Title: [VII]. Regulation of Gene Expression Via Signal Transduction
1VII. Regulation of Gene Expression Via Signal
Transduction
- Reading List VII
- Signal transduction
- Signal transduction in biological systems
2External Signal Regulating the Expression of Genes
Signals
Signal transduction cascades
Gene Expression
or
Cytoplasmic mechanism/muscle contraction/etc.
New Proteins
mRNAs
Proteins
3Communication between Matting Yeast Cells
- Yeast cells use chemical signaling to communicate
with the opposite mating types and initiate
mating process - Two mating type factors are a and b
- The mating factors are peptides of about 11 amino
acid residues - Receptors on the surface of the yeast cells
recognize the specific mating type factor
4Communication among Bacteria
Aggregation in progress
Individual cells
Spore forming
Myxobacteria (Myxococcus xanthus, slime bacteria)
use chemical signaling to share information about
nutrient availability. When food is limited,
starving cells secrete a molecule that enters
neighboring cells and stimulate them to
aggregate. The cells form a structure that
produces thick-walled spores capable of surviving
until the environment improves.
5Characteristics of Signals
- Have specificity unique, can only be detected by
the molecular machinery designed for the
detection - Small and easy traveling to the site of action
- Easily made, mobilized, altered relatively
quickly, and easily destroyed
6Signaling Via Cell-Surface Receptors (I)
- Synthesis and release of signaling molecules by
signaling cells (step 12) - Transport of signaling molecules to the target
cells (step 3) - Binding of the signaling molecule with a specific
receptor protein on the membrane leading to
activation (step 4)
7Signaling Via Cell-Surface Receptors (II)
- Initiating one or more intracellular
signal-transduction pathways initiated by the
activated receptor (step 5) - Specific change in cellular response (cellular
function, metabolic change or gene expression)
(step 6a 6b) - Removal of the signal to terminate the cellular
response (step 7)
8Different Ways Cells Signal Each Other
- Endocrine signaling
- Paracrine signaling
- Autocrine signaling
- Signaling by plasma membrane-attached proteins
9Chemical Identity of Signals
- Peptides Protein Hormones (most abundant)
e.g., thyrotropin, Gonadotropin releasing hormone
(GnRH), growth hormone (GH), prolactin (PRL),
Insulin etc. - Amino Acid Derivatives thyroid Hormone,
epinephrien - Steroid Hormones testosterone, estrogen,
cortisone etc. - Lipids prostaglandin retinoic acid
- Nucleotides cAMP, cytokinins, 1-methylalanine
- Oligosaccharides a-1,4-oligogalaturonide
- Gases CO, ethylene etc.
10Receptor Proteins Exhibit Ligand-Binding
Effector Specificity
Dimers
- Each ligand binds to its specific receptor due to
binding specificity and the receptor-ligand
complex in turn will exhibit a specific effect
(effector specificity) - Different receptors of the same class that bind
different ligands often induce the same cellular
response in a cell
11Receptor Ligand Interaction
At equilibrium
Where R and L are the concentration of free
receptor ligand at equilibrium. RL is the
concentration of the receptor-ligand complex. Kd
is the dissociation constant
koff
Kd
kon
And
Ka (association constant) 1/Kd RL/R.L
From this equation, one can see that Ka equals to
the ratio of bound RL to free ligand L
12Binding Assays Are Used to Detect Receptors and
Determine Their Kd Values
- Binding assay is used to demonstrate the presence
of receptors. Both the number of the
ligand-binding sites per cell and the Kd value
are easily determined from the binding assay - Figure in the left shows the binding of ligand
(insulin) to the receptors with high affinity
(Free Ligand)
- High affinity binding, Kd 10-8 M or lower Low
affinity binding, Kd 10-7 M or higher (larger) - If the Kd is larger than 10-7 M, the bound ligand
can easily fall off the receptors in the process
of separating unbound ligand from the bound
ligand. A competitive binding assay can be used
instead
13Scatchard Plot
- Slop -1/Kd
- n number of receptors number of binding sites
- From this plot, one can easily figure out Kd and
number of the binding site of the receptor
-
14Scatchard Plot
- If the plot gives a bi-phasic line, it means that
the receptor contains multiple binding sites with
different affinities or the presence of multiple
receptors binding to the same ligand
15Insulin-Like Growth Factor (IGF) I
16Multiple Forms of Pro-IGF-I E-Peptide
17Anti-Tumor Activities of the Pro-IGF-I E-peptide
- Induces morphological differentiation and
inhibits anchorage-independent growth in
oncogenic transformed cell lines (Chen et al.,
2002 Kuo and Chen, 2002) - Inhibits tumor cell growth and invasion, and
tumor-induced angiogenesis in developing chicken
embryos (Chen et al., 2007) - Induces programmed cell death of cancer cells
(Chen et al., 2012) - Up-regulate fibronectin 1 and laminin receptor
genes and down-regulate uPA, tPA and TIMP1 genes
(Siri and Chen 2006a, 2006b Chen et al., 2007)
18Is there a specific membrane receptor present on
the membrane of cancer cells that binds to
E-peptide?
