Chapter 11 Cell Communication
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Transcript Chapter 11 Cell Communication
You Must Know
3 stages of cell communication
Reception, transduction, & response
How G-protein-coupled receptors receive cell
signals & start transduction
How receptor tyrosine kinase receive cell
signals & start transduction
How a cell response in the nucleus turns on
genes while in the cytoplasm it activates
enzymes
What apoptosis means & why it is important to
normal functioning of multicellular organisms
11.1
External signals are converted into
responses within the cell
Animal cells communicate:
by direct contact
by secreting local regulators (growth factors
or neurotransmitters)
3 stages of cell signaling:
1) Reception:
○ The target cell’s detection of a signal molecule
coming from outside the cell
2) Transduction:
○ Conversion of the signal to a form that can
bring about a specific cellular response
3) Response:
○ Specific cellular response to the signal
molecule
11.2
Reception: a signal molecule binds to a
receptor protein, causing it to change
shape
The binding between a signal molecule
(LIGAND) & a RECEPTOR is highly
specific
A change in the shape is the initial
transduction of the signal
Receptors are found in 2 places:
1) Intracellular
○ Inside membrane in the cytoplasm or nucleus
○ Signal molecule MUST cross the membrane
(hydrophobic) : examples – steroids & NO
2) Plasma membrane receptors
○ Bind to water-soluble ligands
3 types of plasma membrane receptors:
1) G-Protein-Coupled receptor
2) Receptor tyrosine kinase
3) Ligand-gated ion channels
1) G-Protein-Coupled receptor
Step 1
○ The ligand (signaling molecule) has bound to the Gprotein-coupled receptor
○ Causes a conformational change in the receptor so it
can bind to an inactive G-protein
○ This causes a GTP to displace the GDP
○ This activates the G-protein
Step 2
○ The G protein binds to a specific enzyme & activates it
○ When activated, it triggers the next step in a pathway
leading to cellular response
○ All shape changes are temporary
○ To continue, new molecules are required
2) Receptor tyrosine kinase
Step 1
○ Shows binding of signal molecules to the
receptors & formation of a dimer
○ Each tyrosine kinase adds a phosphate from an
ATP
Step 2
○ Fully activated receptor protein that initiates a
unique response
○ The ability of a single ligand to activate multiple
responses is the difference between #2 & #1
3) Ligand-gated ion channels
Caused by specific signal molecules
Opens & closes to regulate the flow of
specific ions - Na+ or Ca2+
11.3
Transduction – Multiple molecular
interactions relay signals from receptors
to target molecules
Involve a phosphorylation cascade
Usually a multistep pathway
Leads to greater amplifying of the signal
Enzymes called protein kinases
phosphorylate & activate proteins
Allows for a greater cellular response
Not all components are proteins
May include small, nonprotein water-soluble
molecules or ions called SECOND
MESSENGERS
Calcium ions & cyclic AMP are examples
Once activated, they can initiate a
phosphorylation cascade
11.4
Response – Cell signaling leads to
regulation of transcription or cytoplasmic
activities
Many pathways regulate protein
synthesis
Done by turning specific genes on or off in
the nucleus
The final activated molecule in a signaling
pathway functions as a transcription factor
In the cytoplasm
Signaling pathways often regulate the
activity of proteins rather than their synthesis
Example: final step in signaling pathway
may affect the activity of enzymes or cause
cytoskeleton rearrangement
11.5
Apoptosis – integrates multiple cell
signaling pathways
Controlled cell suicide
The cell is systematically dismantled &
digested
Protects neighboring cells from damage that
would occur if a dying cell leaked out its
enzymes
Apoptosis
Triggered by signals that activate a cascade
of suicide proteins in the cells
In vertebrates, a normal part of
development:
○ Normal nervous system
○ Operation of immune system
○ Normal morphogenesis of hands & feet in
humans