Signal Transduction Flashcards

1
Q

Post-Translational Modification

A

Most important in multicellular eukaryotes
Phosphorylation
Acetylation
Methylation
Ubiquitnination
Effects: change surface properties of protein

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2
Q

Why Phosphate as PTM?

A

Phosphate is big and has highly [ ] negative charge
ATP readily acts as phosphate donor
Reactions are thermo favorable but kinetcally slow and thus can be enzymatically controlled

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3
Q

Which AA get phosphorylated

A

Serine and Threonine (both have free OH) done by same/similar enzyme
Tyrosine only found in multicellular animals

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4
Q

Assembly and Disassembly of Signaling Complexes

A

Alter subecellular localization of proteins
Associate enzymes with their substrate
Assemble complex multifunctional strucutres that can integrate and coordinate activites

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5
Q

Writer vs. Eraser

A

Writer puts something on protein, eraser removes it.

i.e. kinase = writer, phosphatase = eraser

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6
Q

Kd

A

Dissociation constant
At equilibrium kon [A][B] = koff [AB]
Kd = Koff / Kon = [A]
[B] / [AB]
Kd has units of concentration

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7
Q

What does Kd mean?

A

Kd is [ ] of B at which half of A is free and half is bound to B
If B > Kd then most of A is bound to B
If B < Kd then most of A is free

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8
Q

Fractional Occupancy

A

F.O = [B] / (Kd + [B])

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9
Q

Which has the greater affinity for substrate?

Kd1 = 10^-15 or Kd2 = 10^-4

A

Kd1 => less substrate is free and majority is bound to enzyme
NB: Kd = Koff / Kon = [A]*[B] / [AB]

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10
Q

Affinity

A

Measure of how likely two components are to bind to each other at a given [ ]

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11
Q

Specifity

A

Measure of the affinity of two components compared to the affinity of other possible binding partners

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12
Q

Regulated Subcellular Localization of Signaling Proteins

A

Substrates are not uniformly distributed in the cell. The activity of a protein will depend on the local [ ] of these partners
Regulated by transcription and membrane localization

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13
Q

JAK / STATS is an example of?

A

Nuclear Localization
Prolactin binds to receptor. Activated receptor activates JAK protein via phosphorylation. JAK protein causes STAT to dimerize becoming active.
Active STAT acts as transcription factor.

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14
Q

Regulation of protein conformation in signaling

A

Same protein can exist in multiple 3D conformations, which have different activities
i.e. Calmodulin, Hemoglobin

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15
Q

Catalytic Properties of Signaling Proteins

A

Potential for large signal amplification action at a distance
i.e. Caspase cascade

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16
Q

Small molecule Second messenger

A

Signal leads to production of highly diffusible product that can regulate downstream effectors
i.e. cAMP, Ca2+, IP3 and DAG
NB: Secondary messengers are small

17
Q

Modular Architecture

A

Conserved domains of proteins are rearranged to create complex proteins

18
Q

Domain

A

A compact, independently folding unit of protein structure.

i.e. Rho GEF

19
Q

Modular Signaling Proteins Scaffold

A

These types of proteins allow for binding of specific substrate to the specific enzyme. Scaffolding protein increase specificity.

20
Q

G Proteins

A

Have slow intrinsic GTPase activity
Normally only active in GTP state
Release of GDP (Koff) is very slow
GEF (Guanine Exchange Factor) promotes activiation
GAP (GTPase Activator Protein) promotes turning off G-Protein

21
Q

G-Protein Coupled Receptors

A

Can act as GEFs

22
Q

Getting Information Across the membrane

A

Use readily diffusable proteins
i.e. NO or Hormones

Bind to receptors to relay message
i.e. G proteins
Tyrosine Kinase Receptors

Gated Ion Channels
i.e. Ca++ ion channel with Vassopressin