To answer this question, we used binding assay to
demonstrate the presence of specific receptor
molecules on the membrane cancer cells
19Binding of 35S-E-Peptide to SK-N-F1 Cells
Human Eb-peptide
Trout Ea4-peptide
Kd 2.9 1.8 x 10-11 M
Kd 2.9 1.8 x 10-11 M
20Competitive Displacement Assay
- Labeled hEb was competed out with unlabeled hEb
- Labeled rtEa4 was competed out with unlabeled
rtEa4
21Competitive Displacement Assay
- C. Labeled hEb competitive with unlabeled rtEa4
- Labeled rtEa4 competitive with unlabeled hEb
22(No Transcript)
23Competitive Binding Assay with hIGF-I
The data suggest that E-peptide does not bind to
the same receptor that binds IGF-I
24Use of a Competitive Binding Assay to Detect
Binding of Low Affinity Ligands to Receptors
- One way to determine weak binding of a ligand to
its receptor is in a competition assay with
another ligand that binds to the same receptor
with higher affinity
- Alprenolol, a synthetic high affinity ligand to
epinephrine receptor Epinephrine, natural
hormone isoproternol, an antagonist to
epinephrene. - The Kd of the competitor can be determined at the
50 competition. The Kd for epinephrine is 5 x
10-5 M
25Maximal Physiological Response to Many External
Signal Occurs When Only a Fraction of the
Receptor Molecules are Occupied by Ligand
- In all signaling systems, the affinity for any
signaling molecules to its receptor must be
greater than the normal physiological level of
the signaling molecule - Take insulin for example, the kd of insulin to
its receptor is 1.4 x 10-10M, and the circulating
insulin is 5 x 10-12M. By substituting
these number into the equation Kd RL/RL,
at equilibrium, about 3 of the total insulin
receptors are bound by insulin. If the
circulating concentration of insulin rises five
fold to 2.5 x 10-11M, the number of the
receptor-hormone complexes will rise about 5 fold
to 15 of the total receptors are bound by
insulin
- In many cases, the maximum cellular response to a
particular ligand is induced when less than 100
of its receptors are bound to the ligand. The
example is shown in the figure above
26 Sensitivity of a Cell to External Signals is
Determined by the Number of Surface Receptors
- The cellular response to a particular signaling
molecular depends on the number of
receptor-ligand complex. The fewer receptors
present on the surface of the cell, the less
sensitive is the cell to the ligand - In the erythroid progenitor cells, the Kd for
binding of erythropoietin (Epo) is 10-10 M. Only
10 of the 1000 cell-surface erythropoietin
receptors must be bound to ligand to induce
maximum cellular response. By following the
equation below, we can calculate the L needed
to induce the response - Kd
- L
- RT/ RL - 1
- If the RT1000, Kd 10-10 M, RL 100, the
Epo 10-11 M will elicit the maximal response.
If RT 200, 10-10 M of erythropoietin will be
required to occupy 100 receptors to elicit the
maximum response
27Purification of Membrane Receptors
- Membrane receptors can be purified by
- Affinity binding method
- Label the ligand with isotope
- Binding of the labeled ligand to cells that may
contain the desired receptor, washing off the
unbound ligand and covalent bound the ligand to
the receptor - Isolate the membrane fraction, dissolve the
membrane protein and purify the receptor - Affinity Chromatography
- Link the ligand to beads (agarose or
polyacrylamide) and pack the beads in a column - Pass the crude extract of membrane fraction
containing receptors through the column, wash
column several times to remove the contaminants - Elute the column with excess amounts of ligand
and the receptor will be eluted from the column - These methods are suitable for the isolation of
high affinity membrane receptors
28A Functional Assay to Confirm the Identity of a
Receptor cDNA
- Once a receptor is purified, the partial sequence
of the receptor can be identified mass
spectrometer analysis. This information can be
used to clone the full-length cDNA of the
receptor - The identity of the receptor cDNA can be
confirmed by the method depicted in the figure on
the left of this slide - An expression construct with the full-length of
receptor cDNA is transfected into a cell line
that dose not have the endogeneous receptor in
question. The transfected cells will express the
desired receptor which can be detected by
receptor binding assay
29- Reading List VII
- Isolatiion and characterization of colagen
receptor - Isolation of interleukins by immunoaffinity-recept
or affinity chromatography - Isolation, characterization and regulation of the
prolactin receptor - Isolation and characterization of human prolactin
receptor
30The General Structure of a Membrane Receptor
- A signal molecule binds to a receptor protein,
causing to change shape - Most signal receptors are plasma membrane
proteins - G-protein-coupled receptor, tyrosine kinase
receptor, ligand-gated ion-channel receptor etc.
31Receptors Activate a Limited Number of Signaling
Pathways (I)
- There are seven classes of membrane receptors
that can receive external signaling molecules - G-protein-coupled receptors, cytokine receptors,
receptor tyrosine kineses, TGFb receptors,
Hedgehog receptors, Wnt receptors, Notch receptor - External signals induces two types of cellular
responses - Change in the activity or function of specific
pre-existing proteins (Activating enzymes) - Changes in amounts of specific proteins produced
by a cell as a result of activation of genes
(gene expression) - Signaling from G-protein-coupled receptors often
results in changes in the activity of
pre-existing proteins, but it can also result in
activation of gene expression
32Receptors Activate a Limited Number of Signaling
Pathways (II)
- The other classes of receptors operate primarily
to modulate gene expression - The activated TGFb and cytokine receptors
directly activate a transcription factor in the
cytosol - The Wnt receptors assemble an intracellular
signaling complex to the cytosol transcription
factors - Tyrosine receptor kinases activate several
cytosolic protein kinases that translocate into
nucleus and regulate the activity of nucleus
transcription factors - Some classes of receptors can initiate signaling
via more than one intracellular
signal-transduction pathways, leading to
different responses. This is typical of
G-protein-coupled receptors, receptor tyrosine
kinases and cytokine receptors - Only limited number of signal transduction
mechanisms are responsible for signal transduction
33Seven Major Classes of Cell-Surface Receptors
34Four Common Intracellular Second Messenger
- Besides signaling molecules from outside of the
cells, there are additional micromolecules from
inside of the cells that are involved in signal
transfer. These are second messengers - Second messengers carry and amplify signals from
receptors - Binding of the signaling molecules to many cell
surface receptors leads to a short-lived increase
in the concentration of low molecular weight
intracellular signaling molecules (i.e. second
messengers) - These molecules include cAMP, cGMP, DAG, IP3,
Ca, and inositol phospholipids
(phosphoinositide embedded in cellular membranes)
35Appropriate Cellular Responses Depend on
Interaction and Regulation of Signal Pathways
- Activation of a single type receptor often leads
to production of multiple second messengers which
have different effects - The same cellular response may be induced by
activation of multiple signaling pathways. Such
interaction of different signaling pathways
permits the fine-tuning of cellular activities
required to carry out complex developmental and
physiological processes - Regulation of signaling pathways is critical for
the cell to response to signals properly - Cells down regulate the effects of signal
transduction processes by degrading second
messengers, deactivate signal transduction
proteins, desensitizing the receptors or removing
the signaling molecules by endocytosis etc.
