Receptors Flashcards
Which receptors bind to hydrophilic and hydrophobic molecules?
Hydrophilic- Cell Surface Receptor
Hydrophobic- Intracellular Receptor
Define ‘receptor’
A receptor is a molecule that recognises
specifically a second molecule (ligand) or
family of molecules and which in response to
ligand binding brings about regulation of a
cellular process
What is a ligand?
A ligand is any molecule that binds specifically to a receptor site
Ligand binding may produce activation of a
receptor. In this case the ligand is termed an agonist
A ligand may combine with a receptor site without causing activation. This type of ligand is termed an antagonist because it would oppose the actions of an agonist.
Describe the affinity of ligands to receptors
Affinity of ligand binding at receptor sites is generally much higher than binding of substrates and allosteric regulators to enzyme
sites
Kd is much lower than Km.
How are receptors classified?
Classified according to:
Specific physiological signalling molecule (agonist) recognised
Sub-classification:
Affinity (tightness of binding) of a series of antagonists
What are the two types of acetylcholine receptors?
- Nicotine
- Muscarine
What is the difference between a receptor and and an acceptor?
Receptor is silent at rest and agonist binding stimulates a biological response, whereas an acceptor operates in absence of ligand and ligand binding alone produces no response
Give four ways in which signals are transduced in a cell
- Membrane-bound receptors with integral ion
channels - Membrane-bound receptors with integral
enzyme activity - Membrane-bound receptors which couple to
effectors through transducing proteins - Intracellular receptors
Describe the structure of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor
- Pentameric
- alpha subunits binds ACh and opens channel
- ring of negatively charged residues at both ends that confer anion selectivity
How do Membrane-bound receptors with integral enzyme activity work?
- dimers
- ligand binding to binding domain causes catalytic domain to be revealed
Describe signalling via tyrosine kinase-linked receptors
- Dimers
- Activation causes autophosphorylation (receptors phosphorylate themselves)
- Phosphotyrosine recognition site becomes active, and enzymes can bind or transducing proteins can bind to phosphotyrosine receptor and this protein can bind to several enzymes
Describe membrane-bound receptors that signal through transducing proteins (Seven transmembrane domain (7TMD) receptors)
-Coupled through GTP-binding regulatory
proteins (G-proteins) to enzymes or channels
-thousands of these
What is the structure of G-protein coupled receptors?
-7 transmembrane domains which form cleft in membrane where ligand binds
What is integrated signalling via G-protein coupled receptors?
- stimulatory receptor and inhibitory receptor could both be present in a cell, that both affect same enzyme
- integrated response based on signalling molecules present
Describe the structure of intracellular receptors
- DNA binding domain (blocked at rest) and Binding domain
- cytoplasmic or nuclear