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The series of steps by which a signal on a cells surface is converted into a specific cellular response is called the
signal transduction pathway
Are the general aspects of cell signaling pathways similar in various organisms? What is the basis for your yes or no answer?
Yes. Those in yeast and mammals are strikingly similar and there are other similarities between signaling systems in plants and bacteria.
Paracrine signaling and Synaptic signaling
Hormonal Signaling - also called Endocrine Signaling
Circulatory System
Gap Junctions in animal cells; Plasmodesmata in plant cells; Interaction of cell surface molecules (glycoproteins) in cell-cell recognition
Reception - Transduction - Response
A small molecule that specifically binds to a larger molecule
G - protein-linked receptors, Tyrosine-kinase receptors, and ligand-gated ion-channel receptors
They are protein with seven alpha-helices spanning the cell membrane.
Before the signal binds to the receptor the receptors exist as individual polypeptides. Each polypeptide has an intracellular tail containing a number of tyrosine amino acids, and a single alpha-helix in the cell membrane.
When the signal binds to the receptor two receptor polypeptides aggregate forming a dimer, this aggregation activates the tyrosine-kinase parts of both polypeptides and these phosphorylate the tyrosines on the tail of the other polypeptide.
Inactive proteins within the cell bind to the phosphorylated tyrosine residues, the phosphate is transferred to the proteins, and the proteins become active.
Protein pores in the membrane that open or close in response to a chemical signal, allowing or blocking the flow of specific ions, such as Na+ or Cl-.
No, some are proteins located in the cytoplasm or the nucleus of the cell. Ones that are small enough to pass between membrane phospholipids or ones that are lipid soluable.
Testosterone and Estrogen
genes
transcription factors
phosphorylation of proteins
A molecule that transfers phosphate groups from ATP to proteins. Many of the molecules in signal-transduction pathways are protein kinases.
A series of different molecules in a pathway phosphorylated in each turn, each molecule adding a phosphate group to the next
These are enzymes that remove phosphate groups from proteins; they reverse the action of protein kinases.
These are small, nonprotein, water-soluble molecules that are components of the signal-transduction pathway.
Because they are small and water-soluble.
G-protein-linked receptors and tyrosine-kinase receptors
Cyclic-AMP and Calcium ions
A membrane-bound enzyme, adenylyl cyclase, converts ATP to cAMP
Cyclic-AMP activates protein kinase A. This activated protein kinase then activates other proteins within the cell depending upon the cell type.
Why doesn't cyclic-AMP keep working all of the time the cell is alive
Another enzyme, Phosphodiesterase, converts cAMP to AMP which is not active.
What role does the second messenger cyclic-AMP play in the disease Cholera?
Bacteria obtained from contaminated water gets into our intestine. A protein produced by the bacteria modifies the G-protein so that the G-protein does not function properly. Salt and water exit the cells into the lumen of the digestive tract and this material is lost from the body in profuse diarrhea.
Yes, by interacting with an inhibitory G-protein instead of a stimulatory G-protein. This causes a decrease in the amount of cAMP within the cell.
Calcium is used as a second messenger in these signaling pathways.
G-protein-linked pathways and tyrosine-kinase pathways.
Why can calcium ions be used as a second messenger? Where are most of the calcium ions in a cell?
Because the concentration of Calcium ions within the cytoplasm of the cell is very low. Small increases in the level of cytoplasmic Calcium can stimulate certain processes.
Most of the Calcium ions are inside the Endoplasmic Reticulum.
Describe the pathways that can lead to the release of calcium from the endoplasmic reticulum.
How could a signaling pathway be involved in activating genes on the chromosomes?
Special proteins within the nucleus called Transcription Factors can be phosphorylated (activated) by protein kinases. The Transcription Factor can then bind to a specific region of the DNA and initiate the process of mRNA production from the DNA strand.
What is Signal Amplification?
At each catalytic step the number of activated products is much greater than in the preceding step. The amplification effect depends on the fact that these proteins persist in active form long enough o process numerous molecules of substrate before they become inactive again.
What determines the specificity of a particular cell for a specific cellular response?
Different kinds of cell have different collections of proteins.