Cell Signalling Flashcards

1
Q

What causes the activation of the Synthesis of cAMP?

A
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2
Q

G-protein coupled receptors have a very characteristic structure, with what specific feature

A
  • It has these 7 transmembrane domains (7 stretches of hydrophobic amino acids)
  • Zig-zags through the membrane (4 extracellular - where ligands bind and 4 cytosolic regions)
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3
Q

There are two main types of G-proteins, what are they?

A
  • Monomeric
  • Trimeric
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4
Q

What affect does GTP have on these G-proteins

A
  • Inactive when GDP bound
  • Active when GTP bound
  • GTP becomes hydrolysed when the protein needs to deactivate
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5
Q

What is the use of Guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs)

A

Activate the G protein by stimulating it to release GDP

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6
Q

What is the use of GTPase activating proteins (GAPs)

A

Inactivate the G protein by stimulating hydroloysis of GTP to GDP
Keep in mind these proteins will be regulated by allosteric effectors ect

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7
Q

The Trimeric G protein is made up of how many subunits

A

3: α, β, γ
β, γ subunits are tightly complexed

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8
Q

Which face is the G-protein attached to?

A

The cytoplasmic face of the plasma membrane

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9
Q

Which parts of the G-protein is it activated and inactived

A
  • Activation of G-protein, via receptor activation
  • Inactivation of G protein by GTP hydroloysis by α-subunit
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10
Q

Binding of a ligand to the GPCR on trimeric G-protein does what?

A
  • Binding of ligand to GPCR changes the conformation of the receptor
  • Allowing GDP to be exchanged for GTP (acts as a Guanine nucleotide exchange factor)
  • α and β subunits may dissociate
  • Activated G-protein elicits a second messenger system
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11
Q

Cyclic AMP is produced from ATP and which other molecule

A

Adenylyl cyclase, releasing pyrophosphate

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11
Q

What causes the mechanism for the synthesis of cAMP to shutdown

A

Hydrolysis of GTP to GDP causes Gs protein to dissociate from adenylyl cyclase and bind to Gb instead

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12
Q

What causes the activation of the synthesis of cAMP?

A
  • Binding of Hormone/Lingand produces a conformation chaning in receptor
  • Receptor bind to Gs protein
  • Binding to the receptor induces a conformational change in Gs
  • GDP bound to Gs is replaced by GTP and subunit dissociates
  • Gs binds to adenylyl cyclase, activating synthesis of cAMP
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13
Q

What affect does the synthesis of cAMP have

A

Activates cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA)
PKA exists in inactive form but binding of cAMP causes dissociation of regulatory subunits

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14
Q

What is the job of PKA

A

PKA can phosphorylate target proteins
(e.g. metabolic enzymes in glycogen metabolism)
It has also influence transcription factors (CREB) and encorage transcription of genes

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15
Q

Receptor Tyrosine Kinases (RTKs) are different types of cell surface receptor is a

A

Enzyme coupled receptor
It puts phosphates on tyrosine

16
Q

Receptor Tyrosine Kinases (RTKs) are involved in activating signalling pathways involved in…

A
  • Cell cycle
  • Cell metabolism
  • Cell proliferation
  • (known because mutations in receptors and/or singalling molecules linked to many cancers)
17
Q

Receptor Tyrosine Kinases have 60 different genes which encode them with 16 structural subfamilies
Describe the basic features of the Tyrosine kinase receptor?

A
  • Single transmembrane protein
  • Extracellular ligand binding domain
  • Intracellular tyrosine kinase domian
18
Q

How does the receptor tyrosine kinase become activated

A
  • Ligand binds to extracellular binding site
  • Causes the receptor chain to dimerize
  • Phosphorylate tyrosine residues on cytosolic domian
19
Q

One tyrosines on the receptor tyrosine kinases have been activated, what can then happen

A
  • Phosphorylated tyrosines can act as docking sites for a wide range of intracellular signalling proteins (which may become phosphorylated themselves turing on next protein in pathway)
  • Specific intracelluar proteins will bind to specific phosphorylation sites on activated receptor
20
Q

With the phosphorylated tyrosine proteins acting as docking stations for different proteins, what can this allow to happen

A
  • Docking proteins may become phosphorylated (and activated) and in turn activate next protein in pathways
  • OR docking protein may move closer to next protein in signalling pathway and cause it to be activated (resulting in signal being propagates through the cytoplasm into nucleus)
21
Q

How can the receptor tyrosine kinase be turned off

A
  • Dephosphorylation of tyrosine residues on the RTK
  • Endocytosis of receptor
  • Dual-specificity phosphatase will inactivate MAPKs
  • GTPase activity can inactivate G-proteins