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BIO315 - Cell Bio

Lecture 1:

  • Cell communication

  • Intracellular signaling pathway

  • 4 components to cell communication

  • Extracellular signalling

  • Classes of intracellular signaling

    • contact-dependant

    • Paracrine

    • synaptic

    • endocrine

  • Binding types:

    • cell surface

    • intracellular receptors

  • Combination of biological responses

  • cell types

  • signal concentrations

  • classes of cell surface receptors

    • ion-channel coupled

    • G-protein

    • enzyme coupled

  • Second messengers

  • Importance of intracellular signalling proteins

Lecture 2:

  • Molecular Switches:

    • Phosphorylation/dephosphorylation - the addition or elimination of a phosphoryl group to a molecule - storage/transfer of free E

      • Signal by phosphorylation: Signal in -> protein kinase uses ATP -> signalling protein on -> protein phosphatase removes Pi -> signalling protein off

      • Many protein kinases are organized by kinase cascades that one gets activated, it activates the next, in a signal line -> adds more phosphate groups

        • Protein phosphatases can remove phosphate groups

      • Types of Kinases:

        • ser/thr -> phosphorylate the hydroxyl groups in ser/thr

        • Tyr -> phosphorylates proteins on tyr

        • dual specificity -> 

    • GTP/GDP binding signalling

      • Causes a change inside the cell from being outside the cell -> on when GTP bound, off when GDP bound

        • When on, they have GTP activity and shut off when hydrolyzing their GTP to GDP

      • Types of GTP-proteins:

        • heterotrimeric G protein -> help relay signals from G-protein receptors

        • monomeric GTPases -> help relay signals from many cell-surface receptors

    • Regulation of monomeric GTPases: 

      • GAP GTPase activating protein -> causes the off state by hydrolyzing more GTP

      • GEF(guanine nucleotide exchange factor) -> causes the on state by eliminating GDP and allowing more GTP to bind

      • then GDI(GDP dissociation inhibitor)

    • Proteins can also be switched on/off by calcium of cAMP -> second messengers

    • Other post-translational modifications like methylation, acetylation, ubiquitylation

  • Two negative inhibitory signals produce a positive effect

    • Most signals have activation and inhibition steps

    • Two inhibitory effects in one path can create a positive effect

  • How to ensure signal response and specificity - lots of noise in a cell can cause signal molecules to bind/modify the wrong partner creating interference

    • High-affinity interactions that are highly specific -> docking sites - protein kinases that interact with specific amino acids

    • Signal threshold - reduction of background noise by the proteins by only responding to a set concentration of signals to activate it

    • Localization of specific signaling proteins to the same region of the cell

  • Location: localizing the site for signalling proteins to ensure that a specific response is given while minimizing making unwanted responses with other pathways ex. Localizing in a place in the cell or within a larger protein

  • Localizing by scaffold proteins - brings groups of interacting signalling proteins into signalling complexes often before the signal has been received  -> they are in the scaffold protein but are activated in a downstream manner when the signal protein activates the receptor

  • Localizing at the site of activated receptors -> inactive receptor and proteins are not yet attached, then, when the signal molecule is attached and activates the receptor, it latches on all the other smaller complexes and sends a downstream signal

  • Localizing with the help of phospholipids -> docking on the membrane and interacting with other signalling proteins when the receptor on the membrane is activated

  • Importance of interaction domains:

    • Induced proximity -> signal triggers the assembly of complex proteins

    • Interaction domains -> areas of the proteins where they bind to other proteins

  • Signal complex formation using modular interaction domains ex. Insulin receptors

  • Different signalling pathways can vary in their properties

    • Response time(synaptic = fast, endocrine = slow), sensitivity(receptors, some need lower concentrations of a signal to activate, others higher[C]), dynamic range(adaptation mechanisms, some need specific signals other can have broader ones), persistence(+/- feedback), signal processing(ex. Gradual increase to abrupt), integration(many signals can activate one signal), coordination(one signal to a response that activates many signals)

  • Signal integration and coincidence detectors

  • Factors influencing response times

  • Turnover (half-life) signalling molecules influence response time -> inhibition processes determine how quickly and great the response can be -> activation needs to be quickly revered to make rapid signalling possible

  • Signal processing influences the properties of biological responses

    • Some signals need slower responses, like hormones, to be able to fine-tune their signals

