Lecture 11- Cell communication: hormone signalling pathways Flashcards
What is a precursor of a range of steroid hormones?
Cholesterol
Describe some properties of steroid hormones
- Both hydrophilic and hydrophobic properties
2. Able to penetrate through cell membranes and BBB
What are the 2 classes of steroid hormones?
- Corticosteroids
2. Sex steroids
What are the 5 subtypes of steroid hormones?
- Glucocorticoids
- Mineralocorticoids
- Androgens
- Oestrogens
- Progestogens
What is a zinc finger?
Contains 4x cysteine residues which co-ordinate with a zinc atom to form a looped structure that is able to access the major groove of the DNA double helix
Describe the early phase response to steroid hormones
- Steroid hormone binds to the steroid hormone receptor
- The receptor-steroid hormone complexes activate primary response genes
- This induces the synthesis of primary response proteins
Describe the delayed response to steroid hormone
- The primary response proteins shuts off primary response genes
- And turn on secondary response genes
Give an example of a disease caused by too much cortisol
Cushing’s syndrome
Give an example of a disease caused by too little cortical
Addison’s disease
State the 3 major biochemical steps in insulin signalling
- Tyrosine phosphorylation of the receptors and its direct substrate
- Activation of the lipid kinase PI3K
- Activation of multiple serine/threonine kinases (most importantly AKT)
What happens following insulin binding
- The insulin receptor tyrosine kinase is activated
- Causing tyrosine phosphorylation of insulin receptor and the insulin receptor substrate protein
- P-tyrosine sites on IRS allow the binding of PI3K which synthesised PIP3 at the PM
- PIP3 recruit PDK which directly phosphorylates the Thr308 residue of AKT
- Activated AKT goes on to phosphorylate a number of substrates at Ser/Thr residues
Give 2 diseases associated with lack of insulin
- Type 1 diabetes
2. Type 2 diabetes
Give a treatment of type 2 diabetes
Metformin
How does metformin treat type 2 diabetes?
- Decreases insulin resistance
* Reduces plasma fasting insulin levels
How does metformin treat diabetes at a molecular level?
- Drug is positive so accumulated in mitochondria
- Inhibits the mitochondrial complex I and prevents ATP production
- This activated AMPK which is an enzyme that helps regulate glucose metabolism