Title: Intercellular and intracellular signals
1Intercellular and intracellular signals
- Primary signal molecules small, apolar mol's,
unstable compounds, small and large water-soluble
molecules hormons, paracrine-, autocrine- and
juxtacrine (contact dependent) factors growth-,
death-, survival and differentiation factors - Receptorsintracellular and cell surface
receptorsreceptors with DNA binding,
transcription regulating activity, G-protein
coupled receptors, ion channel-linked receptors,
enzyme-linked receptors - Second messengers (intracellular signal
molecules)cAMP, IP3, DAG, Ca ions, protein
kinases/phosphatases, ubiquitin-ligases,
proteases, (scaffold proteins, cytoskeletal
structures, motor proteins) - TargetsDNA - general transcription factor
complexes, histon proteins (nucleosome),
metabolic enzymes, RNA processing mechanisms
(splicesomes), extracellular matrix
2Growth-, survival- and differentiation factors
- On the basis of their biological activity we
distinquish growth-, survival and differentiation
factors - Growth factors are mitogenic, elicit
proliferation of the cell type,survival factors
are needed for prolongation of life,differentiati
on factors trigger irreversible changes in
morphology and metabolism (some of them are
death-factors, as terminal differentiation in
certain cell types leads to programmed
death)death-factors, triggering programmed
death, lysis or necrosis of cells - These factors are pleiotropic their effect
depends on cell type, stage of differentiation,
presence of other factors, etc. - Survival factors can be growth factors for other
cell types or cause apoptosis in another cell
types. - In general all these factors are referred to as
growth factors (GF)
3Receptor types
Ion channel-linked receptors regulate the traffic
or transport of specific ions. Ligand binding
elicits opening of the channels. G-proteins
coupled receptors activate G-protein trimers and
indirectly (through the activity of G proteins)
induce the synthesis of second messengers, like
cAMP, IP3 and DAG. Ligand-binding induces
oligo-merization of enzyme-linked (and signaling
protein-linked) receptors, which leads to
activation of different enzymes and second
messengers.
4Receptor types
1. Receptor tyrosine kinases A number of growth
factor-, cytokine-, and some hormone receptors
exhibit tyrosine-kinase activity Ligand-binding
induces dimerization, activate the latent kinase,
which results in the mutual phosphorylation of
receptor subunits Second messenger molecules are
attracted to the phosphotyrosine residues of the
receptor The kinase also phosphorylates these,
activating these second messengers
platelet-derived growth factor
PDGF receptor
5Receptor types
1. Receptor tyrosine kinases A number of growth
factor-, cytokine-, and some hormone receptors
exhibit tyrosine-kinase activity Ligand-binding
induces dimerization, activate the latent kinase,
which results in the mutual phosphorylation of
receptor subunits Second messenger molecules are
attracted to the phosphotyrosine residues of the
receptor The kinase also phosphorylates these,
activating these second messengers In case of
these receptors the subunit(s) of the receptor
exhibit(s) kinase activity
6Receptor types
2. Tyrosine kinase-linked receptors Other
receptors are linked to kinases. The kinase is a
separate molecule, which associates with the
receptor after ligand-induced dimerization. The
kinases phosphorylate each other, subunits of the
receptor and second messenger molecules,
attracted to the active receptor
The receptor subunits have no kinase activity
receptor activation leads to kinase activation
7Channel-linked receptors
- Activation of these receptors leads to the
opening of specific ion channels - These receptors can be localized in the
plasmamembrane or in intracellular membranes
(eg. vitamin D3 receptor, IP3 receptor) - ATP-gated receptors (P2X) playroles in
contractility, tone, nociception, etc. are
specific for calcium or sodium ions -
P2X
vitamin D3 receptor
8Channel-linked receptors(ligand-gated channels)
- A number of neurotransmitters have receptors with
ion channel activity (cys loop type of
receptors). These can be specific for Cl ions
(eg. GABA receptors, histamine receptor) or for
cations (nicotinic acetylcholin R, 5HT).
9Channel-linked receptors(ligand-gated channels)
- NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartic acid) receptor is one
member of the glutamate receptor family. It has 4
transmembrane domains. Splice variants are
present in different cell types. It is a Ca(Na)/K
pump.
10Mitogenic factors
- Each cell type have characteristic GF receptors.