    • Other systems need faster signalling, like action potentials, to work right

  • Allosteric binding

  • +/- feedback

  • Importance of + feedback -> gradual increase in [C]

  • Importance of - feedback -> allows cells to use a small [C] of signals to do what they need

Lecture 3:

  • Regulating signal sensitivity and dynamic range -> adaptation = the ability of a cell to respond to a wide range of signals [C]

    • Relative vs absolute [C]

  • GPCR = G-protein coupled receptor

    • Largest family of cell surface receptors -> one ligand can bind to many GPCRs and one GCPR to many ligand types - all are 7 transmembrane(folded in the membrane 7 times) and signals through heterotrimeric G proteins

      • Rhodopsin is a member of the G protein family

  • GCPR ligand diversity

    • Nucleotide - A, cAMP, melatonin

    • Biogenic amines - dopamine, adrenaline, ACTH, serotonin, histamine

    • Lipid-based

    • Excitatory amino acids and ions

    • Retinal based - vit. A

  • Heterotrimeric G-proteins: all have 3 subunits of alpha, beta, and gamma

    • Couples the receptor to enzymes or ion channels in the membrane 

    • In an unstimulated state, alpha has GDP bound and G protein inactive

    • GPCR is active(performs GEF activity), alpha releases GDP to bind to GTP -> GTP causes a conformational change that releases G protein from receptor and dissociation of alpha G from beta and gamma pair G - they then can relay signals onwards

    • Alpha then hydrolyzes the GTP to GDP and becomes inactive

  • G-coupled receptors

    • Biological functions include smell and taste, light perception, neurotransmission, endocrine/exocrine glands, control of BP, exocytosis, cell growth and development, etc.

  • Activation of heterotrimeric G-proteins -> act like GEF in GPCRs

  • G-proteins and cAMP -> cAMP act like a second messenger in some systems and are made from ATP by adenylyl cyclase and destroyed by cyclic AMP phosphodiesterases

    • The alpha subunit in G proteins stimulates cAMP synthesis

    • Gi proteins(inhibitory G protein) inhibit the cAMP synthesis

      • Cholera toxin -> inhibits the switch-off mechanism of Gs and allows elevated cAMP [C] since the alpha unit is GTP bound and on

      • Pertussis toxin -> inhibits the switch on of Gi that prevents the protein from interacting with others and keeps it in its inactive state

    • Gi is different from Gs!

  • Cellular responses mediated by cAMP

    • Thyroid gland -> TSH secretion and synthesis

    • Adrenal cortex -> ACTH and cortisol secretion

    • Ovary -> LH and progesterone secretion

    • Muscle -> Adrenaline and glycogen breakdown

    • Boen -> parathormone and bone reabsorption

    • Heart -> adrenaline and increase HR + contractions

    • Liver -> glucagon and glycogen breakdown

    • Kidney -> vasopressin and water reabsorption

    • Fat -> adrenaline, ACTH, glucagon, TSH and triglyceride breakdown

  • cAMP dependant protein kinase

    • cAMP activates PKA that phosphorylates specific serines or threonines and regulates signal protein activity

      • Inactive PKA has two catalytic subunits, cAMP binds and alters their shape and the two release from each other and go to target other proteins

    • Regulatory proteins help localize the PKA to a specific complex via A-kinase anchoring proteins(AKAPs)

  • CREB(CRE-binding protein) - cAMP-dependent transcription factor

    • Recognizes the cis-regulatory sequence called CRE found on many regulatory proteins activated by cAMP

    • PKA activated, phosphorylates CREB which then recruits a transcriptional coactivator called CBP that stimulates the transcription of target genes

  • G proteins and phospholipid signalling

    • Some cell responses that use GPCRs that activate PLC are liver(vasopressin), pancreas(acetylcholine), smooth muscle(acetylcholine), and blood patelets(thrombin)

    • Many GCPRs affect G proteins that activate the plasma-membrane-bound enzyme phospholipase-C(PLCβ) - it activates by Gq G protein that cleaves PI4,5P2 to make two products: IP3 and diacylglycerol

    • IP3 goes through the ER and opens IP3-gated Ca channels, raising Ca ion[C] in the cytosol

    • Diacylglycerol activates protein kinase C(PKC) is Ca-dependent and phosphorylates different proteins(similar to PKA)

