Yokomori Flashcards
What are the two major mechanisms of reversible transmission?
phosphate transfer (phosphorylation and dephosphorylation) and nucleotide exchange (replacing a GDP with a GTP via hydrolysis)
What are the different types of cell to cell signalling?
paracrine, autocrine, endocrine, synaptic, gap junction
What are the 3 types of cell surface receptor?
Ion-channel-linked
G-protein-linked
Enzyme-linked
_____ hormones can homodimerize, while ________ hormone receptors must heterodimerize with their common binding partner ____.
Steroid; non-steroid; RXR
What are the major steroid (Type 1) nuclear receptors? What are the major non-steroid (Type 2) nuclear receptors?
Steroid: glucocorticoids (GR), mineralocorticoids (aldosterone), sex steroids [estrogen (ER), androgen (AR)]
Non-steroid: retinoid/retinoic acid (RAR, RXR*), thyroid (TR), Vitamin D3 (VDR)
What is the difference between a NISS and a MISS?
Nuclear-initiated steroid signal: Steroid binds its receptor and steroid+receptor complex binds a DNA regulatory sequence, becoming a trans-acting transcription factor.
Membrane-initiated steroid signal: Steroid binds receptor on outside surface of cell, activating other kinases and downstream targets.
Histone _____ serves as a coactivator and histone ____ serves as a corepressor.
acetyltransferase (HAT), deacetylase (HDAC)
How is the glucocorticoid (GR) pathway regulated?
HPA Axis: The HYPOTHALAMUS secretes vasopressin (AVP) and corticotropin releasing factor (CRF) under the control of the hippocampus and the amygdala. AVP and CRF cause the ANTERIOR PITUITARY to release adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH). ACTH stimulates production of glucocorticoids by the ADRENAL CORTEX.
AVP/CRF (hypothalamus) –> +ACTH (anterior pituitary) –> +Glucocorticoids (adrenal cortex)
Regulated by negative feedback of glucocorticoids on synthesis of ACTH and CRF.
What is Cushing sydrome?
hypercortisolism (too much cortisol, a glucocorticoid) caused by adrenal hyperplasia and other defects that result in overproduction of ACTH or cortisol.
Aldosterone is a _______ hormone.
mineralocorticoid (activates MR)
MR is expressed in the ____ and causes resorption of ____ and ____ back into the blood stream, which prevents _____ but also raises _____.
kidney, Na+, water, dehydration, blood pressure
_____ can occur secondary to a defect in the androgen receptor (AR) gene.
Androgen insensitivity syndrome (AIS)
Kennedy’s disease (Spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA)) and prostate cancer involve defects in what pathway?
androgen receptor (AR)
Type 2 (non-steroid) receptors heterodimerize with \_\_\_ and are constitutively bound to their DNA response elements in the absence of their ligand. In the absence of ligand, the receptors serve as transcriptional \_\_\_\_\_\_\_, and \_\_\_\_ transcription after binding their ligand.
RXR, repressors, activate
*Activation does NOT require the RXR LIGAND (9-cis retinoic acid). Type 2 receptors will heterodimerize with the RXR receptor (repressor state), and become active (dissociate from RXR) after binding their own ligands.
Which organs are involved in the thyroid hormone receptor (TR) pathway?
Hypothalamus: thyrotropin-releasing factor (TRF)
Anterior pituitary: thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH)
Thyroid: thyroxine (T4), triiodothyronine (T3) - stimulate metabolism in almost every tissue of the body
What is Graves’ Disease? What can this lead to if poorly managed?
hyperthyroidism; thyroid storm/thyrotoxic crisis (life-threatening hypermetabolic state)
What causes hypocalcemic vitamin D-resistant rickets? How is this different than classic rickets?
Vitamin D receptor (VDR) mutation; classic rickets is caused by vitamin D deficiency not by genetic mutation
Chromosomal translocation resulting in abnormal RAR fusion proteins is a cause of which disease?
acute promyelocytic leukemia (AML)
Which receptors serve as the major sensor of dietary cholesterol in the liver?
Liver X receptor (LXR), binds oxysterol which is produced in the liver when cholesterol is abundant
Which receptor is involved in regulation of cytochrome P450 genes? What do these genes do?
Pregnane X receptor (PXR), detoxification/metabolism of xenobiotics (drugs)