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Cell Communication

Cell Communication. The language of chemistry. What do cells talk about?. Sex Danger Action Recovery. Evolution of cell signaling. Yeast and mammals signaling mechanisms are very similar Why? Pathway evolved in common ancestor. local calls. Cell junctions connect adjoining cells

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Cell Communication

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  1. Cell Communication The language of chemistry

  2. What do cells talk about? • Sex • Danger • Action • Recovery

  3. Evolution of cell signaling • Yeast and mammals signaling mechanisms are very similar • Why? • Pathway evolved in common ancestor

  4. local calls • Cell junctions connect adjoining cells • Chemical signals dissolve into cytosol • Membrane bound surface proteins • Coordinates actions of multiple cells • Ex. Embryonic development

  5. In state calls • Signaling cell releases molecular messages • Bind to receptors on receiving cell • Growth factors • Synaptic signaling

  6. Long distance calls • Glands release hormones into the bloodstream • Insulin, epinephrine (adrenaline), testosterone, etc • Plant hormones diffuse through cells or through the air • Ethylene, growth factors

  7. The gist of it: • Reception • Transduction • Response

  8. An example • Fight or flight response • Reception-E. binds to receptors on the surface of liver cells • Transduction-glycogen phosphoylase is activated • Response-enzyme breaks glycogen into glucose, glucose is released into the bloodstream

  9. Reception • Only cells with the correct receptor protein will be able to “hear” the message • Signaling molecule binds to receptor, changes its shape

  10. Intracellular receptors • Small, hydrophobic molecules pass through cell membrane • Bind to receptor inside of cell • Turn on specific genes • Nitrous oxide • Steroid hormones

  11. Extracellular receptors • Water soluble signaling molecules bind to membrane bound receptors • Ion channel receptors in nerve cells

  12. Transduction • Protein interactions pass message from receptor to response • Multiple steps allow signal to amplified

  13. Protein phosphorylation • Kinases transfer phosphates from ATP to proteins • Phosphorylation changes shape of protein • Consumes ATP, uses energy • Protein phosphatases remove phosphates, turn off signal

  14. cAPM • Cyclic Adenosine Monophosphate • Binding of signal molecule activates enzyme that turns ATP Into cAMP(20fold increase/seconds) • Ex. Epinepherine stimulates cAMP production, cAMP stimulates proteins associated with fight or flight response • Once signal has passed cAMP is degraded to AMP Cholera- toxin stimulates cAMP production. Overstimulates transport proteins in intestine

  15. Response • Final action • Opening/closing of ion channel • Activation of enzyme • RNA synthesis/ protein production • Signal can be amplified at each step of pathway • Activates multiple molecules before breaking down

  16. Differential responses • Different cells make different proteins • Receptors, transducers, response proteins • Ex. Heart vs. liver response to epinephrine • Heart= contraction • liver= glycogen metabolism

  17. But it isn’t that simple… • Proteins participate in more than one pathway • Scaffolding proteins hold multiple kinases • Pathways branch, one signal causes multiple responses • Pathways interact, two signals cause the same response

  18. Termination • All changes are reversible • As concentration of signaling molecules decreases response needs to decrease • Enzymes convert relay proteins back to inactive form • Ex. Cholera results when signaling pathway remains on indefinitely

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