  • Gq proteins activate PLCβ and calcium signalling

    • Phospholipase C(PLC) is activated by Gq -> inositol phospholipid signalling path

      • PLC is activated by Gq  which activates PI4,5P2 and makes two products

  • Protein Kinase C(PKC) -> lacks Ca binding sites and needs to be altered to use Ca

    • When Ca is increased initially by IP3, it alters PKC to face the plasma membrane where it is activated by Ca, DAG, and negative serine to target other proteins

  • Diacylglycerol(DAG)

    • It can be further cleaved to make arachidonic acid that can be used to synthesize prostaglandins or function as a signal molecule -> used in pain and inflammatory responses 

  • Ca as a ubiquitous intracellular mediator

    • Many extracellular responses raise intracellular Ca[C] -> normally it is lower intracellular than extracellular

      • Some processes outside the cell raise Ca[C] in the cell while some intracellular processes like IP3 receptors(GPCR mediated signals) increase Ca from inside the cell -> Ryanodine receptors in the ER membrane are activated by Ca and amplify Ca signals

  • Terminating the Ca2+ signal and maintaining low resting Ca

    • There are also Ca pumps in the ER and plasma membranes, which use ATP, that return calcium to intracellular stores

  • Calcium signalling -> spikes, puffs, and waves

    • IP3 and ryanodine are stimulated by low Ca[C] - Ca-induced calcium release is positive feedback -> a spark when IP3 stimulated and Ca enters that then activates the next receptor and the next and so on, this sends a wave of Ca when the [C] of Ca is enough to activate nearby receptors and moves through the cytosol -> high [C] across the entire cell(rather than becoming more dilute) -> positive feedback

  • +/- feedback generates calcium waves and oscillations

    • Eventually, the large [C] of Ca shuts down IP3 and ryanodine receptors that shut down Ca release and prevent more Ca from coming in -> Negative feedback -> Ca pumps remove the Ca

    • Eventually this - feedback will wear out and IP3 will trigger another wave of Ca -> these oscillations will continue to happen -> frequency reflects extracellular stimulus 

      • Different systems can use different amounts of Ca[C] to do different things - some need higher [C] to make one thing or lower [C] to make another -> depending on their sensitivity

M

BIO315 - Cell Bio

Lecture 1:

  • Cell communication

  • Intracellular signaling pathway

  • 4 components to cell communication

  • Extracellular signalling

  • Classes of intracellular signaling

    • contact-dependant

    • Paracrine

    • synaptic

    • endocrine

  • Binding types:

    • cell surface

    • intracellular receptors

  • Combination of biological responses

  • cell types

  • signal concentrations

  • classes of cell surface receptors

    • ion-channel coupled

    • G-protein

    • enzyme coupled

  • Second messengers

  • Importance of intracellular signalling proteins

Lecture 2:

  • Molecular Switches:

    • Phosphorylation/dephosphorylation - the addition or elimination of a phosphoryl group to a molecule - storage/transfer of free E

      • Signal by phosphorylation: Signal in -> protein kinase uses ATP -> signalling protein on -> protein phosphatase removes Pi -> signalling protein off

      • Many protein kinases are organized by kinase cascades that one gets activated, it activates the next, in a signal line -> adds more phosphate groups

        • Protein phosphatases can remove phosphate groups

      • Types of Kinases:

        • ser/thr -> phosphorylate the hydroxyl groups in ser/thr

        • Tyr -> phosphorylates proteins on tyr

        • dual specificity -> 

    • GTP/GDP binding signalling

      • Causes a change inside the cell from being outside the cell -> on when GTP bound, off when GDP bound

        • When on, they have GTP activity and shut off when hydrolyzing their GTP to GDP

      • Types of GTP-proteins:

        • heterotrimeric G protein -> help relay signals from G-protein receptors

        • monomeric GTPases -> help relay signals from many cell-surface receptors

    • Regulation of monomeric GTPases: 

      • GAP GTPase activating protein -> causes the off state by hydrolyzing more GTP

      • GEF(guanine nucleotide exchange factor) -> causes the on state by eliminating GDP and allowing more GTP to bind

      • then GDI(GDP dissociation inhibitor)

    • Proteins can also be switched on/off by calcium of cAMP -> second messengers

    • Other post-translational modifications like methylation, acetylation, ubiquitylation

