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Cell Communication Chapter 11
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11.1 External signals are converted to responses within a cell
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Why cell communication?
Cells must “talk” to coordinate activities Evolved in single and multicellular organisms Ex: quorum sensing in bacteria Ex: hormones in plants and animals Why cell communication?
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Signaling by Distance Cell to cell contact Local Long distance
Paracrine Synaptic Long distance Endocrine Signaling by Distance
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Signal Transduction Pathways
Receiving end of cell “conversation” Signal Transduction Pathways
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11.2 Reception: A signaling molecule binds to a receptor protein, causing it to change shape
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Reception Chemical signal is detected by the target cell
Surface proteins or intracellular receptor Ligand Signaling molecule that binds specifically to another molecule Reception
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Reception: G Protein-Coupled Receptor
Ligand binds to G protein-coupled receptor on membrane G protein becomes activated Activated G protein binds to enzyme, activating it G protein receptor is COUPLED with G protein Reception: G Protein-Coupled Receptor
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Reception: Receptor Tyrosine Kinases
Ligand binds to receptor tyrosine kinase protein monomers Kinase: enzyme that transfers phosphate groups Activated monomers form dimer Phosphates from ATP added to activated dimer Reception: Receptor Tyrosine Kinases
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Reception: Ion Channel Receptors
Ligand gated ion channel changes shape when ligand binds Opens “gate” so ions can cross membrane Reception: Ion Channel Receptors
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Reception: Intracellular Receptors
Receptor in cytoplasm or nucleus (NOT cell membrane) Signal is hydrophobic or small enough to cross membrane Ex: steroid hormones, nitric oxide Reception: Intracellular Receptors
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11.3 Transduction: Cascades of molecular interactions relay signals from receptors to target molecules in the cell
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Converts the signal to a form that the cell can respond to
Often involves relay molecules Transduction
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Transduction: Phosphorylation Cascades
Series of proteins activated by addition of phosphate group pass signal along Like falling dominoes Transduction: Phosphorylation Cascades
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Transduction: Secondary Messengers
Non-protein messengers pass signal along Ex: cyclic AMP (cAMP), Ca+, or IP3 Transduction: Secondary Messengers
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11.4 Response: Cell signaling leads to regulation of transcription or cytoplasmic activities
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Response Specific response by the cell
Almost any imaginable cellular activity turned on or off, depending on signal Usually regulate enzyme activity Response
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Response: Nuclear Genes turned on to make proteins
Activates transcription Genes turned off to stop making proteins Stops transcription Response: Nuclear
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Response: Cytoplasmic
Proteins made are modified, amplified, or terminated Translation of genes modified, resulting proteins modified Example: stimulation of glycogen breakdown by epinephrine Response: Cytoplasmic
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Cell Signaling Specificity
Which receptors and secondary messengers a cell has determines which signals it will respond to and how Ex: liver and heart cells respond differently to epinephrine Cell Signaling Specificity
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11.5 Apoptosis integrates multiple cell-signaling pathways
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Apoptosis Programmed cell death
Part of normal development and differentiation Ex: formation of fingers and toes Ex: cancer cells Complex cell signaling pathways Apoptosis
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