Cell Signaling (Lecture 9) Flashcards
Types of cell signaling
- Same cell–> autocrine
- Direct contact to an adjoining cell–> eg, gap junctions (Ca2+) or membrane-enclosed ligands (antigen presentation)
- cell is close proximity–> paracrine
- far-away cell –> endocrine
Complexity and Flexibility of Cell Signaling
- Same receptor can stimulate different pathways in different cells
- Within a cell, a receptor can stimulate multiple pathways
- Signal strength can be altered along pathway
- Signals from multiple receptors can be integrated to produce a cellular response
Intracellular receptors
- In cytoplasm or nucleus
- Often inactive by inhibitory, heat shock, or chaperone protein
- Bind to small hydrophobic ligands that travel through bld and pass through membrane
- When bound, blocking protein is displaced
- Complex can bind directly to DNA + cause gene expression change
- Ie, estrogen binds to estrogen receptor
Cell-surface receptors
enzyme-coupled receptors & 7-helix transmembrane receptors
(RTKs) (GPCRs)
- Also includes ligand-gated ion channels
Both signal with two signaling molecule types:
2nd messengers and signaling proteins
Second messengers
vs
Signaling Proteins
SH2 (Src homology 2) domain
recognition motif
Binds phosphotyrosine
SH3 (Src homology 3) domain
recognition motif
Binds proline-rich sequences
PTB domain
recognition motif
(Phosphotyrosine binding)
Binds phosphotyrosine
PH (plexitrin homology) domain
recognition motif
Binds lipids (eg, phosphatidylinositol bi-and triphosphates)
Ways signaling proteins can act as molecular switches
- Allosteric regulation: conformational change in a protein d/t binding another molecule
-
Phosphorylation of an animo acid (Tyr, Ser, Thr) by a protein kinase
* Dephosphorylation by a phosphatase -
Phosphorylation w/ GEF (exchanging bound GDP–> GTP)
* Loss of phosphorylation: GTP hydrolysis by a GTPase or GTPase Activating Protein (GAP)
Scaffold proteins
- Bind several signaling proteins to bring into close proximity
- Association with a scaffold protein/post translational modification can localize signaling to a part fof the cell
- Ie, lipid groups, prenylation / fatty acid acylation links proteins to the interal surface of the plasma membrane
Initial Steps of Receptor Tyrosine Kinase Signaling
- RTKs are single pass transmembrane proteins with an extracellular ligand-binding domain and an intracellular protein kinase domain*
1. Ligand binding: ligands can be monomers or dimers - Causes conformational changes
- Can also cause dimerization, activating kinase and leading to transphosphorylation
- Tyrosine residues in the intracellular domain are phosphorylated, creating docking sites for SH2 and PTB domain proteins (this activates downstream signaling pathways)
* Because RTKs have several P-Tyr residues, it can interact with different signaling proteins at the same time
MAPK-ERK Signaling Pathway
(Mitogen Activated Protein Kinase)
(Extracellular Signal-Regulated Kinase)
- One of 2 major signaling pathways stimulated by EGF
- Every MAPK signaling pathway consists of 3 parts: MAP kinase kinase kinase, MAP kinase kinase, MAP kinase
- EGF binds to = activates its receptor, EGFR
- GRB2 binds to the activated receptor at SH2 domain, plasma membrane recruits SOS
- SOS (a GEF) facilitates binding of GTP to Ras, activating it (Ras-GTP active; Ras-GDP inactive)
- Tethered to cell membrane, Ras-GTP phosphorylates/activates Raf (MAP kinase kinase kinase)
- Raf phosphorylates/activates MEK (MAPK/Erk kinase), which phosphorylates/activates ERK (MAP kinase)
- ERK has targets in cytoplasm and can translocate into the nucleus, where it phosphorylates TFs, leading to transcription of target genes
Termination of the MAPK-ERK pathway
- Spontaneous hydrolysis of GTP to GDP inactivates Ras
- Protein phosphatases (Tyr and Ser/Thr) dephosphorylate and deactivate every component of the signaling pathway
- Internalization of the receptor (via endocytosis) and sorting to lysosomes for degradation
Signaling of G-Protein Coupled Receptors (GPCRs)
- Largest family of receptors; 7 pass transmembrane proteins that transduce extracellular signals by activation of heterotrimeric GTP-binding protein (G protein)
- consist of three subunits: ß, alpha (several isoforms) gamma
- In absence of a ligand, some GPCRs associate with the G protein, others need receptor activation.
* alpha subunit is bound to GTP - Ligand binds, GPCR interacts with G (3rd intracell loop)
- ßy subunits complex at membrane (C terminus)
- alpha subunit (loosely associated with ßy) anchors at N
- GPCR works as GEF, exchanges GDP for GTP at alpha subunit
- G protein dissociates from receptor (also alpha subunit from ßy complex). Both subunit + complex can bind to downstream targets (effectors) and activate signaling pathways
Eventually, the alpha subunit hydrolyzes GTP by RGS (Reg G protein sigaling; a GAP for alpha subunit)
- alpha subunit and ßy re-join, signaling terminates