  • Two negative inhibitory signals produce a positive effect

    • Most signals have activation and inhibition steps

    • Two inhibitory effects in one path can create a positive effect

  • How to ensure signal response and specificity - lots of noise in a cell can cause signal molecules to bind/modify the wrong partner creating interference

    • High-affinity interactions that are highly specific -> docking sites - protein kinases that interact with specific amino acids

    • Signal threshold - reduction of background noise by the proteins by only responding to a set concentration of signals to activate it

    • Localization of specific signaling proteins to the same region of the cell

  • Location: localizing the site for signalling proteins to ensure that a specific response is given while minimizing making unwanted responses with other pathways ex. Localizing in a place in the cell or within a larger protein

  • Localizing by scaffold proteins - brings groups of interacting signalling proteins into signalling complexes often before the signal has been received  -> they are in the scaffold protein but are activated in a downstream manner when the signal protein activates the receptor

  • Localizing at the site of activated receptors -> inactive receptor and proteins are not yet attached, then, when the signal molecule is attached and activates the receptor, it latches on all the other smaller complexes and sends a downstream signal

  • Localizing with the help of phospholipids -> docking on the membrane and interacting with other signalling proteins when the receptor on the membrane is activated

  • Importance of interaction domains:

    • Induced proximity -> signal triggers the assembly of complex proteins

    • Interaction domains -> areas of the proteins where they bind to other proteins

  • Signal complex formation using modular interaction domains ex. Insulin receptors

  • Different signalling pathways can vary in their properties

    • Response time(synaptic = fast, endocrine = slow), sensitivity(receptors, some need lower concentrations of a signal to activate, others higher[C]), dynamic range(adaptation mechanisms, some need specific signals other can have broader ones), persistence(+/- feedback), signal processing(ex. Gradual increase to abrupt), integration(many signals can activate one signal), coordination(one signal to a response that activates many signals)

  • Signal integration and coincidence detectors

  • Factors influencing response times

  • Turnover (half-life) signalling molecules influence response time -> inhibition processes determine how quickly and great the response can be -> activation needs to be quickly revered to make rapid signalling possible

  • Signal processing influences the properties of biological responses

    • Some signals need slower responses, like hormones, to be able to fine-tune their signals

    • Other systems need faster signalling, like action potentials, to work right

  • Allosteric binding

  • +/- feedback

  • Importance of + feedback -> gradual increase in [C]

  • Importance of - feedback -> allows cells to use a small [C] of signals to do what they need

Lecture 3:

  • Regulating signal sensitivity and dynamic range -> adaptation = the ability of a cell to respond to a wide range of signals [C]

    • Relative vs absolute [C]

  • GPCR = G-protein coupled receptor

    • Largest family of cell surface receptors -> one ligand can bind to many GPCRs and one GCPR to many ligand types - all are 7 transmembrane(folded in the membrane 7 times) and signals through heterotrimeric G proteins

      • Rhodopsin is a member of the G protein family

  • GCPR ligand diversity

    • Nucleotide - A, cAMP, melatonin

    • Biogenic amines - dopamine, adrenaline, ACTH, serotonin, histamine

    • Lipid-based

    • Excitatory amino acids and ions

    • Retinal based - vit. A

  • Heterotrimeric G-proteins: all have 3 subunits of alpha, beta, and gamma

    • Couples the receptor to enzymes or ion channels in the membrane 

    • In an unstimulated state, alpha has GDP bound and G protein inactive

    • GPCR is active(performs GEF activity), alpha releases GDP to bind to GTP -> GTP causes a conformational change that releases G protein from receptor and dissociation of alpha G from beta and gamma pair G - they then can relay signals onwards

    • Alpha then hydrolyzes the GTP to GDP and becomes inactive

  • G-coupled receptors

    • Biological functions include smell and taste, light perception, neurotransmission, endocrine/exocrine glands, control of BP, exocytosis, cell growth and development, etc.

  • Activation of heterotrimeric G-proteins -> act like GEF in GPCRs

  • G-proteins and cAMP -> cAMP act like a second messenger in some systems and are made from ATP by adenylyl cyclase and destroyed by cyclic AMP phosphodiesterases

    • The alpha subunit in G proteins stimulates cAMP synthesis

    • Gi proteins(inhibitory G protein) inhibit the cAMP synthesis

      • Cholera toxin -> inhibits the switch-off mechanism of Gs and allows elevated cAMP [C] since the alpha unit is GTP bound and on

      • Pertussis toxin -> inhibits the switch on of Gi that prevents the protein from interacting with others and keeps it in its inactive state

    • Gi is different from Gs!

