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Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction

Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

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Page 1: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Signalling Moleculesand

Signal Transduction

Page 2: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Signalling molecules

• The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding environment in order to control and regulate their activities.

• Cells also need to communicate to other cells to ensure the control and regulation of systems within the organism.

• Molecules that enable cells to receive information and communicate with other cells are called signalling molecules or ligands.

Page 3: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Receptors

• For a cell to act on and respond to a chemical signal the cell must have a receptor to receive the signal.

• Once the signalling molecule has interacted with the receptor, the information needs to be processed to produce the appropriate cellular response.

• Signal processing within a cell may involve a series of molecular steps called a signal transduction pathway.

Page 4: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Types of signals

• There is constant ‘chemical chatter’ between cells in multicellular organisms.

• Chemical signals can be classified according to the distance the signal needs to travel:– Autocrine signals – a cell secretes signalling

molecules that can bind to its own receptors.

– Paracrine signals – signals are released by cells into the extracellular medium in their neighborhood and act locally

– Endocrine signals – signals produced in endocrine glands are secreted into the bloodstream and can be distributed throughout the body

Page 5: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Types of signals

Page 6: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Types of Signalling Molecules

• Hormones

• Neurotransmitters

• Pheromones

• Plant hormones

Page 7: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Hormones

• Production– Usually produced in endocrine glands.– Some neurons also produce hormones e.g. the

neurons of the hypothalamus

• Transport– Travel in the general circulation (blood) or tissue fluid.

• Targets– Specific cells in the body respond to each hormone.– Target cells have a specific receptor for each

hormone they respond to.

Page 8: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Types of hormones• The chemical nature of a hormone

influences the way it interacts with its target cells.

• Based on chemical structure hormones can be divided into three types. – steroid hormones– peptide hormones and protein hormones– amino acid derivatives

Page 9: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Steroid Hormones• Are synthesised on demand from

precursors in a cell.

• Leave the cell by simple diffusion.

• Have a long life span.

• Examples include: testosterone, oestrogen, progesterone and corticosteroids, all of which are synthesised from cholesterol.

Page 10: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Peptide/Protein hormones• Peptide hormones (< 200 amino acids) and

protein hormones (> 200 amino acids).

• Made in advance by a cell and stored in secretory vesicles.

• Leave the cell by exocytosis.

• Have a short life span.

• Examples of peptide/protein hormones include: adrenaline, thyroxine, oxytocin, antidiuretic hormone (ADH) and growth hormone

Page 11: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Amino acid derivative hormones

• Small molecules structurally related to a simple amino acid; for example, thyroid gland hormones are derived from tyrosine.

• Made in advance by a cell and stored, some in precursor form, in secretory vesicles until required.

• Leave the cell by exocytosis or, if a precursor, by simple diffusion.

• Have a short life span.

Page 12: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Key differences in hormones

• Steroid hormones– Have a lipid base, hence they are lipophilic and insoluble in water.– Require a carrier protein for transport by blood, which has a water

base. – Lipophilic nature allows steroid hormones to pass through cell

membranes that are phospholipid in nature.

• Amino acid hormones, peptide and protein hormones– Are water-soluble hormones and therefore hydrophilic.– Require no assistance to travel in the bloodstream. – Hydrophilic nature means they are unable to pass through phospholipid

membranes without assistance. – Water-soluble hormones require the presence of a second messenger

molecule, such as G protein, to transmit their message from the surface membrane receptor into the cytosol.

Page 13: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Signalling by hormones

• Lipid-soluble hormones pass through the cell membrane and bind to receptors in the cytosol.

• Water-soluble hormones bind to receptors in the cell membrane and stimulate second messenger systems.

• In both cases, the signals received by the cells go through a cascade of changes, called signal transduction, and finally the cell initiates its response.

Page 14: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Second messenger systems

• Receptors associated with second messenger systems include G protein-coupled receptors, tyrosine-kinase receptors, and ion-channel receptors.

• The ligand binds to a receptor on the cell's plasma membrane activating an associated molecule (the second messenger).

• The second messenger activates other intracellular molecules that elicit a response.

Page 15: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Second messenger systems

Page 16: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Neurotransmitters

• Most are peptides or modified amino acids

• Production– Produced in neurons and stored in synaptic vesicles

• Transport– Synaptic vesicles fuse with cell membrane following

an electrical signal, and neutrotransmitters are released. The contents of the synaptic vesicles diffuse across the synaptic gap.

• Targets– Dendrites of another neuron in order to continue an

impulse– Cells stimulated by neurons (muscles, glands)

Page 17: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Neurotransmittors• A nerve ending in the region of a synapse with another cell, contains

numerous mitochondria and many tiny vesicles containing neurotransmitter molecules.

