Title: Signal Transduction Pathways
1Signal Transduction Pathways
Prepared by Samaneh Rahamooz Haghighi
2Introduction
- Cell-to-cell communication is essential for
organisms - In multicellular organisms, cell-to-cell
communication allows the cells of the body to
coordinate their activities - Communication between cells is also essential for
many unicellular organisms - Biologists have discovered some universal
strategies and mechanisms of cellular regulation - Response is determined by combined effects of
multiple signals - The plasma membrane plays a key role in most cell
signaling - Pathway similarities suggest that ancestral
signaling molecules evolved in prokaryotes and
were modified later in eukaryotes(Alberts et al.,
2002) - Signaling systems is similar in plants and
bacteria (Campbell and Reece, 2008)
2
3The Evolution of Cell Signaling
- Signaling systems is similar in plants and
animals - NO, c AMP, c GMP
- Scientists think that signaling mechanisms first
evolved in ancient prokaryotes and single-celled
eukaryotes
3
4(Campbell and Reece, 2008)
4
Communication between yeast cells
5Local and Long-Distance Signaling
- Eukaryotic cells may communicate by direct
contact - Animal and plant cells have junctions that
directly connect the cytoplasm of adjacent cells - These are called gap junctions (animal cells) and
plasmodesmata (plant cells) - The free passage of substances in the cytosol
from one cell to another is a type of local
signaling(growth factor)
- Direct cytoplasmic connections
- - gap junctions in animal cells
- - plasmodesmata in plant cells
- -contact of surface molecules (cell-to-cell)
recognition via receptors
5
6 (Campbell and Reece, 2008)
1- Gap junction 2- Cell-cell recognition 3-
local regulators
Communication between cells by direct contact
6
7Plasmodesmata in plant cells
7
8- In many other cases of local signaling,
messenger molecules are secreted by a signaling
cell - These messenger molecules, called local
regulators, travel only short distances - One class of these, growth factors, stimulates
nearby cells to grow and divide - This type of local signaling in animal cells is
called paracrine signaling
8
9Signaling pathway
- Paracrine
- Synaptic
- endocrine
9
10- In many other cases, cells must share information
with cells they are not touching - They use (1) local regulators, messenger
molecules that travel only short distances
(Alberts et al., 2002)
10
11Local signaling
Target cell
Secreting cell
Secretory vesicle
Local regulator diffuses through extracellular
fluid.
(a) Paracrine signaling
11
12- Local regulators nearby cells
- paracrine signaling only includes cells of a
particular organ - synaptic signaling between neurons
12
13neurotransmitter
- Another more specialized type of local signaling
occurs in the animal nervous system - This synaptic signaling consists of an electrical
signal moving along a nerve cell that triggers
secretion of neurotransmitter molecules - These diffuse across the space between the nerve
cell and its target, triggering a response in the
target cell
13
14Electrical signal along nerve cell triggers
release of neuro- transmitter.
Local signaling
Neurotransmitter diffuses across synapse.
Target cell is stimulated.
14
(b) Synaptic signaling
15- Long distance
- nerve transmission
- endocrine signaling
15
16- And (2) chemicals called hormones for
long-distance signaling
- In long-distance signaling, plants and animals
use chemicals called hormones - In hormonal signaling in animals (called
endocrine signaling), specialized cells release
hormone molecules that travel via the circulatory
system - Hormones vary widely in size and shape
(Alberts et al., 2002)
16
1717
18A Preview
- Earl W. Sutherland discovered how the hormone
epinephrine acts on cells - E. W. Sutherland studied the relationship between
epinephrine presence and activation of glycogen
phosphorylase enzyme - Sutherland suggested that cells receiving signals
undergo three processes - Reception
- Transduction
- Response
18
19Generic Pathway
- Reception Chemical message (ligand) docks at
receptor on cell membrane and changes its shape - Transduction switching message from chemical
signal received on cell outside to chemical
messages on interior of cell - Response Signal transduction cascade occurs
until end result is reached
19
20 There are three stages in cell
signaling Reception Transduction Respon
se
EXTRACELLULAR FLUID
CYTOPLASM
Plasma membrane
Transduction
Response
Reception
1
2
3
Receptor
Activation of cellular response
Relay molecules in a signal transduction pathway
Signaling molecule
20
21Reception, the Binding of a Signaling Molecule to
a Receptor Protein
-
- The binding between a signal molecule (ligand)
and receptor is highly specific - Ligand binding generally causes a shape change in
the receptor - A shape change in a receptor is often the initial
transduction of the signal - Many receptors are directly activated by this
shape change - Most signal receptors are plasma membrane
proteins - Hormones
- NO, CO
21
22- A signal transduction pathway is a series of
steps by which a signal on a cells surface is
converted into a specific cellular response
22
23Three classes of cell surface receptors
- G-PROTEIN-COUPLED RECEPTORS
- ION-CHANNEL-COUPLED RECEPTORS
- ENZYME-COUPLED RECEPTORS
23
24How important is the G-protein system?
