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Cell to Cell Communication
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Why do cells need to communicate?
Cells must communicate to coordinate their activities!! (unicellular AND multicellular) Cells respond to internal signals (chemical molecules/hormones) AND external signals (detection of light or temperature changes)
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Unicellular Organism Communication
Signals are typically changes in the environment Responses are typically changes in gene expression Ex: Quorum Sensing, Inducible operons, Repressible Operons
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Quorum Sensing Ex: Results in Production of Toxins
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Lac Operon Responding to changes in the environment
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Multicellular Signaling Pathways
Allow receiving of information, coordination of ALL of the cells of the organisms in responding to that information Ex: Fight or Flight Response (Epinephrine)
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Signal Transduction is UNIVERSAL
All organisms have signal transduction pathways MAJOR area of evolution! Heavily adapted by natural selection
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What are the various ways that cells can communicate?
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Cell-Cell Contact (Juxtacrine)
Plasmodesmata: Channels in the cell walls of plant-like cells which allow for direct passage of materials and signaling molecules
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Immune System Cells Communication between lymphocytes (white blood cells)
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Paracrine Signaling Neurotransmitters
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Interferons in Immune System
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Endocrine Signaling – Long-Distance
Hormones Insulin/Glucagon
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Human Growth Hormone
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Sex Hormones –Menstrual Cycle
How does birth control work?
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Sex Hormones - Testosterone
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What are the three phases of signal transduction?
The process must involve three stages. Reception, detection of signal Transduction, transmission of signal Response, cellular response to the signal
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What is a ligand?
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What is a ligand? A ligand is a signaling molecule involved in the reception stage Two major classes of ligands: polar (protein based, charged, peptide) and nonpolar (lipid based, steroid) The chemistry of the ligand determines if it will be received by a receptor on the cell membrane or intracellularly
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Receptor Proteins Proteins with a diversity of structures, BUT there are general features: Area to interact with ligand (MATCHING SHAPE!) Area that transmits the signal to another protein Conformational change in shape following ligand interaction
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Ex: G-Protein-Linked Receptor
A ligand binds to G-protein linked receptor Conformational change in receptor causes phosphorylation of a G-protein (activation) Activated G-protein phosphorylates the next protein in the pathway
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Ex: Ligand-gated Ion Channels
Ligand binds to the channel protein (receptor) Conformational Change causes the channel to open Ions move freely into the cell Change in Ion concentration triggers intracellular responses by changing shapes of various proteins Very important in NERVOUS SYSTEM
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Ex: Intracellular Receptors
Can be found in the cytoplasm or the nucleus
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How do chemical messengers reach these receptors?
Ligand must pass through the cell membrane (nonpolar, lipid based, steroid hormone ligands)
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Is this a protein or steroid ligand?
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Is this a protein or steroid ligand?
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Is this a protein or steroid ligand?
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STAGE 2: TRANSDUCTION Transduction converts signal reception into a cellular response Accomplished by activation of proteins through phosphorylation (kinase enzymes), or a change in intracellular conditions
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Second Messengers Internal signaling molecules, often activated by multiple external signals Aid in amplification of signal Ex: cyclic AMP (cAMP) and Ca2+.
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Pathway involving cAMP as a secondary messenger.
Pathway using Ca2+ as a secondary messenger.
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The Response Cell responses involve changes in gene expression, and the activation of already synthesized, inactive proteins
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Ex: Epinephrine
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Ex: Testosterone: A steroid Hormone
Steroid Hormones (nonpolar ligands) bind to intracellular receptors These activated proteins act as transcription factors and activate gene expression of male specific genes
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Benefits of Multiple Steps
They amplify the response to a signal. They contribute to the specificity of the response. Allow for multiple points of regulation
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Do all cells have the same responses to the same signals?
NO! Different cells have different collections of proteins present and therefore cannot always have the same response
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Alterations in Signal Transduction Pathways disrupt homeostasis
Diabetes – Type I and Type II Parkinston’s Syndrome Cancer Cholera
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Short Answer Question The figure above represents a generalized hormone- signaling pathway. Briefly explain the role of each numbered step in regulating target gene expression.
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(3 points maximum) • Step 1 = hormone/ligand binding to receptor to initiate/trigger/induce signaling OR signal reception • Step 2 = an intracellular cascade that transduces/amplifies/transfers the signal from plasma membrane to nucleus (or other cellular effectors) • Step 3 = transcription/expression of target genes is stimulated/repressed
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Many drugs work by altering signal transduction pathways
Antihistamines Birth Control
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