Chapter 11 Cell
Communication
Lecture Outline
Overview: The Cellular
Internet
·
Cell-to-cell
communication is absolutely essential for multicellular organisms.
°
Cells
must communicate to coordinate their activities.
·
Communication
between cells is also important for many unicellular organisms.
·
Biologists
have discovered universal mechanisms of cellular regulation involving the same
small set of cell-signaling mechanisms.
°
The
ubiquity of these mechanisms provides additional evidence for the evolutionary
relatedness of all life.
·
Cells
most often communicate by chemical signals, although signals may take other
forms.
Concept 11.1 External signals are converted into responses within
the cell
·
What
messages are passed from cell to cell? How do cells respond to these messages?
·
We
will first consider communication in microbes, to gain insight into the
evolution of cell signaling.
Cell signaling evolved early in the history of
life.
·
One
topic of cell “conversation” is sex.
·
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the yeast of bread, wine,
and beer, identifies potential mates by chemical signaling.
°
There
are two sexes, a and a, each of which secretes a
specific signaling molecule, a
factor and a factor, respectively.
°
These
factors each bind to receptor proteins on the other mating type.
·
Once
the mating factors have bound to the receptors, the two cells grow toward each
other and undergo other cellular changes.
·
The
two cells fuse, or mate, to form an a/a cell containing the genes
of both cells.
·
The
process by which a signal on a cell’s surface is converted into a specific
cellular response is a series of steps called a signal-transduction pathway.
°
The
molecular details of these pathways are strikingly similar in yeast and animal
cells, even though their last common ancestor lived more than a billion years
ago.
°
Signaling
systems of bacteria and plants also share similarities.
·
These
similarities suggest that ancestral signaling molecules evolved long ago in
prokaryotes and have since been adopted for new uses by single-celled
eukaryotes and multicellular descendents.
Communicating cells may be close together or
far apart.
·
Multicellular
organisms release signaling molecules that target other cells.
·
Cells
may communicate by direct contact.
°
Both
animals and plants have cell junctions that connect to the cytoplasm of
adjacent cells.
°
Signaling
substances dissolved in the cytosol can pass freely between adjacent cells.
°
Animal
cells can communicate by direct contact between membrane-bound cell surface
molecules.
°
Such
cell-cell recognition is important to such processes as embryonic development
and the immune response.
·
In
other cases, messenger molecules are secreted by the signaling cell.
°
Some
transmitting cells release local
regulators that influence cells in the local vicinity.
°
One
class of local regulators in animals, growth
factors, includes compounds that stimulate nearby target cells to grow and
multiply.
°
This
is an example of paracrine signaling,
which occurs when numerous cells simultaneously receive and respond to growth
factors produced by a single cell in their vicinity.
·
In
synaptic signaling, a nerve cell
produces a neurotransmitter that diffuses across a synapse to a single cell
that is almost touching the sender.
°
The
neurotransmitter stimulates the target cell.
°
The
transmission of a signal through the nervous system can also be considered an
example of long-distance signaling.
·
Local
signaling in plants is not well understood. Because of their cell walls, plants
must have different mechanisms from animals.
·
Plants
and animals use hormones for
long-distance signaling.
°
In
animals, specialized endocrine cells release hormones into the circulatory
system, by which they travel to target cells in other parts of the body.
°
Plant
hormones, called growth regulators,
may travel in vessels but more often travel from cell to cell or move through
air by diffusion.
·
Hormones
and local regulators range widely in size and type.
°
The
plant hormone ethylene (C2H4), which promotes fruit
ripening and regulates growth, is a hydrocarbon of only six atoms, capable of
passing through cell walls.
°
Insulin,
which regulates blood sugar levels in mammals, is a protein with thousands of
atoms.
·
What
happens when a cell encounters a signal?
°
The
signal must be recognized by a specific receptor molecule, and the information
it carries must be changed into another form, or transduced, inside the cell before the cell can respond.
The three stages of cell signaling are
reception, transduction, and response.
·
E.