- Used by hormones, neurotransmitters, sensory
reception, development. - Many bacteria produce toxins that interfere with
G-protein systems - Up to 60 of medicines influence G-protein
pathways
24
25Reception- Example I
- G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are plasma
membrane receptors that work with the help of a G
protein - The G protein acts as an on/off switch If GDP is
bound to the G protein, the G protein is inactive - GTP/GDP are chemically very similar to ATP/ADP
but contain Guanine not Adenine - G proteins bind to the energy-rich molecule GTP
- Many G proteins are very similar in structure
- GPCR pathways are extremely diverse in function
25
26- G-protein is embedded within cell membrane has
three subunits inside the cell - Ligand binding changes the conformation of the
GPCR and causes it to release alpha subunit - Alpha subunit moves to another protein called
adenylyl cyclase - Binding causes conformational change which
activates protein (enzyme) - Enzyme converts ATP ? cAMP
26
27G Protein-Coupled Receptor
a subunit has GTPase activity
27
28Mechanism of G protein coupled reception
Plasma membrane
Inactive enzyme
G protein-coupled receptor
Signaling molecule
Activated receptor
GDP
GDP
GTP
Enzyme
G protein (inactive)
CYTOPLASM
2
1
Activated enzyme
GTP
GDP
P
i
Cellular response
3
4
The relay protein is called a G Protein
Membrane receptorsG protein-coupled receptors
28
29Enzyme-Coupled Receptor
- Extracellular signal binding domain and cytosolic
domain with enzymic activity
- six known groups of enzyme-coupled receptors
- Tyrosine-kinase receptors
- Tyrosine-kinase-associated receptors
- Histidine-kinase-associated receptors
- Tyrosine-phosphatase receptors
- Serine/threonine-kinase receptors
- Guanylyl cyclase receptors
29
30Reception- Example II
- Receptor tyrosine kinases are membrane receptors
that attach phosphates to tyrosines - Has intra- and extracellular domains, also
membrane domain - A receptor tyrosine kinase can trigger multiple
signal transduction pathways at once - Kinase is an enzyme that attaches a phosphate to
a substrate - Growth factor, ansolin
30
31(Campbell and Reece, 2008)
Figure Membrane receptorsreceptor tyrosine
kinases
31
32Ras Protein
GEFs Guanine nucleotide exchange factors GAPs
GTPase-activating proteins
32
33Signal Transduction
- balance between Phosphorylation and
dephosphorylation activity - Phosphorylation occur in serine, threonine or
tyrosine amino acid - MAP kinase (mitogen activated protein kinase) is
a serine/threonine- kinase pathway that activate
by Ras - Propagation of cells
33
34Two-Component Signaling Pathway
- Typically consist of
- 1) a membrane-bound Histidine-kinase that senses
a specific environmental stimulus - 2) a response regulator protein that mediates the
cellular response - Fungi, plant , bacteria
(Buchanan et al., 2000)
34
35Hybrid kinase systemBacteri, ETR1
(Buchanan et al., 2000)
35
36Reception- Example III
- A ligand-gated ion channel receptor acts as a
gate when the receptor changes shape - When a signal molecule binds as a ligand to the
receptor, the gate allows specific ions, such as
Na or Ca2, through a channel in the receptor
36
37Ion Channels
- Ligand-gated ion channels are very important in
the nervous system - The diffusion of ions through open channels may
trigger an electric signal
(Campbell and Reece, 2008)
Membrane receptorsion channel receptors
37
38Signaling transduction
- The molecules that relay a signal from receptor
to response are mostly proteins - Like falling dominoes, the receptor activates
another protein, which activates another, and so
on, until the protein producing the response is
activated - At each step, the signal is transduced into a
different form, usually a shape change in a
protein
38
39Protein Phosphorylation and Dephosphorylation
- Phosphorylation and dephosphorylation are a
widespread cellular mechanism for regulating
protein activity - Protein kinases transfer phosphates from ATP to
protein, a process called phosphorylation - The addition of phosphate groups often changes
the form of a protein from inactive to active
39
40- Protein phosphatases remove the phosphates from
proteins, a process called dephosphorylation - Phosphatases provide a mechanism for turning off
the signal transduction pathway - They also make protein kinases available for
reuse, enabling the cell to respond to the signal
