Signal Transduction and Cancer Flashcards
What is signal transduction?
the process by which a chemical or physical signal is transmitted through a cell as a series of molecular events which ultimately results in a cellular response
What are some general rules of signal transduction?
- pathway activation is rapid and transient (short lasting)
- persistent activation of a pathway may lead to uncontrolled cell proliferation (cancer)
- pathways are multi component = intracellular signalling molecules can compromise of proteins, small molecules or lipids
- target proteins are post-transitionally modified which results in conformational changes
What are post-translational modifications?
- generally enzymatic modification of proteins following protein biosynthesis
- occurs in the endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi apparatus
- approx 523 kinases
- other types of post translational modifications are:
1. Acetylation
2. Methylation
3. Lipid conjugation
4. Ubiquitination - all have deactivating enzymes
What is signal specificity?
- different ligands bind to their own specific receptors
- the same ligand can induce a different response in different cell types as the same ligand can bind different receptors and can utilise different intracellular signalling molecules to transmit the signal
- different signals differentially lead to the activation of different transcription factors
- different cell types express dissimilar transcription factors, therefore the same signal results in expression of different genes in different cell types
What are examples of intracellular receptors?
- steroids
- retinoids
- vitamin D
What are examples of transmembrane receptors?
- ion channels
- G protein-coupled
- tyrosine kinases
List some regulatory elements with their transcription factors and triggers
- GGGANNNTCC, NF-kB, immune stress
- TGACGTCA, CREB, cyclic AMP
- GGTCANNNTGACC, oestrogen receptor, oestrogen
- GAAANNGAAACTG, ISGF3, interferon
What are downstream effects of G coupled protein receptors
- glycogen breakdown
- ion channel regulation
- transcriptional activation
- Ca2+ Influx
- cytoskeletal rearrangements
What is the result of overexpression of EGFR and ERBB2
- EGFR = responsible for over 50% of carcinomas
- ERBB2 = responsible for 30% breast cancer
What is the result of active procto-oncogenes RAS and RAF?
RAS:
- 20-30% human tumours
- 90% pancreatic adenocarcinoma
- 50% colon/thyroid adenocarcinoma
- 30% lung adenocarcinoma
RAF:
- 7% human tumours
- 70% melanomas
- 30% thyroid cancer
- 15% colon cancer
How is cancer a defect in cell signaling?
- The wiring of intracellular signalling is extremely specific and is regulated by transient changes in affinity of key components
- cancer can disrupt correct associations of cellular components through mutations which will short circuit intracellular signaling