Genetics 9 Flashcards

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0
Q

What domain on tyrosine kinase is responsible for ligand binding?

A

Globular Extracellular domain: extremely variable.

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1
Q

Receptor Protein Tyrosine Kinases

A

Example: insulin receptor, growth factors (VEGF and EGF).

-Exist as monomers with 3 protein domains

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2
Q

What is the catalytic domain of RPTKs?

A

Tyrosine kinase domain. Responsible for cellular signaling through processes such as autophosphorylation and substate phosphorylation

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3
Q

RPTK ligands are in the form of…

A

dimers. Helps the two monomeric protein units come together and dimerize.

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4
Q

How is Tyrosine kinase phosphorylation different than serine/threonine kinase phosphorylation?

A
  • No conformational change induced in the protein

- Created binding sites for proteins that are specific to phosphorylated tyrosine residues.

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5
Q

All amino acid sequences that allow binding to recruited substrates need to have a ….

A

Phosphotyrosine residue.

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6
Q

SH2 domains

A
  • responsible for localizing substrates around tyrosine kinase domain of the receptor.
  • Counteracts high Km of tyrosine kinase by increasing concentration of substrate around the catalytic domain.
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7
Q

How are receptors for RAPTKs different from RPTKs?

A
  • Receptors for RAPTKs do not have a tyrosine kinase domain attached to them. Instead, need to recruit RAPTKs in order to provide catalytic activity.
  • Recruit RAPTKs using interaction domain in cytoplasmic portion of receptor
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8
Q

Janus Kinases

A
  • JAK
  • Type of RAPTK that associates with signaling receptors on cell membrane to provide catalytic activity.
  • Contain FERM domain: binds to receptor
  • Kinase domain: phosphorylation activity
  • SH2 domain
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9
Q

What needs to happen before JAKs can provide tyrosine kinase activity?

A

They need to cross-phosphorylate each other.

  • After that, they can phosphorylate the tyrosine residues on the cytoplasmic domain of the receptor itself.
  • Then, protein substrates can be recruited to the phosphotyrosines, similar to RPTK signaling.
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10
Q

What about JAKs allows for a wider range of signaling?

A

They can form homodimers (JAK1 +JAK1) or heterodimers (JAK1+ JAK2)

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11
Q

Src

A
  • Type of RAPTK
  • functions similarly to Jak.
  • Has SH2 domain, no evidence that it uses it to bind to receptor. May use interaction domain.
  • Can affect many different functions inside the cell
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12
Q

RPTK Activation

A

1) Ligand binding induces receptor dimerization.
2) Dimerization leads to tyrosine kinase domain activity
3) Dimerization leads to inter-molecular trans-autophosphorylation
4) Autophosphorylation on tyrosines outside of catalytic domain
5) Trans-auto-P= essentail for substrate phosphorylation
- Autophosphorylated tyrosine residues serve as highly selected binding sites for specific cytoplasmic molecules.

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13
Q

JAK/STAT signaling is important because it allows….

A

Direct access to the nucleus through STAT dimerization.

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14
Q

STAT

A
  • Signal Transducers and Activators of Transcription
  • Recruited proteins that attach to phosphotyrosine residues on receptor that were phosphorylated by JAK/Src.
  • Contain SH2 domains.
  • After STATs are phosphorylated by JAKs on receptor, they dissociated and form dimers that travel to nucleus, influencing transcription.
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15
Q

SOCS

A

Suppressors of Cytokine Signaling

  • Used as feedback mechanism to prevent continuous activation of RAPTKs.
  • Contains SH2 domain: allows it to bind to phosphotyrosines on receptor, prevents further signaling.
16
Q

PTPs

A

Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases

  • Used to halt tyrosine kinase signal transduction.
  • Binds using SH2 domain.
  • Function by either dephosphorylating the receptor itself, or dephosphorylating recruited substrates after being activated.