molecular biology of the cell 4 th edition chapter 15 cell communication

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Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

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Page 1: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Molecular Biology ofTHE CELL4th edition

Chapter 15Cell Communication

Page 2: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Cell Communication

Single cell

Multicellular organism

Page 3: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF CELL COMMUNICATION

Extracellular signal molecules bind to specific receptors

Page 4: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Extracellular signal molecules can act over either short or long distance

Page 5: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Autocrine signaling can coordinate decision by groups of identical cells

“Community effect” in early developmentIn tumor biology---cancer cells stimulate their own proliferation

Page 6: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Gap junctions allow signaling information to be shared by neighboring cells

Ca2+, cAMP etc. but not for proteins or nucleic acids

Intracellular electrodes, small water-soluble dyes

Connexin 43 deficiency --- abnormal heart development

Page 7: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Each cell is programmed to respond to specific combinations of extracellular signal molecules

Page 8: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Different cells can respond differently to the same extracellular signal molecules

Page 9: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The concentration of a molecule can be adjusted quickly only if the lifetime of the molecule is short

Page 10: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Nitric oxide gas signals by binding directly to an enzyme inside the target cell

Nitroglycerine --- anginaViagra --- PDE inhibitorCO

Page 11: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Nuclear receptors are ligand-activated gene regulatory proteins

Page 12: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Ligand-binding domain

Page 13: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication
Page 14: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The three largest classes of cell-surface receptor proteins are ion-channel-linked, G-proteins-linked, and enzyme-linked receptors

Page 15: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Most activated cell-surface receptors relay signals via small molecules and a network of intracellular signaling proteins

SCIENCE 281, 1671-1674 (1998)A Mammalian Scaffold Complex That Selectively Mediates MAP Kinase Activation(JNK interacting protein-1. JIP-1)Alan J. Whitmarsh, Julie Cavanagh, Cathy Tournier, Jun Yasuda, Roger J. Davis*

Page 16: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Some intracellular signaling proteins act as molecular switches

~2% of human genes(576 kinases in human genome)

Monomeric GTPaseTrimeric GTPase

Page 17: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Signal integration by protein phosphorylation

Page 18: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Intracellular signaling complexes enhance the speed, efficiency, and specificity of the response

Page 19: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Complex forms transiently

Page 20: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Interactions between intracellular signaling proteins are mediated by modular binding domains

Page 21: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

SCIENCE 278, 2075-2080 (1997)Signaling Through Scaffold, Anchoring, and Adaptor ProteinsTony Pawson and John D. Scott

Page 22: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

PDZ DomainDomain binding and function: PDZ domains bind to the C-terminal 4–5 residues of their target proteins, frequently transmembrane receptors or ion channels. These interactions can be of high affinity (nM Kd). The consensus binding sequence contains a hydrophobic residue, commonly Val or Ile, at the very C-terminus. Residues at the –2 and –3 positions are important in determining specificity. PDZ domains can also heterodimerize with PDZ domains of different proteins, potentially regulating intracellular signaling. In addition to engaging in protein-protein interactions, several PDZ domains including those of syntenin, CASK, Tiam1 and FAP are capable of binding to the phosphoinositide PIP2. PIP2-PDZ domain binding is thought to control the association of PDZ domain-containing proteins with the plasma membrane.Structure Reference: Doyle, D.A. et al. (1996) Cell 85(7), 1067–1076.

The third PDZ domain from PSD-95.

www.cellsignal.com

Page 23: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Cells can respond abruptly to a gradually increasing concentration of an extracellular signal

Chicken oviduct cells Stimulated by estradiol

effector/target : 1~16

maximal activation

Page 24: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

One type of signaling mechanism expected to show a steep threshold-like response

Page 25: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

A cell can remember the effect of some signals

Signals trigger muscle cell determination

Page 26: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Cells can adjust their sensitivity to a signal

Page 27: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

SIGNALING THROUGH G-PROTEIN-LINKEDCELL-SURFACE RECEPTORS

1. The largest family of cell-surface receptors2. 5% of the C. elegans genes3. Signal molecules: hormones, neurotransmitters and local medicators4. Rhodopsin-light receptor5. Genome sequencing --- vast numbers of new family members6. Major targets for drug discovery

Page 28: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Trimeric G proteins disassemble to relay signals from G-protein-linked receptors

Transducin-G protein in visual transduction

Page 29: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The disassembly of a activated G-protein into two signaling components

Page 30: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The switching off of the G-protein subunit by the hydrolysis of its bound GTP

RGS proteins --- regulators of G protein signaling, act as subunit-specific GTPase activating proteins (GAPs)

~25 RGS proteins in the human genome

Page 31: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Some G-proteins signal by regulating the production of cyclic AMP

Nerve cell culture, preloaded with a fluorescent protein that changes its fluorescence when it binds to cAMP.

