Cytokine Receptors: Signalling and Function Flashcards

1
Q

Cytokine

A

Any class of immunoregulatory proteins (such as interleukin or interferon) that are secreted by cells, especially of the immune system

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2
Q

What do cytokines do?

A

Control the function of other cells

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3
Q

What physiological processes do cytokines regulate

A

Hematopoiesis (formation of blood cell components)
Immunity (function of WBCs)
Inflammation

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4
Q

What are the four major categories of cytokines and their functions

A

Interferons: anti-viral activity
Tumour necrosis factors (TNF): inflammatory response
Chemokines: control and direct cell migration
Interleukins: various

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5
Q

What family of receptors do cytokines (mostly) signal through (receptor superfamily not cytokine receptor type)

A

kinase-linked, the receptor is non-catalytic, must activate intracellular kinases

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6
Q

What type of cytokine receptors do most cytokines bind

A

Type I/II

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7
Q

What type of cytokine receptors regulate JAK/STAT pathways

A

Type I/II

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8
Q

What is a JAK

A

Janus kinase, a tyrosine kinase that is pre-associated constitutively with the receptors of cytokine receptors

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9
Q

What happens when ligand binding occurs on an alpha-chain cytokine receptor subunit

A

Beta chain and associated JAKs are bought closer and phosphorylate each other, activating tyrosine residues on the intracellular tail

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10
Q

What is the cytokine homology region (CHR)

A

conserved “Bent elbow structure” of cytokine receptor ligand binding region, ligand binds the outside of the elbow

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11
Q

How is specificity achieved in cytokine receptors

A

The 3D structures associated with the cytokine homology domain

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12
Q

What is in the JAK family

A

JAK1, JAK2, JAK3, Tyk2

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13
Q

Explain the domains of a JAK

A

FERM containing the SH2 domain, psi kinase domain containing nucleotide binding site, kinase domain containing ATP binding site

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14
Q

What do phosphorylated tyrosine residues activate in class I/II kinase-linked cytokine receptors

A

STAT dimers, once phosphorylated STAT dimers assume an active dimer conformation

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15
Q

What do STAT dimers do when activated

A

the nucleus where it binds specific DNA specific

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16
Q

Which domain of cytokine receptor subunits serves as a docking site for STAT transcription factors

A

SH2 domain of receptor subunit

17
Q

Explain SH2 domain sites, function and specificity

A

two binding sites: one for amino acid side chains which gives specificity to the interaction and one for binding phosphorylated tyrosine (phosphotyrosine/pY)

18
Q

on what proteins are SH2 domains commonly found

A

adaptor proteins that aid in signal transduction of kinase linked receptors

19
Q

How do STAT dimers form

A

once phosphorylated, STAT proteins change conformation and form high-affinity homo- and hetero-dimers via the interaction of the SH2 domain of one and the pY phosphorylated residue of the other

20
Q

What are the signal transducers and activators of transcription family members

A

STAT1
STAT2
STAT3
STAT4
STAT5a/b
STAT6

21
Q

what type of feedback loop do cytokine, JAK, STAT pathways mostly activate

A

negative

22
Q

What mechanisms do suppressor of cytokine signalling (SOCS) proteins use to negatively regulate cytokine receptor signalling

A
  • Inhibition of JAK signalling by binding the tyrosine phosphorylated residue in the receptor tail, preventing JAK binding. (can do this as they have an SH2 domain)
  • bind and directly inhibit JAKs
  • SOCS box domain of SOCS bind ubiquitin ligases and recruits ubiquitin causing degradation of bound protein
23
Q

why do SOCS need fine control

A

too little inhibition of cytokine signalling means hyperactivity of pathways
too much inhibition of cytokine signalling means autoimmune disease - no immune response

24
Q

Where is Interleukin-2 (IL-2) produced and what is its function

A

Produced by antigen-activated cells and it acts as a major growth factor/mitogen for antigen-activated T cells

25
Q

In what manner does IL-2 function (_____crine)

A

Autocrine and paracrine

26
Q

Describe IL-2 receptor structure

A

In inactive T-cells: dimer with beta subunit and a common gamma chain (ɣc) subunit
In active T-cells: trimeric complex with the same and an alpha subunit
Activated cell receptor complex has a much higher affinity and produced a stronger signal

27
Q

IL-2 pathway

A

IL-2 -> JAK 1/3 -> STAT 5 -> Myc ->

28
Q

IL-2 pathway

A

IL-2 -> JAK 1/3 -> STAT 5 -> Myc -> other target genes-> cell growth
-> Cdk4/cyclin D -> G phase