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SIGNAL TRANSMISSION WITHIN THE CELL Nela Pavlíková nela.pavlikova@lf3.cuni.cz
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G-PROTEIN COUPLED RECEPTOR - 7 transmembrane segments
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G-protein heterotrimer, composed of 3 different subunits: subunit ~ 33-55kD - binding place for GDP / GTP - intrinsic hydrolytic activity for GTP (it binds GTP = activation → hydrolyzing of GTP to GDP = deactivation) - in deactivated state - it has bound GDP molecule - it is associated with G complex subunit ~ 35kD subunit ~ 15kD - creates G complex mammals: 20 different G proteins (each contains unique G subunit + one of 5 subunits and one of 12 subunits)
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GiGi GsGs GqGq
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GsGs stimulates adenylyl cyclase → synthesis of cAMP → activation of protein kinase A (PAK) → phosphorylation of nearby substrates cholera toxin: it keeps G s permanently activated → ↑cAMP G i after activation it inhibits adenylyl cyclase → ↓cAMP pertussis toxin: G i subunit unable to release GDP → incapable of activation → cannot inhibit adenylyl cyclase cAMP is involved in regulation of many ion channels
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GqGq not influenced by cholera toxin nor pertussis toxin phospholipase C → inositol-3-phosphate (IP 3 ) → ↑Ca 2+ in cell → CaMKII → diacylglycerol (DAG) → protein kinase C both pathways lead to phosphorylation of nearby proteins
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GtGt „transducin“ sensitive to pertussis toxin → incapability to release GDP → inhibition of signalization Vision: t 1 – black-and -white t 2 – colors occurrence: retina, some stem cells effector: phosphodiesterase-6 (PDE 6 ) → degradation of cGMP
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GoGo „other“ effectors not known sensitive to pertussis toxin → incapability to release GDP → inhibition of signalization occurrence: neural and endocrine tissues, mitotic spindle early development: effect of serotonin on neuron migration
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G 12/13 activation of REF („Rho guanine-nucleotide exchange factors“) → activation of Rho proteins occurrence: ubiquitous
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RECEPTOR TYROSINE KINASE
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growth factors, cytokines, hormones 17 subfamilies of receptors dimerization of receptors necessary (even tetramers) only one transmembrane segment (N-end extracellular, C-end intracellular) tyrosine phosphorylation = creation of binding domains for cytosolic signaling proteins → binding → activation of signaling pathways cytosolic signaling proteins: e.g. Src, phospholipase C , PI3-kinase domains for binding on phosphorylated tyrosines: SH 2 domain (src), PTB domain (PI3-kinase)
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RECEPTOR TYROSINE KINASE endocytosis of activated receptor: destruction of receptor in lysosome ← binding of ubiquitin molecule on kinase endocytosed receptor signalization – e.g. NGF
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RECEPTOR TYROSINE KINASE Ras, Rho- monomeric GTPases - anchored in the inner membrane - a part of receptor tyrosine kinase signaling pathway - activation: GEF (guanine nucleotide exchange factor) - inhibition: GAP (GTPase activating factor) ↓ resistance → cancer Ras → MAP kinase → signalization into nucleus (→ e.g. cell proliferation) Rho → connect RTK with cytoskeleton (→ cell shape, motility, adhesion)
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RECEPTOR TYROSINE KINASE
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PI-3 kinase - Akt
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RECEPTORS ASOCIATED WITH TYROSENE KINASE JAK-STAT
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RECEPTOR SERINE/THREONINE KINASE ligand: e.g. TGF- SmaDs → regulatory protein endocytosis → activation → degradation
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NUCLEAR RECEPTORS their ligands can cross the cytoplasmic membrane on their own = transcription factors (in activated form they start transcription of target genes) nuclear receptors activated by ligand vs. „orphan“ receptors type I – receptor in cytosol → ligand binding → homodimerization → transport into nucleus → binding on „response element“ part of DNA → start of transcription type II – receptor as heterodimer with RXR (and some corepressors) bound in nucleus on „response element“ → ligand into nucleus→ binds to receptor → dissociation of corepressors → start of transcription
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answer on the question from the last seminar: synthesis of thyroid hormones
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