110 likes | 233 Views
TGF b –Superfamily Proteins. Erica DeGeus. TGF b (Transforming Growth Factor b ). What makes up the TGF b –Super Family Proteins?. A number of related extracellular signaling molecules that play widespread roles in regulating development in both invertebrates and vertebrates
E N D
TGFb –Superfamily Proteins Erica DeGeus
What makes up the TGFb –Super Family Proteins? • A number of related extracellular signaling molecules that play widespread roles in regulating development in both invertebrates and vertebrates • These are derived from inactive precursor proteins through proteolytic processing • The precursors contain an N-terminal signal peptide, a central pro-domain containing 50-375 amino acids, and a C-terminal mature domain • The C-terminal mature domain forms the active growth factor
These growth factors also promote the production of: • Cell-adhesion molecules • Other growth factors • Extracellular matrix molecules
The monomeric form of these growth factors contains 110-140 amino acids and has a compact structure with four antiparallel b strands and three intramolecular disulfide linkages forming a structure called a cystine knot • The cystine knot is resistant to denaturation which may be particularily well suited for extracellular molecules
Ribbon Diagram of mature TGFb dimer Figure 23-2
TGFb– Signaling Pathway • The ligand binds to type I and type II receptors (which are serine/threonine kinases) and induces formation of multimeric receptors • Type II receptors phosphorylate type I receptors in the juxtamembrane region • Activated type I receptors specifically phosphorylate receptor-regulated Smads (R-Smads), which then dimerize with Co-Smads in the cytosal
The R-Smad/Co-Smad complex translocates to the nucleus where it binds to regulatory sequences in combination with specific transcription factors, leading to transcription of specific target genes