W. Sutherland and his colleagues pioneered our understanding of cell signaling.
°
Their
work investigated how the animal hormone epinephrine stimulates breakdown of
the storage polysaccharide glycogen in liver and skeletal muscle.
°
Breakdown
of glycogen releases glucose derivatives that can be used for fuel in
glycolysis or released as glucose in the blood for fuel elsewhere.
°
Thus
one effect of epinephrine, which is released from the adrenal gland during
times of physical or mental stress, is mobilization of fuel reserves.
·
Sutherland’s
research team discovered that epinephrine activated a cytosolic enzyme,
glycogen phosphorylase.
°
However,
epinephrine did not activate the phosphorylase directly in vitro but could only act via intact
cells.
°
Therefore,
there must be an intermediate step or steps occurring inside the cell.
°
The
plasma membrane must be involved in transmitting the epinephrine signal.
·
The
process involves three stages: reception, transduction, and response.
°
In
reception, a chemical signal binds
to a cellular protein, typically at the cell’s surface or inside the cell.
°
In
transduction, binding leads to a
change in the receptor that triggers a series of changes in a series of
different molecules along a signal-transduction
pathway. The molecules in the pathway are called relay molecules.
°
In
response, the transduced signal triggers
a specific cellular activity.
Concept 11.2 Reception: A signal molecule binds to
a receptor protein, causing it to change shape
·
The
cell targeted by a particular chemical signal has a receptor protein on or in
the target cell that recognizes the signal molecule.
°
Recognition
occurs when the signal binds to a specific site on the receptor that is
complementary in shape to the signal.
·
The
signal molecule behaves as a ligand,
a small molecule that binds with specificity to a larger molecule.
·
Ligand
binding causes the receptor protein to undergo a change in shape.
·
This
may activate the receptor so that it can interact with other molecules.
°
For
other receptors, this causes aggregation of receptor molecules, leading to
further molecular events inside the cell.
·
Most
signal receptors are plasma membrane proteins, whose ligands are large
water-soluble molecules that are too large to cross the plasma membrane.
Some receptor proteins are intracellular.
·
Some
signal receptors are dissolved in the cytosol or nucleus of target cells.
°
To
reach these receptors, the signals pass through the target cell’s plasma
membrane.
°
Such
chemical messengers are either hydrophobic enough or small enough to cross the
phospholipid interior of the plasma membrane.
·
Hydrophobic
messengers include the steroid and thyroid hormones of animals.
·
Nitric
oxide (NO) is a gas whose small size allows it to pass between membrane
phospholipids.
·
Testosterone
is secreted by the testis and travels through the blood to enter cells
throughout the body.
°
The
cytosol of target cells contains receptor molecules that bind testosterone,
activating the receptor.
°
These
activated proteins enter the nucleus and turn on specific genes that control
male sex characteristics.
·
How
does the activated hormone-receptor complex turn on genes?
·
These
activated proteins act as transcription
factors.
·
Transcription
factors control which genes are turned on—that is, which genes are transcribed
into messenger RNA.
·
mRNA
molecules leave the nucleus and carry information that directs the synthesis
(translation) of specific proteins at the ribosome.
·
Other
intracellular receptors (such as thyroid hormone receptors) are found in the
nucleus and bind to the signal molecules there.
Most signal receptors are plasma membrane
proteins.
·
Most
signal molecules are water-soluble and too large to pass through the plasma
membrane.
·
They
influence cell activities by binding to receptor proteins on the plasma
membrane.
°
Binding
leads to changes in the shape of the receptor or to the aggregation of receptors.
°
These
cause changes in the intracellular environment.
·
There
are three major types of membrane receptors: G-protein-linked receptors,
receptor tyrosine kinases, and ion-channel receptors.
·
A
G-protein-linked receptor consists
of a receptor protein associated with a G protein on the cytoplasmic side.
°
Seven
alpha helices span the membrane.
°
G-protein-linked
receptors bind many different signal molecules, including yeast mating factors,
epinephrine and many other hormones, and neurotransmitters.
·
The
G protein acts as an on/off switch.