36Overview of Cell Signaling
Reception Transduction Response
The components of intracellular signal
transduction pathways are highly conserved
37Signal Transduction Pathways
- Signal on the membrane receptors will be
transduced by a multi-step pathway in order to
amplify a signal - Protein phosphorylation by protein kinase is a
major mechanism of signal transduction - Unlike receptor tyrosine kinases, cytoplasmic
protein kinases do not phosphorylate themselves
but phosphorylate other substrate proteins on
serine/threonine residues (serine/threonine
kinase) - About 1 of our genes are thought to code for
protein kinases, indicating the importance of
protein kinases in the cell - The activated protein kinases are quickly
reversed by protein phosphatases
38Protein Kinases
- Protein kinases and phosphatases are used in
virtually all signaling pathways - Protein kinases enzymes add phosphate groups to
the OH-group of tyrosine, serine or threonine of
its own or other proteins - Phosphatases enzymes remove phosphate groups
from proteins - In human genome, there are at least 600 genes
encoding for different protein kinases and 100
genes encoding different phosphatases - In some of the signaling pathways, receptor
itself possesses intrinc kinase activity. It can
phosphorylate itself upon binding to its ligand - The activity of all protein kinases is opposed by
the activity of protein phosphatases
39A Phosphorylation Cascade
40- G-Protein Coupled Receptors
- G-protein-coupled receptors that regulate ion
channels - G-protein-coupled receptors that activate or
inhibit adenylyl cyclase - G-protein-coupled receptors that activate
phospholipase C - Activation of G protein-coupled receptors leading
to gene expression - Receptor Tyrosine Kinase
41General Elements of G Protein-Coupled Receptors
- G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the most
numerous class of receptors found in organisms
from yeast to human - All GPCR signaling pathways share the following
common elements - A receptor that contains seven membrane-spanning
elements (transmembrane domains) - A coupled trimeric G protein which functions as a
switch by cycling between active and inactive
forms - A membrane-bound effector protein
- Feedback regulation and desensitization of the
signaling pathway - A second messenger also occurs in many GPCR
pathways, and these components are modular and
can be mixed and matched - GPCR pathways have short term effects in cells by
quickly modifying existing proteins or enzymes or
ion channels, but also long term effects
involving change in transcription leading to
differentiation
42General Structure of G Protein-coupled Receptor
- G Protein-coupled receptors are a large and
diverse families with a common structure and
function - GPCR activate exchange of GTP for GDP on the
a-submit of a Trimeric G protein
- G-protein coupled receptors consists of
hydrophobic amino acids that allow proteins to be
stabled anchored in the hydrophobic core of the
membrane (seven membrane spanning domains) - Loops C3 and C4 are involved in binding to G
protein. In some cases, C 2 is also involved - There are several sub-families of G
protein-coupled receptors with high conservation
of amino acid sequence and structure
43Switching Mechanism for Monomeric Trimeric G
Proteins
- External signals induce two types of cellular
responses - Change the activity or function of specific
enzymes or proteins - Change the amount of proteins in the cell via
modification of transcription factors - Trimeric and monomeric G proteins
- GTPase Switch Proteins, belong to GTPase
superfamily proteins. These guanine
nucleotide-binding proteins are turned on when
bound to GTP and turned off when bound to GDP.
The signal-induced conversion from the inactive
to active state is mediated by a guanine
nucleotide-exchange factor (GEF)
- Subsequent binding of GTP induces a
conformational change in two segments of the G
protein, switch I and II, allowing the protein to
bind to and activate other downstream signaling
proteins - The rate of GTP hydrolysis is enhanced by
GTPase-activating protein (GAP) and a regulator
of G protein signaling protein (RGS)
44Structural Model of Complex Formed between
Epinephrine the b-Adrenergic Receptor
- The amino acids that form the interior of
different G protein-coupled receptors are
diverse, allowing different receptors to bind to
very different small molecules
- b-adrenergic receptor binding to epinephrine
- Three a-helices are involved in binding of
b-adrenergic receptor to epinephrine - Examples Binding of epinephrine to
b-adrenergenic receptor in the liver and adipose
tissue results in liberation of glucose and fatty
acids. In heart muscle cells, binding of
epinephrine to b-adrenergeic receptor results in
increase of heart contraction rate
45(No Transcript)
46Studies with Chimeric Adrenergic Receptors
Identifying the Long C3 Loop as Critical to
Interaction with G Proteins
- Although all a- and b-adrenergic receptors bind
to epinephrine, different receptors coupled to
different G proteins that induces different down
stream signaling pathways, leading to different
responses - This slide describes an experiment demonstrating
that the specificity of G protein is determined
by the cytosol-facing C3 loop between helices 5
and 6 of the receptor
47Activation of Effector Proteins Associated with G
Protein-Coupled Receptors
- G protein-coupled receptors activate exchange of
