Intracellular communications Flashcards

1
Q

Types of signal transmission

A

Direct

Indirect

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2
Q

Direct signal transmission

A
  1. Gap junctions
  2. Contact- Dependent (Juxtacrine signaling)
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3
Q

Gap junction

A

Pore-like communication, ions and small molecules diffused through
Ex. epithelial cells
Ex. heart muscles and smooth muscles

Essentially all tissues that touch each other

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4
Q

Contact-dependent (juxtacrine signalling)

A

Cells make direct physical contact through a signal molecule on the plasma membrane

Important during embryonic development, this type of signalling allows adjacent cells to differentiate into a different cell type

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5
Q

indirect signal transmission types

A
  1. Paracrine
  2. Hormonal
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6
Q

Paracrine signal

A

Indirect signalling

Signals are transmitted in the interstitial fluid. So only nearby cells affected (does not enter bloodstream)

Examples: inflammation, wound healing

can be autocrine or between neurons

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7
Q

Types of paracrine signals

A
  1. Autocrine- cell releases signal that binds to itself causing a response in the cell that originally released it

Important in development where a cell gets its own signal to develop into correct tissues
Ex. interleukins released by the T-helper cells can signal themselves to self-amplify

  1. Between neurons
    - Signal can travel far due to the morphology of neurons and fast due to action potential
    - Affects postsynaptic neuron
    - Signals can be released into the bloodstream- “Neuroendocrine”
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8
Q

Hormonal signal

A

indirect signalling

signals are transmitted in the blood circulation

  • Hormones released by endocrine cell. Signal molecules travel in the blood stream to target cells
  • Not very fast but more flexible as signals can affect any cells that express the receptors
  • Hormones get diluted in the blood stream, so receptors must have a very high affinity for the hormone
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9
Q

Types of signal molecules

A
  • lipid insoluble
  • lipid-soluble
  • gaseous (nitric oxide)
  • intracellular messengers
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10
Q

Lipid insoluble signal molecules

A
  • amino acids (AAs and GABA)
  • biogenic amines (catecholamines, histimine, seratonin)
  • peptides and proteins
  • non-coding RNA
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11
Q

Lipid soluble signalling molecules

A
  • biogenic amines (modified amino acids) - thyroid
  • steroids (estradiol, testosterone, cortisol)
  • eicosanoids (made from arachidonic acid from either COX pathways or Lipooxygenase pathway)
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12
Q

What eicosanoids are made by COX pathway?

A

prostaglandins

prostacyclins

thromboxanes

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13
Q

what eicosanoid is made from lipoxygenase pathway?

A

Leukotrienes

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14
Q

Gaseous signal molecules

A

Nitric oxide released by endothelial cells cause smooth muscle to relax and lead to vessel dilation and increasing blood flow

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15
Q

intracellular messengers

A
  • Cyclic AMP
  • Inositol triphosphate (IP3)
  • Diacylglycerol (DAG)
  • Calcium
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16
Q

Target cell responses

A
  1. extracellular receptors
  2. intracellular responses
17
Q

Extracellular receptors and types

A
  • Lipid-insoluble signal molecules bind to extracellular receptors

3 types:
1. ion-channel coupled receptors
2. enzyme-coupled receptors
3. G-protein coupled receptors (GPCR)

18
Q

Ion-channel coupled receptors

A
  • ligand gated ion channels

Ex. neuromuscular junction
Acetylcholine released from motor neuron binds to nicotinic receptor causing an ion channel to open and allows Na to move inside

19
Q

Enzyme-coupled receptors

A

Ex. Insulin receptor
- Insulin binds to the tyrosine kinase receptor causing activation (dimerization and autophosphorylation). This activation recruits and activates other intracellular proteins for cell response. Overall, results in the translocation of glucose transporters to the cell membrane, allows cells to take in glucose from bloodstream

Note: kinase- adds phosphate groups

20
Q

G-protein coupled receptors (GPCR)

A

Trimeric G-protein is first molecular switch

Activated g-protein can :
1. Open a channel
2. Activate an enzyme that generates second messengers to Amplify primary signal
- Adenylyl cyclase generates cAMP
- Phosphodiesterase degrades cAMP
- Phospholipase C generates IP3, diacylglycerol and Ca2+

21
Q

Epinephrine binding to the adrenergic receptor on a skeletal muscle cell (Example of GPCR)

A

Epinephrine binds to the adrenergic receptor (GPCR), triggers the G-protein which activates adenylyl cyclase that converts ATP to cAMP

cAMP acts as a second messenger which activates breakdown for glycogen. Providing more glucose for muscle cell to generate ATP for muscle contraction

22
Q

GPCR Example: Norepinephreine binds to alpha-1 adrenergic receptor on the smooth muscle around blood vessels.

A

Activates phospholipase C which cleaves IP3 and diacylglycerol

  • IP3 binds to ER receptors, triggering Ca release from ER
  • DAG and Ca activate protein kinase c
  • Protein kinase C promotes smooth muscle contractions leading to vasoconstriction and increased blood pressure
23
Q

Acetylcholine and GPCR

A

Acetylcholine activates a GPCR receptor on heart cells, activated the attached complex, opening the K channels, allowing K to leave the cell

24
Q

Intracellular receptors

A

Lipid-soluble signal molecules can bind intracellular receptors (cytosolic or nuclear). They will diffuse through the membrane and find the receptors

25
Q

Cortisol Example of intracellular receptors

A

Cortisol (steroid hormone regulating stress response, metabolism, and immune regulation) acts as a signal molecule, binds to receptor forming a Cortisol/receptor complex

Complex moves into the nucleus and activates target genes important in metabolism, immune responses, and stress adaptation