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Part 8 Cell Communication

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Part 8

Cell communication
Individual cells Multicellular

Need to sense and respond to their environment More complicated


Cells must interpret the multitude of
Must be able to communicate with other cells
signals  coordinate their behavior

Yeast cells respond to mating factor (yếu tố giao


phối).
Budding yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) cells are
normally spherical (A), but when they are exposed to Stages of embryo development in culture
an appropriate mating factor produced by neighboring
yeast cells (B), they extend a protrusion (các thể During animal development, for example, cells
nhô/lồi ra) toward the source of the factor. in the embryo exchange signals to determine
(courtesy of Michael Snyder.) which specialized role each cell will adopt, what
position it will occupy in the animal, and
whether it will survive, divide, or die
 GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF CELL SIGNALING ?
1. Reception

2. Transduction

3. Response
How can Cells detect what's going on around them, and can respond in real time?

A ligand is a molecule that binds another


specific molecule (receptor), in some
cases, delivering a signal in the process Receptors are protein molecules inside
the target cell or on its surface that
receive a chemical signal (ligand)

Ligand: signaling molecule a specific ligand will have a specific receptor


Types of ligands

Ligands can enter the cells:

Small, hydrophobic ligands can pass through the plasma membrane and bind to
intracellular receptors

Ex. Steroid Hormone, vitamin D

Ligands that bind on the outside of the cell

Water-soluble ligands (polar or charged ) cannot cross the plasma membrane

Peptide (protein) ligands make up the largest and most diverse class

Ex. Hormones such as insulin


Types of receptors Internal receptors

+ Found in the cytoplasm of the cell

+ Respond to ligands that cross the cell membrane into the cell. (Ligand: small, hydrophobic (water-
hating) molecules: ex. Hormone)

+ Have a direct effect on protein production by binding directly to the DNA.


Types of receptors Cell-surface receptors

• Found on the cell membrane

• Bind to ligands that do not cross the cell membrane

The cell- surface receptors response:

+ Open a channel to allow ions to pass through the membrane (Ligand-gated ion channels)
+ Activate an enzyme that sets off a response inside the cell (Receptor tyrosine kinases)
+ Activate a protein which is not an enzyme, but which can affect other cell components (G
protein-coupled receptors)

The same signaling molecule may produce different results


Cell
No distance APC: antigen presenting cell
Cell

Cell
Cell Short
communication distance
Cell

Cell

Long distance Cell Cell

Cell
No distance

MHCII: Protein major histocompatibility


complex (MHC) molecules
TCR: T cell receptors
Short
distance
Long distance

All the cell in the body receive the


same message from growth hormone
(E) Autocrine signaling

Target sites on same cell


1. Reception

2. Transduction

3. Response
Signal transduction

A signal: is a function that conveys information about a phenomenon

Signal transduction: The process whereby one type of signal is converted to another

(A) When a mobile telephone receives a radio signal, it converts it into a


sound signal; when transmitting a signal, it does the reverse. (B) a target
cell converts an extracellular signal molecule (molecule a) into an
intracellular signaling molecule (molecule B).
Signal transduction *Only occurs with cell-surface receptors

Phosphorylation

Kinases are a type of enzyme that adds a phosphate group to another molecule (including other
proteins). This is called phosphorylation. Phosphorylation can activate or deactivate other
proteins.
Signal transduction
Phosphorylation

Phosphorylation example: MAPK signaling cascade

MAPK/Erk in Growth and Differentiation


MAPK/Erk in Growth and Differentiation
Signal transduction
2. Second messengers
+Small molecules that help to spread a signal through the cytoplasm after a ligand binds to a
receptor
+ Ex. Cyclic AMP (cAMP); calcium ions
Adrenaline stimulates glycogen
breakdown in skeletal muscle cells.

The hormone activates a Gpcr, which


turns on a G protein (Gs) that activates
adenylyl cyclase to boost the production
of cyclic AMP. The increase in cyclic AMP
activates PKA (protein kinase A), which
phosphorylates and activates an enzyme called
phosphorylase kinase. This kinase activates
Glycogen phosphorylase, the enzyme that
breaks down glycogen.
1. Reception

2. Transduction

3. Response
The same signal molecule can induce different responses in different target cells
An animal cell depends on multiple extracellular signals
Quick: changes in cell
movement, secretion, or
metabolism— need not involve
changes in gene expression

Slow: cell differentiation or


increased cell growth and
division—involve changes in
gene expression and the
synthesis of new proteins

Extracellular signals can act slowly or rapidly.


Some small hydrophobic hormones bind to
intracellular receptors that act as transcription
regulators. Their receptors are not identical, but they
are evolutionarily related, belonging to the nuclear
receptor superfamily

The steroid hormone cortisol acts by activating a


transcription regulator
The components of these intracellular signaling
pathways perform one or more crucial functions

1. They can simply relay the signal onward and


thereby help spread it through the cell.

2. They can amplify the signal received, making


it stronger, so that a few extracellular signal
molecules are enough to evoke a large
intracellular response.

3.They can detect signals from more than one


intracellular signaling pathway and integrate
them before relaying a signal onward.

4. They can distribute the signal to more than


one effector protein, creating branches in the
information flow diagram and evoking a complex
response.

Many extracellular signals act via cell-surface


receptors to change the behavior of the target
cell
Cellular responses to signals

+ Changes in gene expression: an increase or decrease in the production of a protein produced by a


specific gene.

+ An increase in cellular metabolism: the conversion of glucose to glycogen (and back) can be
regulated depending on the energy needs of the cell.

+ Cell growth: cells do not normally divide unless they are stimulated by signals from other cells.

+ Cell death: apoptosis is controlled cell death; cells can be stimulated die if they are abnormal,
infected with a bacteria or virus, or during specific parts of development.

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