L7, Ca-signalling toolkit II Flashcards
1
Q
Phospholipase C family:
A
- There are 16 members including beta, gamma, delta, eta, zeta etc
- All have a similar function -> hydrolyse PIP2 -> lipid moiety (DAG) and IP3
2
Q
Overview IP3 activation pathway
A
- Ligand activates GPCR
- G protein switches GDP for GTP, dissociates from beta gamma subunit -> activates PLC-beta
- IP3 released from DAG by hydrolysis of PIP2
- IP3 binds IP3R in ER -> opens channel -> Calcium influx from ER lumen into cytosol
- Initial release triggers CICR -> accelerates influx
- Calcium binds PKC -> migrates to membrane and binds to DAG in membrane -> activation of PKC -> phosphorylation of substrates
3
Q
Function of cADPR:
A
- Cyclic ADP ribose
- Calcium mobilising second messenger (I-C)
- Leads to release of calcium from ER through RyR (via indirect effect on SERCA pump; overloading ER with Ca2+ to trigger opening of RyR)
- Produced from NAD+ by ADP ribosyl cyclase enzyme
4
Q
Function of NAADP:
A
- Calcium mobilising second messenger
- Acts on lysosome-related organelle; activates TPC1/2 (two pore channel), triggering calcium release
- Produced from NADP by ADP ribosyl cyclase enzyme (Same enzyme as involved in cADPR production)
5
Q
Function of S1P:
A
- Sphingosine-1-phosphate
- Produced in cytosol by activity of sphingosine kinase 1 -> transported across membrane into E-C space
- -> perceived by GPCR (S1PR) -> typical IP3 pathway… -> Calcium release from ER
- Additionally, has been shown to stimulate Calcium increase independently of GPCR (pertussin toxin treated)
6
Q
How are intracellular stores of Calcium replenished:
A
- Store operated channels respond to Calcium levels in ER lumen; STIM proteins used to monitor levels
7
Q
Structure and function of STIM proteins:
A
- Found in ER membrane
- Calcium sensing domain in lumen (EF hand) -> calcium binding triggers
- CAD domains in cytosolic domain -> interact with/activate SOCs in membrane
- Upon Ca2+ binding, cytosolic domains interact with EBI (attached to microtubules) -> keeps proteins away from SOCs
- Low calcium in lumen -> STIM proteins oligomerise, can no longer interact with EBI, STIM proteins able to move into proximity with SOCs -> interaction and opening of channels -> influx of Calcium into cytosol from exterior -> pumped into ER to refill stores
8
Q
Typical sequence of OFF mechanisms during a calcium transient:
A
- Calcium buffers (highest conc., capping level, preventing global spread)
- Mitochondria
- Na+/Ca2+ exchanger
- Calcium pumps
9
Q
Key calcium efflux pathways:
Plasma membrane vs organelles
A
- In PM: PMCA (ATPase) and NCX (Na+/Ca2+ exchanger)
- In organelles: SERCA (Ca2+-ATPase), mitochondrial uniporter
10
Q
Calcium sensors:
A
- Different proteins for sensing calcium changes, including…
- Calmodulin
- Troponin C
- NCS proteins
- CaBPs
- All have EF hand domains
11
Q
Calmodulin (CaM) structure and function:
A
- 4 EF and domains
- Unbound: Open conformation
- Calcium binding -> constricts around target peptide -> downstream signalling effect (CaMKs etc.)
- Acting as molecular switches
12
Q
CaMK family:
A
- Big family with at least 4 different types in animals
- Calmodulin-dependent protein kinases
- Form vast signalling cascades
- Conserved regions: ATP binding, catalytic domain. autoinhibitory domain, Ca2+/CaM-binding domain
13
Q
CAMKII activation:
A
- Simplest version
- Inactive: constricted with A-I domain blocking catalytic domain
- Ca2+-CaM binds -> removes autoinhibitory domain from catalytic domain -> phosphorylation -> activation
14
Q
CaMKI, IV activation:
A
- More complex than CaMKII
- Ca2+/CaM partially activates; requires phosphorylation by CaMKK for full activation
15
Q
+ Annexins: Overview structure of family, comment on role
A
- Calcium dependent phospholipid-binding proteins
- All family members have a conserved repeated domain (‘annexin fold’)
- 4 domain core in all members: Includes calcium binding site, phospholipid binding site
- Binding affinity for calcium greatly increased by presence of negatively charged phospholipids; varies widely between members
- Varied effects; both up and downregulation can have pathological effects