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Response: Cell signaling leads to regulation of transcription or cytoplasmic activities Chapter 11.4.

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Presentation on theme: "Response: Cell signaling leads to regulation of transcription or cytoplasmic activities Chapter 11.4."— Presentation transcript:

1 Response: Cell signaling leads to regulation of transcription or cytoplasmic activities Chapter 11.4

2 Nuclear and Cytoplasmic Responses  Ultimately, a signal transduction pathway leads to regulation of one or more cellular activities.  The response may occur in the cytoplasm or in the nucleus.  Many signaling pathways regulate the synthesis of enzymes or other proteins, usually by turning genes on or off in the nucleus.  The final activated molecule in the signaling pathway may function as a transcription factor. Growth factor Receptor Reception Transduction CYTOPLASM Response Inactive transcription factor Active transcription factor DNA NUCLEUS mRNA Gene Phosphorylation cascade P

3  Other pathways regulate the activity of enzymes rather than their synthesis.  This directly affects proteins that function outside the nucleus.  Example: a signal may cause the opening or closing of an ion channel in the plasma membrane or a change in cell metabolism.  Signaling pathways can also affect the overall behavior of a cell, for example, changes in cell shape  Some pathways lead to cell division.  The molecular messengers that initiate cell division pathways include growth factors and certain plan and animal hormones.  Malfunctioning of growth factor pathways may lead to cancer.

4 Fine-Tuning of the Response  Whether the response occurs in the nucleus or in the cytoplasm, it is not simply turned “on” or “off.”  There are four aspects of fine-tuning to consider:  Amplification of the signal (and thus the response)  Specificity of the response  Overall efficiency of response, enhanced by scaffolding proteins  Termination of the signal

5 Signal Amplification  Enzyme cascades amplify the cell’s response.  At each catalytic step in the cascade, the number of activated products can be much greater than in the preceding step.  The amplification effect stems from the fact that these proteins persist in the active form long enough to process multiple molecules of substrate before they become inactive again.  Example: Epinephrine  When epinephrine binds to a receptor on liver or muscle cell, glycogen is broken down into glucose.  A small number of epinephrine molecules binding to receptors on liver cell or muscle cell can lead to hundreds of millions of glucose molecules from glycogen.

6 The Specificity of Cell Signaling and Coordination of the Response  Different kinds of cells have different collections of proteins.  These different proteins allow cells to detect and respond to different signals.  Even the same signal can have different effects in cells with different proteins and pathways. Signaling molecule Receptor Relay molecules Response 1 Cell A. Pathway leads to a single response. Response 2Response 3 Response 4 Response 5 Activation or inhibition Cell B. Pathway branches, leading to two responses. Cell C. Cross-talk occurs between two pathways. Cell D. Different receptor leads to a different response.

7 Signaling Efficiency: Scaffolding Proteins and Signaling Complexes  Scaffolding proteins are large relay proteins to which other relay proteins are attached.  Scaffolding proteins can increase the signal transduction efficiency by grouping together different proteins involved in the same pathway.  In some cases, scaffolding proteins may also help activate some of the relay proteins.

8 Termination of the Signal  For a cell of a multicellular organism to remain capable of responding to incoming signals, each molecular change in its signaling pathways must last only a short time.  Signal concentration must rise and fall.  If a signaling pathway component becomes locked into one state, consequences can be dire.  The ability of a cell to receive new signals depends on the reversibility of the changes produced by prior signals.  The cellular response only occurs when the concentration of receptors with bound signaling molecules is above a certain threshold.  When the number of active receptors falls below that threshold, the cellular response ceases.  Relay molecules return to inactive form:  The GTPase activity intrinsic to a G protein hydrolyzes its bound GTP.  Phosphodiesterase converts cAMP to AMP.  Phophatases inactivate phosphorylated kinases and other proteins.


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