Only these can induce proliferation of the cell. - Mitogenic factors are highly specific for cell
type and degree of differentiation. - The same factor might have other effects on other
cell types (pleiotropic effect). - (Tumor necrosis factor, TNF is a mitogenic factor
for fibroblasts, but cytostatic on melanoma
cells, induces differentiation of myeloid cell,
dedifferentiation in chondrocytes, inhibits
diffferentiation in myoblasts and kills different
tumor cell types, oligodendrocytes, endothelial
cells - Mitogenic factors colony stimulating factors
(CSF) for mieloid progenitors, interleukin-2
(IL-2) T-cells, IL-6 B-cells, erythropoetin
reticulocytes
11Signaling pathways
Receptors frequently induce several signaling
paths, which can interfere, synergize or modulate
each other. Some pathways are characteristic to
certain cell types. Membrane-associated
proteins are very important in
signaling. Mitogenic factors activate
themitogen-activated protein-kinase
(MAPK)pathways These are parallel
paths,serving different signals.All activate
transcriptionfactors (eg. Ap1)
12Signaling is an amplification cascade
- Each step amplifies the signal, more and more
active molecules are generated - Reversible phosphorylation is a key element of
the signaling process - Kinases phosphorylate tyrosine, serine,
threonine amino-acids of proteins - Activated proteins are either dephosphorylated
by phosphatases or they are degraded (after
ubiquinylation)
13Signaling of receptor tyrosine kinases
- Mitogenic (growth) factors activate one of the
mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways, each
representing a chain of proteins with kinase
activity.
14Signaling of receptor tyrosine kinases
- The signal is amplified by each step. Activity of
other enzymes are also modified by the kinases
and other signal pathways might also be
activated. The targets are DNA-binding
transcription factors.
15Mutations of the receptors or signaling molecules
leads to disease
- Members of the FGF family of receptors from
homo-and heterodimers with different
specificities. - Mutations affecting the ligand-binding domain
might cause severe disease
16Signaling of kinase-linked receptors
- Some growth factor receptors signal through the
activation of protein kinases. - Ligand binding activates receptors. The kinase is
a separate molecule (JAK), which associates with
the activated receptor (ligand-induced
dimerization). Adapter molecules (eg. STAT) are
attracted to the phosphorylated receptor and get
activated (phosphorylated) by the kinase. - Activated adapters dimerizeand are translocated
into the nucleus. - Their DNA binding modifies activity of many
genes (they function astranscription factors), -
17Signaling of kinase-linked receptors
18Signaling of kinase-linked immune receptors
- Ligand-specific and signaling subunits build up
these receptors. The same signaling subunit can
serve many receptors with different ligand
specificity. - This may cause competition of different ligands
for the receptors. -
19Insulin receptor and signaling
- Activation of the insulin receptor triggers PI
phosphorylation. An enzyme complex is assembled
on the inner surface of the membrane. - The activated kinases unlimately change the
balance of glucose metabolism (in an opposite
way what we learned aboutthe effect of glucagon)
20(No Transcript)
21Differentiation factors
- A differentiation factors like mitogenic
factors highly specific for their target cells - Receptors of differentiation factors is produced
only in certain stages of differentiation and
might disappear after one or several steps - Differentiation factors are of different chemical
nature mostly proteins, but steroids and
retinoids are also potent morphogens - A typical differentiation factor, transforming
growth factor (TGF) is a member of a superfamily
of proteins (activins, inhibins, TGFs, bone
morphogeic proteins, BMPs, etc.).Their structure,
signaling pathways, functions remained highly
preserved during evolution
22TGF/TGF.R signaling
- Ligand binding activates the receptor
(ligand-induced dimerization). Adapter molecules
(SMADs) are attracted to the phosphorylated
receptor and get activated (phosphorylated). - TGF.R family members use specific Smad proteins
for second messengers - Smad1 to 3 and 5are signal trans-ducers, Smad4
is a co-Smad, while Smad6 and-7 are inhibitors
of Smad signals - The pathway is verysimilar to the STAT pathway
23Survival factors and their receptors
- The population of certain cell types can be
controlled at the level of proliferation or at
the degree of survival - 1. if GF is not present, the cells are living in
G1 or G0 phase (no DNA synthesis). Proliferation
is triggered by the presence of GF. - 2. GF is always present, the cells are
continuously proliferating, however, their
lifespan is limited (terminal dfferentiation
leads to apoptosis) - Apoptosis of these cells can only be prevented
by survival factors - Hemopoetic stem cells (HSC) require stem cells
factor (SCF),interleukin-3 (IL-3), and flt-3
ligand (FL) for survival. Absence of these
factors leads to death, not only growth-arrest. - Survival factors NGF (nerve GF) neurons, IGF-1
(insulin-like GF) many cell types, endothelin
endothel cells, BAFF B-cells, leptin eozinophil
granulocytes, neurotrophins neurons, embryonic
stem cells, VEGF (vascular endothelial growth
factors) capillary endothel, retina endothel - Survival factor receptors belong to different
receptor families (mostly GF.Rs)
24Death receptors
Certain cell types (eg. autoreaktÃv T and B
cells) must be killedActivation of death
receptors (fas, TNF.RI, NGF.R, TGF.R, etc.) leads
to programmed cell death in a cell
type-specific way. The same receptors might
function as growth factor receptors in other cell
types
death pathway survival pathway
proliferation
25Wnt signal a special pathway
- Wnt signal also serves as a differeniation signal
(ventral-dorsal) during ontogenesis - The receptor is a 7TM domain GPCR, which
activates more than one pathway - In the absence of the ligand beta catenin is
degraded. Activation of the receptor leadsto
stabilization of catenin, allowing
nucleartransport and gene regulation by
activatingtranscription factor(s).
