP
- Cyclic AMP (cAMP) is one of the most widely used
second messengers - The second messenger cyclic AMP (cAMP) is made
from ATP by adenylyl cyclase, an enzyme embedded
in the plasma membrane. Cyclic AMP is inactivated
by phosphodiesterase, an enzyme that converts it
to AMP
32cAMP
- cAMP cyclic adenosine monophosphate
- GPCR ? adenylyl cyclase (convert ATP ? cAMP) ?
activate protein kinase A
cAMP as a second messenger in a
G-protein-signaling pathway. The first messenger
activates a G-protein-linked receptor, which
activates a specific G protein. In turn, the G
protein activates adenylyl cyclase, which
catalyzes the conversion of ATP to cAMP. The cAMP
then activates another protein, usually protein
kinase A
33Second Messengers- Calcium ions
- Calcium ions (Ca2) act as a second messenger in
many pathways - Calcium is an important second messenger because
cells can regulate its concentration
34LE 11-11
EXTRACELLULAR FLUID
The maintenance of calcium ion concentrations in
an animal cell. The calcium concentration in the
cytosol is usually lower than in the
extracellular fluid and ER. Protein pumps in the
plasma membrane and the ER membrane, driven by
ATP, move calcium from the cytosol into the
extracellular fluid and into the lumen of the ER.
Mitochondrial pumps, driven by chemiosmosis, move
calcium into the mitochondria when the calcium
level in the cytosol rises significantly.
Plasma membrane
Ca2 pump
ATP
Mitochondrion
Nucleus
CYTOSOL
Ca2 pump
Endoplasmic reticulum (ER)
ATP
Ca2 pump
High Ca2
Key
Low Ca2
35Second Messengers- Inositol Triphosphate (IP3)
- A signal relayed by a signal transduction pathway
may trigger an increase in calcium in the cytosol - Pathways leading to the release of calcium
involve inositol triphosphate (IP3) and
diacylglycerol (DAG) as second messengers
36LE 11-12_1
2. Phospholipase C cleaves a plasma membrane
phospholipid called PIP2 into DAG and IP3
DAG functions as a second messenger in other
pathways
EXTRACELLULAR FLUID
Signal molecule (first messenger)
1. A signal molecule binds to a receptor,
leading to activation of phospholipase C
G protein
DAG
GTP
G-protein-linked receptor
PIP2
Phospholipase C
IP3 (second messenger)
IP3-gated calcium channel
Endoplasmic reticulum (ER)
Ca2
4. IP3 quickly diffuses through the cytosol and
binds to an IP3 gated calcium channel in the ER
membrane, causing it to open
CYTOSOL
37LE 11-12_2
EXTRACELLULAR FLUID
Signal molecule (first messenger)
G protein
DAG
GTP
G-protein-linked receptor
PIP2
Phospholipase C
IP3 (second messenger)
IP3-gated calcium channel
5. Calcium ions flow out of the ER (down the
concentration gradient), raising the calcium
level in the cytosol
Endoplasmic reticulum (ER)
Ca2
Ca2 (second messenger)
CYTOSOL
38LE 11-12_3
EXTRACELLULAR FLUID
Signal molecule (first messenger)
G protein
DAG
GTP
G-protein-linked receptor
PIP2
Phospholipase C
IP3 (second messenger)
IP3-gated calcium channel
Cellular re- sponses
Various proteins activated
Endoplasmic reticulum (ER)
Ca2
Ca2 (second messenger)
6. The calcium ions activate the next protein in
one or more signaling pathways
CYTOSOL
393. Response
- Regulate protein synthesis by turning on/off
genes in nucleus (gene expression) - Regulate activity of proteins in cytoplasm
- Fine-Tuning of the Response
- Multistep pathways have two important benefits
- Amplifying the signal (and thus the response)
- Contributing to the specificity of the response
40The Specificity of Cell Signaling
- Different kinds of cells have different
collections of proteins - These differences in proteins give each kind of
cell specificity in detecting and responding to
signals - The response of a cell to a signal depends on the
cells particular collection of proteins - Pathway branching and cross-talk further help
the cell coordinate incoming signals
41LE 11-15
Signal molecule
Receptor
Relay molecules
Response 1
Response 2
Response 3
Cell B. Pathway branches, leading to two responses
Cell A. Pathway leads to a single response
Activation or inhibition
Response 4
Response 5
Cell C. Cross-talk occurs between two pathways
Cell D. Different receptor leads to a different
response
42Signal Transduction Pathway Problems/Defects
- Examples
- Diabetes
- Cholera
- Autoimmune disease
- Cancer
- Neurotoxins, poisons, pesticides
- Drugs (anesthetics, antihistamines, blood
pressure meds)
43Cholera
- Toxin modifies G-protein involved in regulating
salt water secretion - G protein stuck in active form ? intestinal cells
secrete salts, water - Infected person develops profuse diarrhea and
could die from loss of water and salts
- Disease acquired by drinking contaminated water
(w/human feces) - Bacteria (Vibrio cholerae) colonizes lining of
small intestine and produces toxin
44Viagra
- Used as treatment for erectile dysfunction
- Inhibits hydrolysis of cGMP ? GMP
- Prolongs signal to relax smooth muscle in artery
walls increase blood flow to penis
45Viagra inhibits cGMP breakdown
46Apoptosis cell suicide
- Cell is dismantled and digested
- Triggered by signals that activate cascade of
suicide proteins (caspase) - Why?
- Protect neighboring cells from damage
- Animal development maintenance
- May be involved in some diseases (Parkinsons,
Alzheimers)
47Apoptosis of a human white blood cell
- Left Normal WBC
- Right WBC undergoing apoptosis shrinking and
forming lobes (blebs)
48Effect of apoptosis during paw development in the
mouse