introduction to receptors tim bloom, ph.d. room 206 maddox hall 893-1712 [email protected]
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![Page 1: Introduction to Receptors Tim Bloom, Ph.D. Room 206 Maddox Hall 893-1712 bloom@campbell.edu](https://reader036.vdocuments.mx/reader036/viewer/2022062516/56649d785503460f94a5a9e9/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Introduction to Receptors
Tim Bloom, Ph.D.
Room 206 Maddox Hall
893-1712
www.campbell.edu/faculty/bloom
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Lecture Overview
• History of receptors
• Receptor theory
• Biochemistry of receptors
• Examples of common receptor types
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Pharmacology
• Pharmacokinetics– Absorption
– Distribution
– Metabolism
– Excretion
• Pharmacodynamics– Receptors
– Signaling
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Berthold and the Roosters
– Effects of castration• Secondary sex characteristics
• Behavior
– Effects of transplant– Observation and hypothesis
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Isolated Muscle Setup
flow in flow outnicotine
rise in tensionrise in tensionrise in tension
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Langley and the Frogs
– In vitro study with leg muscle strips
– Muscle stimulation by • Electricity
• Nerve
• Nicotine
– Effect of curare on animals
– Effect of curare on in vitro muscle stimulation• Electricity into nerve
• Nicotine
• Electricity into muscle
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Ehrlich and the Parasites
• Organic chemist making clothing dyes
• Saw dyeing of cells with selective stains– Staining a cell type is dye-dependent– Small changes in chemical alter staining
• “Receptive substance” on cells– Use as target for selective drugs– Attach toxin to selective dye
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Sum of History
• Chemicals affect tissues
• Some chemicals interfere with others
• Chemical structure impacts action
• Cells produce chemicals that affect other cells
• Therefore, cells can detect chemicals
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Receptor Theory
• Core of pharmacodynamics• Cells have “receptors”
– Act as targets for “ligands” (drugs, hormones, neurotransmitters, etc.)
– Required for biological effect of above agents
– Sensitive to small changes in ligand structure
– Mediate action of ligand
• NO RECEPTOR = NO RESPONSE
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Biochemistry of Receptors• Chemical receptors
– Non-specific– Bind via one or two chemical bonds– Examples are stomach acid, heavy metals
• Macromolecular receptors– Detect specific molecules– Require multiple chemical bonds– Rely on 3-D shape of ligand for recognition– These are of interest to pharmacologists
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Molecules as Receptors
• DNA– Alkylating chemicals as cancer chemotherapy– DNA damage gives therapeutic result
• Structural proteins– Colchicine– Interferes with tubulin polymerization
• Enzymes– NSAIDs– Inhibit cyclo-oxygenase
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Molecules as Receptors
• Ion channels– Nicotine – Allow ions to cross cell membranes
• Transcription factors– Steroid hormones– Alter rates of gene expression up or down
• Plasma membrane signaling proteins– Insulin or adrenaline– Binding results in a signal detected inside cell
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Importance of Bonds
• Chemical bonds are formed between a receptor and its ligand(s)– Hydrogen bonds– Hydrophobic interactions– Van der Waals forces– Ionic bonds– (covalent bonds)
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Bonds for Activity
• Ability to create proper bonds is vital
• Proper bonds possible with proper shape
• Bonds allow “proper” interactions
• Small modifications can have large effect
• Weak bonds = temporary binding
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Receptor Functions
• Most common is to generate a “signal”– Alters some facet of cell balance– “Signal” results in some cellular change
• Basal cell at rest has certain features:– Stable pH and electrical charge (ion concentrations)– Stable transcription rates– Stable levels of signaling molecules– Stable levels of protein modifications– Stable metabolic rate
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Signaling Receptor Classes
• Four major classes of signaling receptors– Cytoplasmic transcription factors
– Ion channels
– Transmembrane signaling enzymes
– G-protein coupled receptors
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Cytoplasmic Transcription Factors
• Inactive at rest• Bound to
inhibitor protein• Ligand removes
inhibitor• L-R complex
moves to nucleus
• Transcription is altered
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Ion Channels
• Made up of subunits• Group forms a pore• Gate blocks ions• Ligand binding
affects gate behavior• Some ligands activate
channel, let ions flow
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Transmembrane Enzymes
• Receptor is single protein• Dimerization required for activity• Inactive at rest, activated by ligand• Most common type is tyrosine kinase
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Tyrosine Kinases
• Kinases transfer phosphates (phosphorylation)– From ATP to proteins– Addition to serine, threonine or tyrosine– Modifies substrate protein activity
• Activate
• Inactivate
• Alters interactions with other proteins
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Kinase Receptors
• These receptors have tyrosine kinase activity– Phosphorylate substrate proteins, including other
receptor in dimer– Receptor phosphorylation makes it active:
even without ligand!
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Kinase receptors
• Phosphorylated receptors also act as ligands– “SH2 proteins” recognize Tyr-P and bind
– Binding activates SH2 proteins
– Creation of signaling complex
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Example
kinase P04
SH2 protein
PLC-
substrate
product
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G protein-coupled Receptors
• Largest class of receptors• Wide range of ligands• Wide range of binding “methods”
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G protein-coupled Receptors
• Differ from other classes
• Seven transmembrane domains
• All act through combination of G protein and effector protein
RG
E
A B
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G Proteins
• Made of three subunits:
• has three functions:– Detects ligand-bound
receptor (gets active)
– Activates effector
– Turns itself off
GDP
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Cycle of the Subunit
• Activated by ligand- bound receptor
• Swaps GDP for GTP• Loses subunits• Activates effector• Hydrolyzes GTP to
GDP- is inactivated• Rebinds subunits
GDP
GTP
R*
GTP
GDP
E
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Effectors
• Enzymes– Synthesize product when activated– Modify proteins when active
• Ion channels– Ions flow down gradient– Change in electrical state
• Activated effectors produce effects
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Review
• Cells respond to substances via receptors
• Receptors provide two functions– Detect ligand presence– Generate a signal in response to ligand– (signal = change)
• Signaling through receptor modifies cell
• Most cellular molecules can be a receptor
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Review
• Many receptors are in one of four classes– Ion channels– Transcription factors– Membrane-associated enzymes– G-protein coupled receptors
• Normal function of a receptor determines the nature of its signal