GTP for GDP on the a subnit of a trimeric G
protein - A built-in feedback mechanism is present to make
sure that the effector protein is only activated
for a short period of time
48Activation of G Protein Occurs within Seconds of
Ligand Binding in Amoeba Cells
The experiment shown above is fluorescence
energy transfer experiment
CFP cyan fluorescent protein, excitation at
440nm, emision at 490 nm YFP yellow fluorescent
protein, excitation at 490 nm, emision at 527 nm
cAMP is a ligand of G protein coupled receptor in
Dictyostellium discoideum cells
49- Different G proteins are activated by different
GPCRs and in turn regulate different effector
proteins - Adenylyl cyclase and phospholipase C are
different effectors
50Activation of the Muscarinic Acetylcholine
Reporter and Its Effector K Channel in Heart
Muscle
- G protein-coupled receptors can activate ion
channels - Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor is in cardic
muscle cells which control muscle contraction - Gbg submits of the G protein activate K channel
protein by opening the channel
51Hormone-Induced Activation and Inhibition of
Adenylyl Cyclase in Adipose Cells
- Binding of ligan to Gas or Gai protein activates
or inhibits adenylyl cyclase to synthesize cAMP - cAMP, in turn, activates cAMP-dependent protein
kinase that phosphorylate target proteins - PGE1 postaglandin
52Mammalian Adenylyl Cyclases with Gas.GTP
- Structural studies established how Gas.GTP binds
to and activate adenylyl cyclase - Interaction of Gas.GTP with the catalytic domains
of adenylyl cyclase - The ligand of the system is epinephrine
53cAMP Activates Protein Kinase A by Releasing
Catalytic Submits
- cAMP-dependent protein kinase has regulatory and
catalytic submits - Binding of cAMP to the regulatory submit results
in release of the catalytic submits
54Synthesis and Degradation of Glycogen Is
Regulated by Hormone-Induced Activation of
Protein Kinase A
- Adding of glucose to glycogen is catalyzed by
glycogen synthetase, and removal of glucose
moiety from glycogen is by glycogen phosphorylase - Glucose-1-phosphate is converted to G-6-P in the
liver and then de-phosphorylated by phosphatase
and released into blood stream - Epinephrine-stimulated activation of adenylyl
cyclase resulted in increase of cAMP which in
turn activates protein kinase leading to increase
of G-1-P from glycogen
glycogenolysis
55Regulation of Glycogen Metabolism by cAMP in
Liver and Muscle Cells
56cAMP-mediated activation of protein kinase A
produces diverse responses in different cell
types. It is phosphorylated at ser and thr in a
motif X-Arg-(Arg/Lys)-X-(Ser/Thr)-F where X
denote any AA and F, hydrophobic AA
57A Phosphorylation Cascade
58Amplification of an External Signal Downstream
from a Cell-Surface Receptor
59Several Mechanisms Down-Regulate Signaling from
GPCR
- There are several mechanisms contribute to
termination of cellular responses to hormone
mediated by b-adrenergic receptors and the G
protein coupled receptors coupled to Gas - The affinity of the receptor to its ligand
decreases when GDP bound to Gas is replaced with
GTP. This increase in Kd of the receptor-hormone
complex enhances the dissociation of ligand from
the receptors and thereby limits the number of
Gas protein that are active - The intrinsic GTPase activity of Gas converts the
bound GTP to GDP, resulting in inactivation of
the protein and decreased adenylyl cyclase
activity - The rate of hydrolysis of GTP bound to Gas is
enhanced when Gas binds to adenylyl cyclase thus
by decrease the duration of cAMP production - cAMP phosphodiesterase acts to hydrolyse cAMP
- Receptors can also be down regulated by feedback
repression because the phosphorylated Gas protein
can not be activated by ligand again - Heterologous desentization
60Synthesis of Second Messangers DAG and IP3
- Ca ions play an essential role in regulating
cellular responses to external signals and
internal metabolic changes - A small changes in levels of cytosolic Ca ions
induces a variety of cellular respomnses
inclusing hormone secretion by endocrine cells,
secretion of digestive enzymes by pancretic
exocrine cells and contraction of muscle - Acetylcholine stimulates G-protein receptors in
secretory cells of pancreas to rise Ca ions
- Analogues to Adenylyl cyclase, Phospholipase C is
also an effector protein in this system, and DAG
and IP3 are the second messengers
61IP3/DAP Pathway and the Elevation of Cytosolic
Ca
62Protein Kinases
- There are following protein kinases involved in
signal transduction - Protein Kinase A (PKA) PKA is activated by cAMP
- Protein Kinase B (PKB, Akt) PKB is activated by
receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) - Protein Kinase C (PKC) Activated by DAG
(diacylglycerol) - Protein Kinase G (PKG) Activated by cGMP
63Some Receptors and Signal-Transduction Proteins
Are Localized
- Clustering of membrane proteins mediated by
adapter domains - Distribution of signals release in the
presynaptic cells and receptors in the
postsynaptic cells is the best example clustering
of receptors - Proteins containing PDZ domains play fundamental
role in organizing the plasma membrane of the
postsynaptic cell - The PDZ domain was identified as a common element
in several cytosolic proteins that bind to
integral membrane proteins - The PDZ protein is a small domain containing 90
amino acid residues, that bind to three-residue
sequences at the C-terminus of target proteins.
