Unit 8 - Cell Communication Flashcards
Why do single-celled organisms need to communicate?
- social life, yeast mating
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Why do single-celled organisms need to communicate?
-social life (yeast mating)
Why do multi-cellular organisms need to communicate (
- Day-to-day physiology
- Coordination of development
- Coordination of growth
Signalling Pathway
- signalling molecule is synthesized and released by the signalling cell
- signal molecule travels to target cell
- signal binds to receptor protein on/in target cell
- changes in protein activity, gene expression, cell movement, shape, metabolism, secretion
Steroid Hormone Mechanism of Action
- receptors on steroids are members of nuclear receptor family of transcription factors
- activated receptor-steroid complex binds to regulatory region of target gene –> activates transcription
Intracellular Signalling Cascade
- Primary Transduction
- relay
- transduce and amplify
- integrate
- distribute
Second Messenger
small, non-protein molecule, relays signals from cell surface receptors to target molecules within the cell
Kinase/Phosphotase
molecular toggle switch:
- activation of kinase changes shape of target protein 2. phosphorylation causes target protein to become active 3. phosphatase removes Pi
- target protein is back in inactive form, original shape
GDP/GTP
Molecular Toggle Switch:
- G-protein bound to GDP = inactive
- G-protein changes shape, drops GDP, picks up GTP
- G-protein bound to GTP = active
- GTPase changes GTP –> GDP, back to inactive form
serine/threonine kinases
phosphate hydroxyl groups of serine and threonine in a particular sequence
Receptor Tyrosine Kinase (RTK)
- largest class of enzyme-coupled reactions
- signal proteins recruited to cytosolic tails of RTKs, activates downstream signals
- activate Ras
G - protein
- turn themselves off by hydrolyzing GTP to GDP
- dissociation of GDP and replacement with GTP is in response to a signal
- active form activates downstream steps in cascade
Ion Channel-Coupled Receptors
- binding of ligand opens/closes ion channel
- flow of ions changes voltage across membrane
GPCRs
-binding of ligand activates G-proteins, activates enzyme/ion channel in membrane which sets off cascade
How long does G-protein signal last?
-usually a few seconds, as long as the alpha and beta subunits are free
Consequences of disruptions in G-alpha function
- cell is continuously active –> prolonged secretion into the gut
- whooping cough –> bacterium colonizes lung, inappropriate signal that generates coughing