Membranes and Cell Signalling Coyler Flashcards

1
Q

What is cross talk?

A

The influence of another pathway on a different one.

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2
Q

Where and by who was cycling AMP discovered?

A

1959 by Sutherland.

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3
Q

How is cyclic amp produced?

A

From ATP

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4
Q

What does cyclic amp do?

A

Acts primarily through a protein kinase. Stimulates glucose mobilisation for glycogen, fight or flight response, triglyceride breakdown.

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5
Q

Describe the production of cAMP?

A

Involves a receptor, a G-protein complex and the target/effector adenylate cyclase. When the ligand binds there is a conformational change allowing the G-protein to dock to the receptor. GDP is exchanged for GTP and the G-protein is activated and it’s three subunits fall apart. The alpha subunit moves independent of the beta and gamma subunits and performs work. The alpha subunit targets the effector and cAMP is produced from ATP.

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6
Q

What are second messengers?

A

Primary signal usually has a chemistry that cannot enter the cell therefore secondary messengers are required to convey the signal inside. Can be stimulatory or inhibitory.

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7
Q

What are PDE?

A

Phosphodiesterase, any enzyme that breaks a phosphodiester bond, 11 types.

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8
Q

How do PDE classes differ?

A

All have similar catalytic pore for the similar catalytic function and differ in regulatory and targeting features.

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9
Q

What does the work in the flight or fight response?

A

cAMP

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10
Q

What does cAMP do in the flight and fight response?

A

Changes the contraction from slow shortening and lengthening of contractile to a vigorous and rapid process. Drives phosphorylation in key sites to bring about profound changes in cardiac output and heart rate.

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11
Q

Why is control of fight or flight important?

A

To limit cAMP production to a short/small pulse

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12
Q

What do pathogens do to the flight or fight response?

A

They short circuit the control systems. Eg. Cholera toxin or bordettella pertusis

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13
Q

What are the control points of the fight or flight response?

A

Receptor is optimised for inactivity, receptor is internalised by the cell, G alpha hydrolyses GTP, GAP activates GTPase activity and therefore spreads the reaction to turn off the production of cAMP

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14
Q

Describe the catalytic enterty of cAMP-dependent protein kinase?

A

Small globular protein with 2 domains (N and C terminal), has specific constant between substrate and protein. Two subunits for catalytic activity and one for control or regulation.

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15
Q

What is the cAMP-dependent kinase deterred by?

A

Tyrosine at phosphorylation site: acidic residues at P-1, K at P+2 or F at P+4.
-3RRXSXXXX-4
Limited motif for the enzyme to read and activate on.

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16
Q

What is IP3?

A

Phosphoinositol 1,4,5 triphosphate

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17
Q

What are the roles of IP3?

A

Contraction in smooth muscles, fertilisation, aggregation of platelets (blood clots), secretion (cells of adrenal cortex).

18
Q

Where does IP3 come from?

A

The internal leaflet of the plasma membrane, it’s substrate is a lipid with a inositol head group which is linked to a glycerol backbone as phosphatidylinositol

19
Q

What are the two mechanisms of activation of phospholipase c?

A

Family of GPCRs which respond to light, acetylcholine and serotonin or platelet derived growth factor receptors

20
Q

What’s the difference in the mechanism of regulation between GPCR activation of PLC and cAMP?

A

Both the alpha and beta gamma subunits have activity to activate PLC but only the alpha subunit activates cAMP

21
Q

What is the mechanism of growth factor activation of phospholipase C?

A

Ligand binds to two platelet derived growth factors bringing the two kinase domains on the receptors close together which autophosphorylate one and other. Target residues are phosphotyrosine, SH2 domains recognise these. PlCgamma has a SH2 domain that is targeted to the PDGF.

22
Q

What inhibits PLCgamma?

A

PKA can accces other sites on PLCgamma and phosphorylate to inactivate.

23
Q

How can you destroy IP3?

A

Remove or add phosphate groups.

24
Q

What is IP3 receptor?

A

The IP3 receptor, a calcium channel

25
Q

What organelle primarily stores calcium?

A

The ER, has a calcium pump, a buffer and a IP3 receptor to discharge the calcium ions when the ligand is around (a channel so only let’s it go out).

26
Q

Describe the IP3 receptor?

A

Large size in order to tightly control opening and closing, 2700+ residues, 3 isoforms, assemble as a tetramer, highly selective only takes IP3 (1,4,5).

27
Q

How is the IP3 receptor regulated?

A

By multiple binding sites for luminal and cytosolic calcium, ATP, phosphorylation (PKA) etc.

28
Q

What does IP3 binding to a receptor cause?

A

The release of calcium.

29
Q

How is calcium concentration studied?

A

Two reporter groups: photo protein (aequorin) and fluorescent dyes bases on EGTA (Fura-2, Fura-3)

30
Q

What is capacitative calcium entry?

A

The calcium that comes from the blood across the plasma membrane

31
Q

What does calcium do?

A

Interacts with many protein to alter function sometimes directly and other times through regulatory proteins.

32
Q

Give some methods of direct alteration of function of proteins with calcium?

A

Channels, protease and Ligases.

33
Q

Give some methods of indirect alteration of function of proteins with calcium thorough regulatory proteins?

A

Calmodulin and annexins

34
Q

Describe calmodulin?

A

A ubiquitous, abundant protein. 16.8 kDa, 4 calcium binding sites with a particular structure.
Dung-bell structure with calcium bidding sites on either end and a site for calcium collation in the centre palm of the EF-hand structure.

35
Q

What does calmodulin affect?

A

Cyclic nucleotide metabolism, glycogen meta phloem, calcium transport, smooth muscle contraction

36
Q

What does calmodulin require to become active?

A

All 4 sites to bind calcium

37
Q

What happens when calmodulin is activated?

A

The long central helix buckles through a substantial conformational change, exposing a rich in methionine hydrophobic domain.

38
Q

What is the cluster of methionine residues called when calmodulin is activated?

A

A methionine puddle

39
Q

What is the simple motif that activated calmodulin interacts with and why?

A

A bipartite characteristic motif with positive charges followed by hydrophobic residues. It wraps around it to influence the protein.

40
Q

How is neurotransmitter release controlled?

A

Calcium dependent. Synapsin one is central to release and is at an interface to CaM kinase 2. Phosphorylation of synapsin by CaM kinase 2 releases it from the cytoskeleton which occurs when calcium is present.