Some PDZ domains bind to the sequence
Ser/Thr-X-F, others bind to F-X-F, where X
denotes any amino acid and F denotes any
hydrophobic amino acid - Most receptors contain multiple domains that
binds to PDZ. This interactions permit
clustering of membrane proteins into complexes
64Clustering of Membrane Proteins Mediated by
Cytosolic Adaptor Proteins Containing Protein
Binding Domains
- Three dimensional surface structure of a PDZ
domain showing the backbone of the bound peptide
shown in red - Regions in the PDZ domain that bind to the COO-
group and the side chain to the C-terminal
residues colored in yellow blue
65Clustering of Membrane Proteins Mediated by
Cytosolic Adaptor Proteins Containing Protein
Binding Domains
- Schematic diagram of protein-protein interactions
that cluster several different membrane proteins
in a postsynaptic segment of a nerve cell and
anchor the resulting complex to cytoskeletal
actin filaments - PDZ adaptor protein Ank ankyrin repeats
Neuroligin adhesive protein that interacts with
component of the extracellular matrix
66Activation of Gene Transcription by G
Protein-Coupled Receptors (I)
- Intracellular signal pathways (such as GPCR
pathway) can result in short-term effect (seconds
to minutes) to modulate the pre-existing enzymes
or long-term (hours to days) effect to modulate
gene expression leading to cell proliferation or
differentiation - Membrane-localized tubby transcription factor is
released by activation of phospholipase C - Tubby gene is expressed primarily in certain
areas of the brain involved in control of eating
behavior - Tubby gene encodes a protein that contains a
DNA-binding domain and a transcription-activation
domain - Tubby protein is localized near the plasma
membrane which binds to PIP2
67Activation of Gene Transcription by G
Protein-Coupled Receptors (II)
- Binding of hormone to Go- or Gq-coupled receptors
resulted in activation of phospholipase C leading
to hydrolysis of PIP2 and release tubby protein
into cytosol - Tubby then enters the nucleus and activates
transcription of a still unknown gene or genes - Tubby protein(s) may regulate the expression of
the following genes - Up-regulation erythroid diffrentiation factor 1
(erdr 1) and capase 1 genes - Down-regulation tripartite motif proteinss 3
(Trim 3), cholecys-tokinin 2 receptor (Cck 2) etc.
68Activation of Gene Transcription by G
Protein-Coupled Receptors (III)
- Binding of ligand to Gs protein-coupled receptor
results in activation of adenylyl cyclase leading
to production of cAMP - Activation of Protein kinase A by cAMP
- The activated protein kinase A is translocated
into the nucleus - Activated protein kinase A phosphorylates CREB
(c-AMP-response element binding protein) - CREB and CBP/P300 together activate the
transcription of the responsive genes (c-fos,
neurotrophin, brian-derived neutrophic factor
(BDNF), tyrosine hydroxylase genes)
69Receptor Tyrosine Kinase
- Ligands for receptor tyrosine kinases are soluble
or membrane bound peptide or peptide hormones
including NGF (Nerve growth factor), PDGF
(plated-derived growth factor), FGF (fibroblast
growth factor), EGF (epidermal growth factor)
and insulin - Ligand induced activation of RTK stimulates
tyrosine kinase activity, which subsequently
stimulates the Ras-MAK pathways and several other
signal-transduction pathways - RTK signaling pathways have a wide spectrum of
functions including regulation of cell
proliferation and differentiation, promotion of
cell survival and modulation of cellular
metabolism - Some studies have indicated that RTKs are
involved in human cancers - Constitutively activated Her2 (a receptor for
EGF-like protein, a mutant form) enables
uncontrolled proliferation of cancer cells in the
absence of EGF - Over-production of wild type EGF receptor in
certain human breast cancer results in
proliferation of cancer cells at low EGF levels
that do not stimulate normal stimulation
70Ligand Binding Leads to Transphosphorylation of
Receptor Tyrosine Kinases
- RTKs contain an extracellular ligand bind domain,
a single transmembrane domain, regulatory domain
and a cytosolic domain with a protein kinase
activity - Upon binding to one molecule of ligand, the
receptor forms a dimer - Some monomeric ligands, including FGF, bind
tightly to heparin sulfate that enhances ligand
binding to the monomeric receptor and formation
of a dimeric ligand-receptor complex - Binding of ligand to the receptor will result in
the kinase in one submit to phosphorylate one or
more tyrosine residues in the activation lip near
the catalytic site in the other submit. This
leads to a conformational change that facilitates
binding of ATP
71- The resulting enhanced kinase activity then
phosphorylates other sites in the cytosolic
domain of the receptor. This ligand-induced
activation of RTK kinase activity is analogous to
the activation of the JAK kinase associated with
cytokine receptors - As in signaling by cytokins receptors,
phosphotyrosine residues in the activated RTKs
serve as docking sites for proteins involving in
downstream of signal-transduction. These adaptor
proteins contain SH2, PTB or SH3 domains but have
no intrinsic enzymatic or signaling activity
72Characteristics of the Common Classes of Receptor
Tyrosine Kinase
Structural Features
Examples
Class
Cysteine-rich sequence
I
EGF receptor, NEU/HER2, HER3
II
Insulin receptor, IGF-I receptor
Cysteine-rich sequences disulfide-linked
heterotetramers
III
PDGF receptors, c-Kit
Contain 5 immunoglobulin-like domains as well as
kinase insert
FGF receptors
IV
Contain 5 immunoglobulin-like domains as well as
kinase insert acidic domain
V
VEGF receptor
Contain 7 immunoglobulin-like domains and the
kinase insert domain
VI
HGF and SF receptors
Heterodimeric like the class II receptors
VII
Neurotropin receptor family and NGF receptor
Contain no or few cysteine-rich domain NGFR has
leucine rich domain