  • Cellular responses mediated by cAMP

    • Thyroid gland -> TSH secretion and synthesis

    • Adrenal cortex -> ACTH and cortisol secretion

    • Ovary -> LH and progesterone secretion

    • Muscle -> Adrenaline and glycogen breakdown

    • Boen -> parathormone and bone reabsorption

    • Heart -> adrenaline and increase HR + contractions

    • Liver -> glucagon and glycogen breakdown

    • Kidney -> vasopressin and water reabsorption

    • Fat -> adrenaline, ACTH, glucagon, TSH and triglyceride breakdown

  • cAMP dependant protein kinase

    • cAMP activates PKA that phosphorylates specific serines or threonines and regulates signal protein activity

      • Inactive PKA has two catalytic subunits, cAMP binds and alters their shape and the two release from each other and go to target other proteins

    • Regulatory proteins help localize the PKA to a specific complex via A-kinase anchoring proteins(AKAPs)

  • CREB(CRE-binding protein) - cAMP-dependent transcription factor

    • Recognizes the cis-regulatory sequence called CRE found on many regulatory proteins activated by cAMP

    • PKA activated, phosphorylates CREB which then recruits a transcriptional coactivator called CBP that stimulates the transcription of target genes

  • G proteins and phospholipid signalling

    • Some cell responses that use GPCRs that activate PLC are liver(vasopressin), pancreas(acetylcholine), smooth muscle(acetylcholine), and blood patelets(thrombin)

    • Many GCPRs affect G proteins that activate the plasma-membrane-bound enzyme phospholipase-C(PLCβ) - it activates by Gq G protein that cleaves PI4,5P2 to make two products: IP3 and diacylglycerol

    • IP3 goes through the ER and opens IP3-gated Ca channels, raising Ca ion[C] in the cytosol

    • Diacylglycerol activates protein kinase C(PKC) is Ca-dependent and phosphorylates different proteins(similar to PKA)

  • Gq proteins activate PLCβ and calcium signalling

    • Phospholipase C(PLC) is activated by Gq -> inositol phospholipid signalling path

      • PLC is activated by Gq  which activates PI4,5P2 and makes two products

  • Protein Kinase C(PKC) -> lacks Ca binding sites and needs to be altered to use Ca

    • When Ca is increased initially by IP3, it alters PKC to face the plasma membrane where it is activated by Ca, DAG, and negative serine to target other proteins

  • Diacylglycerol(DAG)

    • It can be further cleaved to make arachidonic acid that can be used to synthesize prostaglandins or function as a signal molecule -> used in pain and inflammatory responses 

  • Ca as a ubiquitous intracellular mediator

    • Many extracellular responses raise intracellular Ca[C] -> normally it is lower intracellular than extracellular

      • Some processes outside the cell raise Ca[C] in the cell while some intracellular processes like IP3 receptors(GPCR mediated signals) increase Ca from inside the cell -> Ryanodine receptors in the ER membrane are activated by Ca and amplify Ca signals

  • Terminating the Ca2+ signal and maintaining low resting Ca

    • There are also Ca pumps in the ER and plasma membranes, which use ATP, that return calcium to intracellular stores

  • Calcium signalling -> spikes, puffs, and waves

    • IP3 and ryanodine are stimulated by low Ca[C] - Ca-induced calcium release is positive feedback -> a spark when IP3 stimulated and Ca enters that then activates the next receptor and the next and so on, this sends a wave of Ca when the [C] of Ca is enough to activate nearby receptors and moves through the cytosol -> high [C] across the entire cell(rather than becoming more dilute) -> positive feedback

  • +/- feedback generates calcium waves and oscillations

    • Eventually, the large [C] of Ca shuts down IP3 and ryanodine receptors that shut down Ca release and prevent more Ca from coming in -> Negative feedback -> Ca pumps remove the Ca

    • Eventually this - feedback will wear out and IP3 will trigger another wave of Ca -> these oscillations will continue to happen -> frequency reflects extracellular stimulus 

      • Different systems can use different amounts of Ca[C] to do different things - some need higher [C] to make one thing or lower [C] to make another -> depending on their sensitivity

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