>10-6 M~5 X 10-8 M

(Science 260:222-226, 1993)

Page 32: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) mediate most of the effects of cyclic AMP

Role of cAMP, PKA in glycogenmetabolism

Page 33: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

How gene transcription is activated by a rise in cAMP concentration

(CRE, cAMP response element)

Role of protein phosphatases?

Page 34: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Some G-proteins activate the inositol phospholipid signaling pathway by activating phospholipase C-

(<1% of total phospholipids)

Page 35: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication
Page 36: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The two branches of the inositol phospholipid pathway

Page 37: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Ca2+ functions as a ubiquitous intracellular messenger

Ca2+ signaling in fertilization of starfish, detected by Ca2+-sensitive fluorescence dye

Page 38: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The main ways eucaryotic cells maintain a very low concentration of free Ca2+ in their cytosol

Page 39: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The frequency of Ca2+ oscillations influences a cell’s response

In a liver cell

Page 40: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinases (CaM-kinases) mediate many of the actions of Ca2+ in animal cells

The structure of Ca2+/calmodulin

A peptide derived from CaM-Kinase II

Page 41: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The activation of CaM-kinases II

~2% of total mass in some brain regions, especially in synapses

It can function as a molecular memory device ---(1) Learning defect (where things are in space) in mutant mice that lack the brain-specific subunit of CaM-kinase II(2) Same defect also observed in mutant mice that have their CaM-kinase II mutated at the autophosphorylation site

Page 42: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

CaM-kinases II as a frequency decoder of Ca2+ oscillations

CaM-kinase II is immobilized on a solid surface +a brain protein phosphatase +repetitive pulse of Ca2+/calmodulin at different frequencyKinase activity assay

[Science. 1998 Jan 9;279(5348):227-30.]

Page 43: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Smell and vision depend on G-protein-linked receptors that regulate cyclic-nucleotide-gated ion channels

Page 44: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Cyclic GMPA rod photoreceptor cell

Page 45: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The response of a rod photoreceptor cell to light

Page 46: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Extracellular signals are greatly amplified by the use of small intracellular mediators and enzymatic cascades

Amplification in the light-induced

catalytic cascade in vertebrate rods

Page 47: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

G-protein-linked receptors desensitization depends on receptor phosphorylation

Page 48: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

SIGNALING THROUGH ENZYME-LINKEDCELL-SURFACE RECEPTORS

Six classes:

1. Receptor tyrosine kinases2. Tyrosine kinase-associated receptors3. Receptorlike tyrosine phosphatases4. Receptor serine/threonine kinases5. Receptor guanylyl cyclases6. Histidine-kinase-associated receptors

Page 49: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Activated tyrosine kinases phosphorylate themselves

angiogenesiscell/axon migration

Page 50: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Three ways in which signaling proteins can cross-link receptor chains

Monomeric vs. dimeric ligand

Page 51: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Inhibition of signaling through normal receptor tyrosine kinases by an excess of mutant receptors

As a tool for determining normal function of receptor

Page 52: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Phosphorylated tyrosine serves as docking sites for proteins with SH2 domains

Page 53: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The binding of SH2-containing intracellular signaling proteins to an activated PDGF receptor

determine the binding specificity

Page 54: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Ras is activated by a guanine nucleotide exchange factor

GEF: guanine nucleotide exchange factorGAP: GTPase-activating protein

In cells [GTP] > [GDP] ~10 fold

Page 55: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The activation of Ras by an activated receptor tyrosine kinase

Page 56: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The MAP-kinase serine/threonine phosphorylation pathway activated by Ras

Page 57: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The organization of MAP-kinase pathway by scaffold proteins in budding yeast

Page 58: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

PI 3-kinase produces inositol phospholipid docking sites in the plasma membrane

Cell division vs. cell growthPI 3 kinase is one of the major cell growth signaling transduces

Page 59: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The recruitment of signaling proteins with PH domains to the plasma membrane during B cell activation

SH2domain

Mutation of BTKleads to severely deficiency in Abproduction

Page 60: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The PI 3-kinase/protein kinase B signaling pathway can stimulate cells to survive and grow

Page 61: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Brief summarization

Page 62: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Signal proteins of the TGF- superfamily act through receptor serine/threonine kinases and Smads

Page 63: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Kinase catalytic domain ~250 amino acids

Page 64: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

SIGNALING PATHWAY THAT DEPENDS ON REGULATED PROTEOLYSIS

1. Notch2. Wnt3. Hedgehog4. NF-kB

Page 65: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The receptor protein Notch is activated by cleavage

In Drosophila, mutation in Delta leads to produce a huge excess of neurons at the expense of epidermal cells

Page 66: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

The processing and activation of Notch by proteolytic cleavage

Inhibit neural differentiation

Page 67: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Wnt proteins bind to Frizzled receptors and inhibit the degradation of -catenin

(c-Myc protein)(APC, adenomatous polyposis coli,a tumor suppressor )

Page 68: Molecular Biology of THE CELL 4 th edition Chapter 15 Cell Communication

Multiple stressful and proinflammatory stimuli act through an NF-B-dependent signaling pathway

inflammationdevelopmentcancer