again
40
41Phosphorylation cascade
41
42Growth factor
Reception
Receptor
Phosphorylation cascade
Transduction
CYTOPLASM
Inactive transcription factor
Active transcription factor
Response
DNA
Gene
NUCLEUS
mRNA
42
Nuclear response to a signal the activation of a
specific gene by a growth factor
43Small Molecules and Ions as Second Messengers
- The extracellular signal molecule (ligand) that
binds to the receptor is a pathways first
messenger - Second messengers are small, nonprotein,
water-soluble molecules or ions that spread
throughout a cell by diffusion - Cyclic AMP and calcium ions are common second
messengers
43
44Second Messengers
- Intracellular signaling molecules produced in
response to an external stimulus - cAMP (Campbell and Reece, 2008)
- cGMP
- Ca2
- DAG
- IP3
- Phospholipase C
- STAT Signal Transducer and Activator of
Transcription - JAK Janus kinases
44
45- Cyclic AMP (cAMP) is one of the most widely used
second messengers - Adenylyl cyclase, an enzyme in the plasma
membrane, rapidly converts ATP to cAMP in
response to a number of extracellular signals - The immediate effect of cAMP is usually the
activation of protein kinase A, which then
phosphorylates a variety of other proteins
45
46cAMP cyclic adenosine monophosphate
CREB (cyclic AMP response elementbinding
protein) CRE (cAMP response element) PKA (protein
kinase A)
46
47First messenger (signaling molecule such as
epinephrine)
Adenylyl cyclase
G protein
G protein-coupled receptor
Second messenger
Protein kinase A
Cellular responses
47
cAMP as a second messenger in a G protein
signaling pathway
4848
49Disruptions in cell signaling pathways
- Bacterial infections (cholera, anthrax,
pertussis) - Animal toxins
- Hormone imbalances (diabetes)
- Cancer
- Plant diseases
49
50Ca2 CalciumDAG, IP3
PK
50
51phospholipid-derived molecules
51
52- Calcium ions also act as second messengers.
-
- One example is activating an enzyme phospholipase
C to produce two more messengers which will open
Ca channels. - The signal receptor may be a G protein or a
tyrosine kinase receptor. - Important in muscle contraction.
52
53Ip3 receptor
53
54Calmodulin
54
55EXTRA- CELLULAR FLUID
Signaling molecule (first messenger)
G protein
DAG
GTP
G protein-coupled receptor
PIP2
Phospholipase C
IP3
(second messenger)
IP3-gated calcium channel
Endoplasmic reticulum (ER)
Various proteins activated
Cellular responses
Ca2
Ca2 (second messenger)
55
CYTOSOL
56Cell Responses
- Alteration of metabolism
- Rearrangement of cytoskeleton
- Modulation of gene activity
56
57Response Regulation of Transcription or
Cytoplasmic Activities
- Ultimately, a signal transduction pathway leads
to regulation of one or more cellular activities - The response may occur in the cytoplasm or in the
nucleus - Many signaling pathways regulate the synthesis of
enzymes or other proteins, usually by turning
genes on or off in the nucleus - The final activated molecule in the signaling
pathway may function as a transcription factor
57
58Signaling Efficiency Scaffolding Proteins and
Signaling Complexes
- Scaffolding proteins are large relay proteins to
which other relay proteins are attached - Scaffolding proteins can increase the signal
transduction efficiency by grouping together
different proteins involved in the same pathway
58
59ABA (Absisic acid) signal
59
60The end of signal
60
6161
62REFRENCES
1- Alberts, B. Johnson, A. Lewis, J. Raff,
M. Roberts, K. Walter, P. (2002). Molecular
biology of the cell. 4 th edition. New
York and London Garland Science 2-
Buchanan, B. Gruissem, W. Jones, R. (2000).
Biochemistry Molecular Biology of Plants. 5
th edition. American Society of Plant
Physiologists. 3- Faurie, B. Cluzet, S.
Merillon, J. (2009). Implication of
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phosphorylation and active oxygen species in
methyl jasmonate-induced defense responses in
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Wei-Yi, S. and Li-Ye, S. (2008). Advances
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development and maturation. Plant Science 175
,106113. 6- Nelson, D. Cox, M. (2004).
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Campbell, N. Reece, J. (2008). Biology. 8th
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Thines, E. Foster, A. (2009). MAP kinase
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46 667681.
62
63Thank for your attention