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Cell Communication Chapter 11.

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Presentation on theme: "Cell Communication Chapter 11."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cell Communication Chapter 11

2 11.1 External signals are converted to responses within a cell

3 Why cell communication?
Cells must “talk” to coordinate activities Evolved in single and multicellular organisms Ex: quorum sensing in bacteria Ex: hormones in plants and animals Why cell communication?

4 Signaling by Distance Cell to cell contact Local Long distance
Paracrine Synaptic Long distance Endocrine Signaling by Distance

5 Signal Transduction Pathways
Receiving end of cell “conversation” Signal Transduction Pathways

6 11.2 Reception: A signaling molecule binds to a receptor protein, causing it to change shape

7 Reception Chemical signal is detected by the target cell
Surface proteins or intracellular receptor Ligand Signaling molecule that binds specifically to another molecule Reception

8 Reception: G Protein-Coupled Receptor
Ligand binds to G protein-coupled receptor on membrane G protein becomes activated Activated G protein binds to enzyme, activating it G protein receptor is COUPLED with G protein Reception: G Protein-Coupled Receptor

9 Reception: Receptor Tyrosine Kinases
Ligand binds to receptor tyrosine kinase protein monomers Kinase: enzyme that transfers phosphate groups Activated monomers form dimer Phosphates from ATP added to activated dimer Reception: Receptor Tyrosine Kinases

10 Reception: Ion Channel Receptors
Ligand gated ion channel changes shape when ligand binds Opens “gate” so ions can cross membrane Reception: Ion Channel Receptors

11 Reception: Intracellular Receptors
Receptor in cytoplasm or nucleus (NOT cell membrane) Signal is hydrophobic or small enough to cross membrane Ex: steroid hormones, nitric oxide Reception: Intracellular Receptors

12 11.3 Transduction: Cascades of molecular interactions relay signals from receptors to target molecules in the cell

13 Converts the signal to a form that the cell can respond to
Often involves relay molecules Transduction

14 Transduction: Phosphorylation Cascades
Series of proteins activated by addition of phosphate group pass signal along Like falling dominoes Transduction: Phosphorylation Cascades

15 Transduction: Secondary Messengers
Non-protein messengers pass signal along Ex: cyclic AMP (cAMP), Ca+, or IP3 Transduction: Secondary Messengers

16 11.4 Response: Cell signaling leads to regulation of transcription or cytoplasmic activities

17 Response Specific response by the cell
Almost any imaginable cellular activity turned on or off, depending on signal Usually regulate enzyme activity Response

18 Response: Nuclear Genes turned on to make proteins
Activates transcription Genes turned off to stop making proteins Stops transcription Response: Nuclear

19 Response: Cytoplasmic
Proteins made are modified, amplified, or terminated Translation of genes modified, resulting proteins modified Example: stimulation of glycogen breakdown by epinephrine Response: Cytoplasmic

20 Cell Signaling Specificity
Which receptors and secondary messengers a cell has determines which signals it will respond to and how Ex: liver and heart cells respond differently to epinephrine Cell Signaling Specificity

21 11.5 Apoptosis integrates multiple cell-signaling pathways

22 Apoptosis Programmed cell death
Part of normal development and differentiation Ex: formation of fingers and toes Ex: cancer cells Complex cell signaling pathways Apoptosis


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