Cytokine messanger systems: slides 1-8 Flashcards
When are cytokines usually in the body, and where?
when we are sick, in the bloodstream
What two pathways do they utilize?
JAK-STAT and Ras-MAP
“janus kinase”
JAK-stat signaling:
1) in cytokine signaling, how does this pw work?
1) cytokine binds to a homo/hetero dimeric receptor with janus kinases constitutively attached cytosolically
2) cytokine-receptor binding causes conformational change —> JAKs phosphorylate themselves
3) In turn, these phosphorylate the receptors
4) STAT proteins bind to phosphorylated receptor chains
5) JAKs phosphorylate the STATs
6) P-STATs form dimers and translocate/accumulate in nucleus where the regulate genes
Cytokines: “critical” roles
1) inflammation
2) linking
3) activation of T cells (Th1)/Th2 polarization)
4) Activation of B cells (Isotype switching)
5) control of hematopoiesis
Pleiotropic
cytokines exhibit multiple effects on growth and differentiation of a variety of cell types
what are three general characteristics of cytokines?
1) redundancy (overlapping between cytokines)
2) synergy (act collectively to enhance their outcomes)
3) antagonism (blocks other cytokines)
4) cascade: one can induce another
Example of a cascade (slide 8)
Activated Th – IFN-gamma –>
Macrophages – IL-12 –> Activated Th cells –> IL-2, IFN-gamma, TNF-beta, other cytokines