26Catenin is a multifunctional protein
beta catenin is associated with cytoskeletal
structures linking cells of the same cell type
together
The Axin-APC-GSK complex (inducing
phosphorylation-linked ubiquitination) degrades
only free beta-catenin molecules, not interfering
with the structural function of the protein
27Wnt signal and differentiation
- Wnt can not activate its receptor in the
posterior segment of the embryobecause of
interference of other factors
28The balance of kinases and phosphatases
- Signaling is influenced by the balance of kinases
and phosphatases. Rafts (membrane microdomains)
can influence this balance while receptor and
kinase are raft-associated, the phosphatase is not
29The balance of kinases and phosphatases
- Signaling is influenced by the balance of kinases
and phosphatases. This balance is cell type
specific and can inhibit the generation of the
signal - Though the ligand inter-acts with its cognate
receptor no signal is generated - SHP-1 enzyme de-phosphorylates the subunits of
the receptor and the second messenger
molecules
30Scaffold proteins
Scaffold proteins are matchmakers,they catalyze
the interaction of signal molecules Molecules
participating in subsequent steps of the signal
are bound to the surface of scaffold proteins,
recognizing and modifying each other Heat shock
proteins do the oppositetry to inhibit
interaction of signaling molecules in the absence
of ligand, preventing false signals
31Pathways of TNF.R signaling
Members of the TNF.R super-family can signal
death as well as survival, proliferation,
activation and differentiation. In different
cell types different pathways dominate, other
might be missing The pathways are under
elaborate control mechanisms.
32Differentiation steps
- In a cell at a certain stage of its
differentiation - - a set of transcription factors regulate the
activity of genes, - - a set of its genes show characteristic pattern
of histone and DNA modification - - the hnRNAs are spliced with characteristic
splicing factors, resulting in a set of splice
variant mRNAs, - - the proteins are modified by characteristic
processing enzymes - - it results in a characterisitc enzyme activity
pattern, metabolic activity and morphology - - life span of the proteins is regulated by
characteristic factors - - the cell secretes specific proteins and
exhibits a characterisitc set of receptors. - The metabolic ativity and the morphology allows
the cell to perform specific tasks, determines
the way how to communicate with other cells and
how to respond to external signals. - Depending on the signals detected by its
receptors, the cell can have different fates
proliferation, differentiation, activation or
death
33Differentiation steps
- The differentiation factor interacting with the
receptor of the cells induces a signal process
resulting in specific changes - - in the activity of enzymes (different
phosphorylation patterns, different activities), - - in the composition of transcription factors,
- - in the modification of histones and DNA,
- - inducing synthesis of a new sets of hnRNAs,
- - splicing of these hnRNAs with a new set of
splicing factors, - - resulting in the synthesis of new splice
variant proteins and new sets of enzymes,
receptors, ECM proteins, - - changing the pattern of protein-modifying and
protein-degrading enzymes, - - resulting in different metabolism,.
- The new metabolic activity might mean changed
morphology and new functions. The cell starts to
produce new receptors and signal molecules,
different ECM its communication with other cells
has also changed. - In many case the differentiation process is
irreversible.
34Signal and co-signal
In cell-fate decisions signals frequently need a
corroborating co-signal to be effective In other
cases, the presence of a co-signal alters the
meaning of the original signal In immune cells
antigen co-signal survival, activation,
proliferation antigen alone apoptosis or
anergy
35Juxtacrine signal and ECM signal
In cell differentiation ligands originating from
neighboring cells (cell adhesion molecules,
juxtacrine factors) or the extracellular matrix
(ECM) play very important roles
The signal is usually bi-directional. Both cells
differentiate (in the same or different
directions)
36ECM-triggered signaling
37ECM-triggered signaling
- The cells produce cell-type specific ECM
molecules. These proteins activate different
signaling pathways in the signaling and the
neighboring cells. These signals harmonize cells
of a certain tissue, create links between
different cell types or induce differentiation of
cells. - Similar cells are linkedtogether by
homofil-,different cell types by heterofil cell
adhesionmolecules (CAMs)
38Cross-talk of signaling pathways
- Cells are exposed to simultaneous signals. The
signaling pathways and signaling molecules
modulate each other they synergize, interfere or
modify each other. - The effect of a certain factor depends on the
presence of all other factors
39The EGF.R signaling pathways
40Alternative pathways result in different effects
41Survival factors
Apoptosis-prone cells survive only in the
presence of survival factors Neurons NGF,
neurotrophic factors, hemopoetic SC SCF, IL-3,
flt3-L The survivalfactors block
thepro-apoptoticsignal cascades,protecting the
life of the cells