73Down Regulation of RTK Signaling by Endocytosis
and Degradation
- There are two mechanisms that down regulate RTK
signaling - Ligand induced endocytosis Ligand induced
endocytosis of the ligand-receptor complex - Sorting of the internalized receptor-ligand to
lysosome for degradation
74Ras, a GTPase Switch Protein, Cycles Between
Active and Inactive States
- Ras is a monomeric GTP-binding switch protein
that alternates between an active on state with
a bound GTP and an inactive off state with a
bound GDP. This is like the trimeric G proteins
in the G protein coupled receptor system - Ras activation is accelerated by a guanine
nucleotide-exchange factor (GEF) which binds to
Ras-GDP complex causing dissociation of bound GDP
from Ras - Due to the presence of high levels of GTP in the
cytosol, GTP binds quickly to the empty Ras to
form Ras-GTP - Deactivation of Ras-GTP requires the assistance
of GTPase-activating protein (GAP). GAP binds to
specific phosphotyrosine in the activated RTKs so
that it can get close to the Ras-GTP to exert its
accelerating effect on GTP hydrolysis - Both trimeric G proteins and Ras are members of a
family of intracellular GTP-binding switch
proteins referred to as GTPase superfamily - Mutation of Ras oncogene (i.e., gly 12 to any
amino acid except Pro) results in blocking to GDP
and thus locks Ras in activated form
75Receptor Tyrosine Kinases Are Linked to Ras by
Adapter Proteins
- Cultured fibroblast cells can be induced to
proliferate by PDGF and EGF, and microinjection
of anti-Ras antibody into these cells blocked
proliferation - Injection of RasD, a constitutively active mutant
Ras that hydrolyzes GTP very inefficiently and
thus perisists in the active state, causes the
cell to proliferate in the absence of growth
factors - GRB2 and Sos provide the key links with the Ras
- SH2 in GRB2 binds to a phosphotyrosine of the
activated receptor. GRB2 has two SH3 domains
which bind and activate Sos - Sos son of sevenless protein
76- Sos is a guanine nucleotide-exchange protein
(GEF) which catalyzes conversion of inactive
GDP-bound Ras to the activate GTP-bound form
77Key Signal-Transduction Proteins Downstream from
RTK
- The compound eye of Drosophila is composed of
about 800 individual eyes called ommatidia. Each
ommatidium consists of 22 cells 8 of which are
photosensitive neurons called retinula, or called
as R cells designated R1-R8 - Sevenless (Sev) encode an RTK that regulate the
development of R7. Mutant of Sev gene fail to
development R7 ommatidia - A protein called Boss (Bride of Sevenless) is
expressed on the surface of the R8 cells. This
protein is the ligand for the Sev RTK on the
surface of the neighboring R7 precursor - Mutants Boss or Sev RTK that do not express Boss
or Sev RTK fail to develop R7 cells
78Genetic Studies Reveal that Activation of Ras
Induces Development of R7 Photoreceptor in the
Drosophila Eye
Temperature sensitive mutants were used to
demonstrate the importance of Boss and Sev on R7
neuron development RasD constitutive expression
of an activated Ras
79Binding of Sos Protein to Inactive Ras Causes a
Conformational Change That Activates Ras
- The adaptor protein GBR2 contains two SH3 domains
which bind to Sos in addition to SH2 domain - SH3 domains are present in a large number of
proteins involved in intracellular signaling - Figure in the left shows the 3-D structure of SH3
interaction with a target protein through the
proline residues -
80Structures of Ras Bound to GDP, Sos Protein and
GTP
- Binding of Sos to inactive Ras causes a large
conformational change that permits release of GDP
and binding of GTP, forming active Ras. GAP,
which accelerates GTP hydrolysis, is localized
near Ras-GTP by binding to active RTKs
81Kinase Cascade That Transmits Signals Downstream
from Activated Ras to MAP Kinase
RTK Ras Raf MEK MAP kinase
82- Raf, a serine/threonine kinase, is activated by
Ras-GTP - Activated Raf activates MEK by phosphorylating
MEK - Activated MEK phosphorylates and activates MAP
kinase - Activated MAP phosphorylates another proteins in
the nucleus including transcription factors - MEK MAP and ERK kinase
83(No Transcript)
84Induction of Gene Transcription by Activated MAP
Kinase
- MAP kinase induces the expression of genes
including c-fos gene by modifying two
transcription factors ternary complex factor
(TCF) and serum response factor (SRF) - It is done through activating p90RSK in cytosol
and both the activated MAP kinase and p90RSK
activates TCF and SRF
85- TGFb Receptors and the Direct Activation of Smads
- Cytokine Receptors and JAK/STAT Pathways
86TGFb Receptors and the Direct Activation of Smads
- TGFb (Transforming Growth Factor ß) superfamily
proteins play important roles in regulating
development of vertebrates and invertebrates - Bone Morphogenic Protein (BMP) is one of the TGFb
superfamily important in regulating formation of
mesoderm and the earliest blood forming cells - TGFb-1 is another member of the TGFb superfamily
proteins which can induce a transformed phenotype
of certain cells in culture - There are three human TGFb isoforms known to have
potent anti-proliferative effects on many types
of mammalian cells. Mutation of TGFb will result
in releasing cells from growth inhibition
(frequently occurs in human tumors) - TGFb also promotes expression of cell-adhesion
molecules and extracellular matrix molecules - TGFb can induce some cells to produce growth
factor to overcome TGFb-induced growth
inhibition. This is why it was considered as a
growth factor initially
87TGFb Is Formed by Cleavage of a Secreted Inactive
Precursor
- TGFb consists of three protein isoforms, TGFb1,
TGFb2 and TGFb3 - Each isoform is encoded by a unique gene in
tissue specific and developmental stage specific
fashion - Each TGFß is synthesized as a larger precursor
4 antiparallel ß strands
88TGFß Receptor Signaling
- TGFß TGFß-1, -2, -3.