• When an action potential enters the nerve ending, the vesicles move to the cell membranes and release their contents into the synaptic gap.

• These molecules diffuse across the gap to interact with specific receptors on the postsynaptic cell membrane.

Page 18: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Neurotransmitters

• Neurotransmitters cannot pass through the plasma membrane.

• They interact with a receptor on the cell surface which opens a protein channel and allows Na+ (sodium ions) to enter the cell and change the membrane potential (important for electrochemical potential).

Page 19: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Pheromones

• May be simple modified hydrocarbons or more complex molecules

• Production– Produced in exocrine glands

• Transport– Molecules are secreted into the external environment.

• Targets– Other members of the same species. Animals of

different species either don’t detect them or don’t respond to them.

Page 20: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Using pheromones against insect pestsa) Normal zig-zag tracking of male

moth along wafting stream of pheromone.

b) The confusion strategy involves flooding an area with pheromone so that males become confused and cannot find female moths.

c) Pheromone baits can lure moths into traps, reducing the size of the current population.

d) A few baited traps can be used to monitor the size of a moth population in order to determine whether further action is required.

Page 21: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Plant Hormones

• Vary from simple organic molecules like ethylene to large complex organic molecules.

• Production– Produced by specialized cells in a variety of plant tissues.

• Transport– Generally by the plant’s vascular tissue– Ethylene is a gas and is able to diffuse through intercellular

spaces.

• Targets – Cells which have receptors for the particular hormone.– One hormone can affect a variety of plant tissues.

Page 22: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Signal Transduction• Signal transduction refers to the way that

receptors on the cell surface convert incoming signals into information leading to an appropriately coordinated response.

• The binding of a signalling molecule with it specific receptor initiates a cellular response.

• Like homeostasis, the action of signalling molecules can be understood in terms of the stimulus response model.

• The binding of the signalling molecule to the receptor affects cellular chemicals.

• Changes in chemical activity in a cell cause changes in function.

Page 23: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION

GROWTH SURVIVAL PROLIFERATION

SIGNAL

DIFFERENTIATION

MIGRATION

APOTOSIS

Page 24: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Signal transduction cascades are the nervous

system of the cell

Page 25: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

The basics of signal transduction

• Signal is received.• Signal is amplified.• Response is usually a

change in protein levels or associations.

• Specificity possible at all levels.

• Feedback possible.• Conservation between

many organisms . . . and pathways

Page 26: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Signal transduction amplifies the original signal• The below-surface receptors activated by steroids and the G or

other proteins activated as a result of water-soluble hormones both trigger a cascade of events.

• These events generally involve proteins and ultimately lead to a biological response within the cell relevant to the original hormone signal.

• This process in which a cell converts one kind of signal into another, by a series of relay molecules and other proteins, is called signal transduction.

• Within a cell, signal transduction amplifies the signal that the original hormone molecule brought to the cell.

• A signal brought by a single hormone molecule or a few hormone molecules can be amplified through many steps to induce reactions that involve many substrates.

Page 27: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

• Binding of antigen to a B cell receptor transduces a signal which upregulates transcription of genes important in proliferation of B cells.

• It can be seen that transduction of the signal is a non-linear process.

Page 28: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

IMPORTANT CONCEPT:Signaling is nonlinear! Think of signal transduction as

a web not a line . . .

Page 29: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Responses to Signals

• Activation of genetic material, DNA.

• May lead to the production of proteins, including enzymes.

• Enzymes become involved in a range of metabolic reactions within the cell.

• Response may be the production of another hormone that will leave the cell and carry different kinds of signals to other cells.

• Alternatively signals may suppress the production of proteins, including enzymes and therefore down-regulate particular metabolic reactions within the cell.

Page 30: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding

Apoptosis• Apoptosis occurs in response to particular cell signals.

• Also known as programmed cell death (PCD), apoptosis is a normal part of the life of cells.

• Cell death is important for:– Developmental changes in growing embryos

– Ridding tissues of old, infected or damaged cells

– Removing immune cells which attack “self”

– Removing cells which have sustained DNA damage so that they do not continue to reproduce and form cancers

• Too little apoptosis can lead to cancer and too much can cause degenerative diseases such as Alzheimer disease.

• Cell death occurs when the cell membrane shrinks, DNA fragments and lysosomes empty their contents into the cell causing the cellular components to be broken down. The dead cell is then consumed by phagocytes.

Page 31: Signalling Molecules and Signal Transduction. Signalling molecules The cells of an organism are constantly receiving information about their surrounding