Second Messengers 2 Flashcards

1
Q

IP3 structure

A

Small sugar, triple phosphorylated (out of 6 available hydroxyl groups)

  • The different hydroxyl groups phosphorylated influence the inositols binding ability/role
  • IP3 = Inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (tris = non-linear, e.g. 1,2,3)

IP3 is made from the cleavage of the head group of a lipid (done by phospholipase C)

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2
Q

IP3 mediates various responses

A

Smooth muscle contraction, platelet aggregation (clotting) and hormonal secretion

Important in fertilization:
- when sperm fuses with egg, IP3 is generated in the egg’s barrier to prevent second egg-sperm fusion

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3
Q

Routes of activating the Phospholipase C (PLC) family

A

1) GPCR
- Wider range of receptor agonsts: light, odour, peptides…
- Both G-alpha and G-beta-gamma subunits activate PLC (Ga - PLC-B1; Gby - PLC-B2)

2) Growth factors
- Growth factor’s double-feature ligand binds 2 receptors causing receptor dimerisation
- Intracellular TK domains activated by autophosphorylation (in close proximity)
- SH2 of PLC-g docks onto active TK domain to become active

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4
Q

IP3’s role in calcium distribution

A

Ca2+ ligand-gated ion channels on ER have an IP3 receptor (aka IP receptors)

The ER is a Ca2+ store

  • SERCA actively pumps Ca2+ in
  • Contains a Ca2+ buffer protein (e.g. calsequestrin)

When IP3 binds to IP receptors, Ca2+ efflux can occur from ER into cytoplasm (important in muscle cells!)

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5
Q

IP3 receptor (Ca2+ ion channel) structure

A

Enormous protein (2701-2745 residues) but only 10% involved in pore channel

  • Highly damaging to cell if leaky
  • 3 isoforms, assembled as a tetramer

Highly specific inositol binding site at N-terminus (far from pore)

  • Ins (1,4,5) P3 binds with high affinity
  • Ins (2,4,5) P3 or Ins (1,3,4,5) P4 cannot bind
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6
Q

Ligand-gated Ca2+ channel regulation

A

Tight coupling between ligand concentration and time of pore opening:
- Ca2+ release is QUANTAL (in individual amounts)

Allosteric channel modification
- Cell’s ATP status can determine kinase levels and different allosteric pathways

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7
Q

Measuring intracellular Ca2+ levels

A

2 reporter groups used:

1) Photoprotein (aequorin)
2) Fluorescent dyes based on EGTA (Fura-2, Fluo-3)

Cytosolic Ca2+ concentration is extremely low and stable (0.1uM) to increase sensitivity
- Blood levels = high (1-2mM) to ensure immediate response in cells

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8
Q

Ca2+ signals for release and influx

A

Low cellular levels of Ca2+ are detected by the ER (the ER has a finite Ca2+ capacity) which trigger the STIM1 protein:

  • STIM1 facilitates ‘Capacitative Ca2+ entry’ where Ca2+ enters the cell through Ca2+ channels on the plasma membrane
  • STIM1 activation results for various protein-protein signals between different organelles
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9
Q

Method of inhibiting IP3 activation of Ca2+ signalling

A

Adding another phosphate to IP3 to become IP4

- IP4 can’t bind to receptor

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10
Q

Ca2+ regulation of activity

inactive in ER, active when bound to Calmodulin

A

Negative regulation: Ca2+ hidden in ER (unable to interact with other cellular proteins/molecules)

Positive action: exerts it’s effect through the Calmodulin (CaM) binding partner

  • Abundant in cells, has 4 Ca2+ binding sites
  • Affects cyclin nucleotide metabolism, glycogen metabolims and Ca2+ transport
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11
Q

Calmodulin (CaM) activation

A
  • Ca2+ binding causes CaM’s a-helix to fold in half, bringing the 2 globular domains together (folding a dumbell in half)
  • CaM wraps itself around target molecules (interacts with simple motif in target proteins of +ve charged segment followed by hydrophobic segment, targets pattern)
  • Exposes Met-rich hydrophobic domain on surface (buried as it wraps on target)
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12
Q

CaM controlling neurotransmitter release

A

2 types of neurotransmitter vesicles in presynaptic knob:

1) Juxtamembrane vesicles adjacent to synapse (1st ones released)
2) Reserve vesicles ensnared inside the cytoskeletal meshwork, must be released to migrate to synapse:
- CaMKII phosphorylates Synapsin on vesicle to break its attachment to cytoskeleton

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