- TGFß receptors type RI, RII, RIII
- Smad R-Smad, Co-Smad, I-Smad
- SnoN Ski, I-Smad feedback control
89TGFb Signaling Receptors Have Serine/Threonine
Kinase Activity
- TGFb signaling receptor is isolated by first
conjugating I125-labeled TGFb to receptors on the
cell membrane and then fractionate the membrane
proteins to isolate the membrane protein that
associates with I125-TGFb - Three different polypeptide with apparent
molecular weights of 55, 85 and 280 kDa were
purified, referred to as types RI, RII and RIII
TGFb receptors - Type RIII TGFb receptor is a cell-surface
proteoglycan, also called b-glycan which bind and
concentrate TGFb near the cell surface - Type RI and type RII receptors are dimeric
transmembrane proteins with serine/threonine
kinases as part of their cytosolic domains - RII is a constitutively active kinase that
phosphrylates itself in the absence of TGFb - Binding of TGFß induces the formation of two
copies each of RI and RII. A RII then
phophorylates serine/threonine of RI adjacent to
the cytoplasm and thus activate the RI kinase
activity
90Activated Type I TGFb Receptors Phosphorylate
Smad Transcription Factors
- Smads are transcription factors. There are three
types of Smads, receptor-regulated Smads
(R-Smads), co-Smads, inhibitory Smads (I-Smads) - R-Smads contain two domains, MH1 and MH2,
separated by a flexible linker region. The
N-terminus of the MH1 contains a specific DNA
binding segment and a NLS sequence - When R-Smads are in inactive state, the NLS is
masked and the MH1 and MH2 domains associate in a
way that they can not bind to DNA or to a co-Smad - Phosphorylation of three serine residues near the
C-terminus of a R-Smad (Smad2 or Smad3) by
activated type I TGFb receptors separates the
domains, allowing binding of importin b to the
NLS
Plasmanogene activator inhibitor API
91- Simultaneously a complex containing two molecules
of Smad3 (or Smad2) and one molecule of a co-Smad
(Smad4) forms in the cytosol - The complex is stabilized by binding two
phosphorylated serines in both the Smad3 and the
Smad4 MH2 domains - The importin bbound heteromeric R-Smad3/Smad4
complex will translocate into nucleus - After importin b dissociates from the complex in
the nucleus, the Smad2/Smad4 or Smad3/Smad4 will
cooperate with other transcription factors to
turn on specific target gene - In the nucleus, R-Smads are continuously being
dephosphorylated, which results in the
dissociation of the R-Smad /co-Smad complex and
export of these Smads from the nucleus.
Therefore, the concentration of the active Smads
in the nucleus closely reflects the levels of the
activated TGFb receptors on the cell surface - One of the genes that is regulated by this signal
transduction pathway is plasmanogene activator
inhibitor (API)
92Oncoproteins and I-Smads Regulate Smad Signaling
via Negative Feedback Loop
- Smad signaling is regulated by additional
intracellular proteins including SnoN and Ski
(Ski stands for Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Institute - These proteins are oncoproteins since they cause
abnormal cell proliferation when over expressed
in cultured fibroblasts
HDAC histone deacety-lase
- SnoN and Ski can bind to Smad2/Smad4 or
Smad3/Smad4 complex after TGFb stimulation - Binding of SnoN and Ski to Smad2/Smad4 or
Smad3/Smad4 will block transcription activation
of the target gene and renders cells resistant to
the growth inhibition induced by TGFb - PAI-1 gene encodes plasminogen activator
inhibitor-1
93Cytokines Influence Development of Many Cell Types
- Cytokines form a family of small secreted
proteins of about 160 amino acids that control
many aspects of growth and differentiation of
specific types of cells - Prolactin induces epithelial cells lining the
immature ductules of the mammary gland to
differentiate into acinar cells to produce milk
proteins secreted into the ducts during
pregnancy, - Interleukin 2 (IL-2) is essential for
proliferation and functioning of the T-cells of
the immune system - IL-4 is essential for formation and function of
antibody-producing B cells - Interferon a is produced and secreted by many
types of cells following virus infection. Then
secreted interferon acts nearby cells to induce
enzymes that render these cells more resistant to
virus infection - Many cytokines induce formation of important
blood cells. Granulocyte colony stimulating
factor (G-CSF) induce progenitor cells in bone
marrow to differentiate into granulocyte,
thrombopoietin acts on megakaryocyte progenitors
to differentiate into megakaryocytes which then
fragmented into cell pieces called platelets
94Cytokine Receptor Signaling
- Similar to Receptor Tyrosine Kinase signaling
- Receptor dimerization
- Phosporylation and activation of JAK kinase
- Binding of STAT to p-Receptor via SH2 domain
- Phosphorylation of STAT by JAK kinase
- Translocation of p-STAT into nucleus
- Activation of transcription
- Feedback regulation SHP1 and SOCS
95Cytokine Receptors and Jak-Stat Pathway
- The cytosolic domain of the cytokine receptor
associates with a family of cytosolic protein
tyrosine kinase, the JAK kinase - Receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) also contain
intrinsic protein tyrosine kinase activity in
their cytosolic domains - The mechanisms by which cytokine receptors and
receptor tyrosine kinases become activated by
ligand are very similar, and there is
considerable overlap by activation of receptors
in both cases - The figure on the left shows the dimerization of
cytokine receptor after binding to EGF
96Cytokine Receptors and Receptor Tyrosine Kinases
Share Many Signaling Features
- Ligand binding to both cytokine receptors and
receptor tyrosine kinases triggers formation of
functional dimeric receptors - In some cases, the ligand induces association of
two monomeric receptor subunits diffusing in the
plan of the plasma membrane in other cases, the
receptor is a dimer in the absence of ligand and
ligand binding alters the conformation of the
extracellular domains of the two subunits - In either cases, formation of the functional
dimeric receptor causes the cytosolic kinases to
phosphorylate the second kinase
Autophosphorylation
97The Role of Erythropoietin in the Formation of
Red Blood Cells (Erythrocytes)
