Cell Signaling Lecture 25 BSCI 420421 Oct 3031
Cell Signaling Lecture 25 BSCI 420/421 Oct 30/31, ’ 02 The 4 Laws of Ecology: “All things are interconnected. Everything goes somewhere. There’s no such thing as a free lunch. Nature bats last. ” -Earnest Callenbach A. General principles of Cell Signaling B. Signaling thru cell surface receptors
Cell to cell signaling allows organisms to coordinate the activity of a wide variety of different cell types. A. General principles of cell to cell signaling. Cells can communicate via signal molecules in 4 different ways: Differ in distance over which they act. Closest: e. g. Boss & Sevenless. E. g. Inductive dev. signals
E. g. neurotransmitters E. g. Insulin
Receptors for signal Molecules can be either: Cell surface Signal mols are water soluble E. g. peptide hormones Induce cytoplasmic signal cascade Or Intracellular Signal molecules are hydrophobic e. g. steroids Carriers in bloodstream
A simple signaling pathway or cascade induced by binding To a cell surface receptor Fig. 15 -1
Signal molecules that bind to intracell receptors, and hence genes. All small & hydrophobic Fig 15 -12
Nuclear receptors The DNA-binding domains Contain multiple Zinc fingers
An animal cell depends on multiple extracellular signals
B. Signaling thru Cell Surface Receptors 3 Classes of Cell Surface Receptors e. g Ach receptors e. g. epinephrine rec.
Types of surface receptors, cont. e. g. Growth factor receptors
Too much stimulation can be a problem. Cells need to be able to respond to changes in signal over a wide range of conc Target cells can become desensitized in 5 diff ways:
G-protein-linked receptors The largest and most widespread family of cell surface receptors, found in all eukaryotes. 7 - pass transmembrane proteins
Associate with a trimeric G Protein (GTPase)
Activated Receptor acts As a GNEF. The alpha subunit Exchanges GTP For GDP The other 2 s-units Dissociate from Alpha, and both Diffuse away in an Active state
Activation of target protein e. g. adenylyl Cyclase Hydrolysis Of GTP Formation of The inactive trimer
- Slides: 15