Lecture 22 Flashcards
Explain the process of epinephrine binding to a beta-adrenergic receptor?
- epinephrine binds to the receptor
- The occupied receptor leads to displacement of GDP to GTP, thus activating Gs
- Gs subunit moves to adenylyl cyclase and activates it
- adenylyl cyclase catalyzes the formation of cAMP
- PKA (protein kinase A) is activated by cAMP
- PKA phosphorylates cellular proteins, which leads to a cellular responce
- cAMP is degraded, thus deactivation of PKA
What is the generally happens when glucagon binds to the glucagon receptor?
- ligand binding
- Gs (alpha) activation
- adenylate cyclase activation
- increased production of cAMP
- activates PKA
- protein cascade
What kind of receptor is the glucagon receptor?
Beta-adrenergic receptor
What are the step to adenylate cyclase activation?
- Ligand binds to the G-protein receptor
- The activated receptor interacts with the G-protein and the G alpha subunit is released by phosphorylation
- GTP bound G alpha subunit activates adenylate cyclase
What does adenylate cyclase do exactly?
catalyzes the reaction of ATP to cAMP
What does cAMP do?
it binds to protein kinase A and activates it
Where is the phosphate group placed on the protein?
Either serine or theronine
How is the signal terminated?
- GTP gets converted back to GDP by GTPase
- Phosphodiesterase enzyme hydrolyzes cAMP to AMP
- ligand dissociates from receptor
What molecules inhibit inhibit cyclic nucleotide
phosphodiesterase and prolong effects of cAMP?
Caffeine and theophylline
How does cAMP impact gene regulation?
cAMP phosphorylates CREB to CREB-P, which can then enter the nucleus and impact gene expression
either decrease or increase expression
what does the binding of a ligand to the alpha-2-adrenergic receptor do?
This activates the Gi (alpha)
this inhibits adenylate cyclase
reduces cAMP levels
What does ADP-ribosylation do?
leads to the inactivation of target proteins
Explain what the cholera toxin does?
Leads to the continuous activation of the Gs alpha protein
Thus the cell has a constant level of cAMP in the cell
This leads to the CFTR channel always being open
result:
watery diarrhea
Explain what the pertussis toxin does?
The Gi alpha protein is continuously inactive
Thus increased levels of cAMP in respiratory cells
result: whooping cough
Explain the alpha-1-adrenergic receptor pathway?
- epinephrine or norepinephrine bind to the receptor
- This activates Gq alpha
- That G-protein activates phospholipase C
- That forms the second messengers (IP3, Ca, and DAG)
- Activates protein kinase C