- Erythroid progenitor cells colony-forming units
erythroid (CFU-E) are derived from
hematopoietic stem cells, which also give rise to
progenitor cells of other blood cell types - Binding of erythropoietin (Epo) to its receptor
on a CFU-E induces transcription of several genes
encoding proteins preventing apoptosis of CFU-E
and allow the cells to go through several rounds
of proliferation - Epo also stimulate expression of specific genes
leading to differentiation of CFU-E into red
blood cells
98Structure of Erythropoietin Bound to the
Extracellular Domains of a Dimeric Erythropoietin
Receptor
- All cytokines have a similar tertiary structure
consisting of four long conserved a helicies
folded together in a specific orientation - Similarly, all cytokine receptors have quite
similar structures, with their extracellular
domains consisted of two subdomains, each of
which contains seven conserved b strands folded
together in a characteristic fashion - One molecule of erythropoietin binds to two
monomers of EpoR
- All cytokines and their receptors have similar
structures and activate similar signal pathways
99Overview of Signal-Transduction Pathways
Triggered by Ligand Binding to the Erythropoietin
Receptor, a Typical Cytokine Receptor
GRB2, a linker protein (adaptor protein)
All of these four pathways lead to eventual
increase or decrease in transcription of target
genes
100Both the Erythropoietin Receptor and JAK2 Are
Essential for Development of Erythrocytes
- Mice embryos in which both alleles of EpoR or
JAK2 gene are knocked out, can develop normally
until embryonic day 12 and at which they begin to
die of anemia due to lack of erythrocyte-mediated
transport of oxygen to fetal organ - These results suggest that EpoR and JAK2 are
required for erythrocyte development in early
embryonic development
101JAK-STAT Signaling Pathway
- Once the JAK kinases become activated, they
phosphorylate several tyrosine residues on the
cytosolic domain of the receptor. Some of the
phosphorylated tyrosine residues serve as binding
sites for a group of transcription factors, STATs - All STAT proteins contain an N-terminal SH2
domain that binds to phosphotyrosine in the
receptors cytosolic domain, a central DNA
binding domain and a C-terminal domain with a
critical tyrosine residue - Once the STAT is bound to the receptor, the
C-terminal tyrosine is phosphorylated by an
associated JAK kinase - The phosphorylated STAT dissociates from the
receptor, and two activated STATs form a dimer
and then enters the nucleus
102Signaling from Cytokine Receptors Is Modulated by
Negative Signals (Feedback Loop) (I)
- Signal-induced transcription of target genes can
not last for too long and needs de-sensitized - Signaling from cytokine receptor is usually
dampened by two classes of proteins short term
regulation by SHP1 phosphatase and long term
regulation by SOCS proteins - SHP1 Phosphatase
- Mutant mice lacking SHP1 phosphatase die because
of producing excess amount of erythrocytes and
other blood cells. These results suggest that
SHP1 negatively regulates signaling from several
types of cytokine receptors in several types of
progenitor cells - Binding of an SH2 domain SHP1 to a particular
phospho-tyrosine in the activated receptor
unmasks its phosphatase catalytic site and
position it near the phosphrylated tyrosine in
the lip region of JAK2 - Removal of the phosphate from this tyrosine
inactivates the JAK kinase
103Signaling from Cytokine Receptors Is Modulated by
Negative Signals (Feedback Loop) (II)
- Signal blocking and protein degradation induced
by SOCS proteins - STAT proteins induce a class of small proteins
termed SOCS proteins. These proteins terminate
signaling from cytokine receptors. These
negative regulators are also known as CIS
proteins - CIS proteins act in two ways to negatively
regulate cytokine receptor stimulated signaling - The SH2 domain in several SOCS proteins bind to
phosphotyrosines on an activated receptor,
preventing binding of other SH2-containing
signaling proteins and thus inhibiting receptor
signaling - SOCS-1 can bind to critical phosphotyrosine in
the activation lip of activated JAK2 kinase
thereby inhibiting its catalytic activity - All SOCS proteins contain a SOCS box that
recruits components of E3 ubiquitin ligases. As
a result of SOCS-1 binding, JAK2 becomes
polyubiquitinated and then degraded in
proteasomes and thus terminate the signaling
permanently
104Two Mechanisms for Terminating Signal
Transduction from the Erythropoietin Receptor
105Components Modularity of Major Signaling
Pathways
106Cross Talk in Signal Transduction Pathways
- For cells to carry out all the cellular
functions, different signal transduction pathways
may communicate among one another. This is
called signal transduction pathway cross talk - Examples
- There two types of estrogen receptors (i)
nuclear ER (ii) membrane bound ER. While
nuclear ER activates the expression of
estrogen-responsive gene, membrane bound ER
activates protein kinases to activate steroid
receptor co-activator (SRCs) and CREB binding
protein-associated factor by phosphorylation
(Reading list VII Cross talk between membrane
and nuclear pathways by steroid hormone) - cAMP-responsive genes are modulated by CREB (cAMP
responsive binding protein), CREM (cAMP
responsive modulator protein) and ICER (inducible
cAMP early repressor). CREM gene can encode two
isoforms, CERM and ICRE, by differential use of
prompters. While CREB and CREM activate the
expression of cAMP-responsive genes, ICER
represses the expression of these genes. The
expression of ICER is regulated NGF (Reading List
VII Cross-talk in signal transduction
Ras-dependent induction of ICER by NGF)
107More Examples of Cross Talk of Signals
- Win.Wingless and TGF-b/BMP
- TGF-b/BMP and Hedgehog
- Estrogen receptor and progesterone receptor
- Angiotensin II receptor between AT1 and At2
receptors - Androgen reeptor and vitemin D receptor
- Chemokine receptors and epidermal growth factor
receptor - Epidermal growth factor receptor and c-Met
- FGF-receptor tyrosine kinase and G-protein
- Glucocorticoid receptor, C/EBP, HNF3 and protein
kinase A - GABA receptors and dopamine D5
- FGF receptor and N/E-cadherin
- RTK-RSK
- PKC, cAMP and MAP kinase