°
If
GDP is bound to the G protein, the G protein is inactive.
°
When
the appropriate signal molecule binds to the extracellular side of the
receptor, the G protein binds GTP (instead of GDP) and becomes active.
°
The
activated G protein dissociates from the receptor and diffuses along the
membrane, where it binds to an enzyme, altering its activity.
°
The
activated enzyme triggers the next step in a pathway leading to a cellular
response.
·
The
G protein can also act as a GTPase enzyme to hydrolyze GTP to GDP.
°
This
change turns the G protein off.
·
Now
inactive, the G protein leaves the enzyme, which returns to its original state.
·
The
whole system can be shut down quickly when the extracellular signal molecule is
no longer present.
·
G-protein
receptor systems are extremely widespread and diverse in their functions.
°
They
play important roles during embryonic development.
°
Vision
and smell in humans depend on these proteins.
·
Similarities
among G proteins and G-protein-linked receptors of modern organisms suggest
that this signaling system evolved very early.
·
Several
human diseases involve G-protein systems.
°
Bacterial
infections causing cholera and botulism interfere with G-protein function.
·
The
tyrosine-kinase receptor system is
especially effective when the cell needs to trigger several signal transduction
pathways and cellular responses at once.
°
This
system helps the cell regulate and coordinate many aspects of cell growth and
reproduction.
·
The
tyrosine-kinase receptor belongs to a major class of plasma membrane receptors
that have enzymatic activity.
°
A
kinase is an enzyme that catalyzes
the transfer of phosphate groups.
°
The
cytoplasmic side of these receptors functions as a tyrosine kinase,
transferring a phosphate group from ATP to tyrosine on a substrate protein.
·
An
individual tyrosine-kinase receptor consists of several parts:
°
An
extracellular signal-binding site.
°
A
single alpha helix spanning the membrane.
°
An
intracellular tail with several tyrosines.
·
The
signal molecule binds to an individual receptor.
°
Ligands
bind to two receptors, causing the two receptors to aggregate and form a dimer.
·
This
dimerization activates the tyrosine-kinase section of the receptors, each of
which then adds phosphate from ATP to the tyrosine tail of the other polypeptide.
·
The
fully activated receptor proteins activate a variety of specific relay proteins
that bind to specific phosphorylated tyrosine molecules.
°
One
tyrosine-kinase receptor dimer may activate ten or more different intracellular
proteins simultaneously.
°
These
activated relay proteins trigger many different transduction pathways and
responses.
·
A
ligand-gated ion channel is a type
of membrane receptor that can act as a gate when the receptor changes shape.
·
When
a signal molecule binds as a ligand to the receptor protein, the gate opens to
allow the flow of specific ions, such as Na+ or Ca2+,
through a channel in the receptor.
°
Binding
by a ligand to the extracellular side changes the protein’s shape and opens the
channel.
°
When
the ligand dissociates from the receptor protein, the channel closes.
·
The
change in ion concentration within the cell may directly affect the activity of
the cell.
·
Ligand-gated
ion channels are very important in the nervous system.
°
For
example, neurotransmitter molecules released at a synapse between two neurons
bind as ligands to ion channels on the receiving cell, causing the channels to
open.
°
Ions
flow in and trigger an electrical signal that propagates down the length of the
receiving cell.
·
Some
gated ion channels respond to electrical signals, instead of ligands.
Concept 11.3 Transduction: Cascades of molecular interactions relay
signals from receptors to target molecules in the cell
·
The
transduction stage of signaling is usually a multistep pathway.
·
These
pathways often greatly amplify the signal.
°
If
some molecules in a pathway transmit a signal to multiple molecules of the next
component in the series, the result can be large numbers of activated molecules
at the end of the pathway.
·
A
small number of signal molecules can produce a large cellular response.
·
Also,
multistep pathways provide more opportunities for coordination and regulation
than do simpler systems.
Pathways relay signals from receptors to
cellular responses.
·
Signal-transduction
pathways act like falling dominoes.
°
The
signal-activated receptor activates another protein, which activates another,
and so on, until the protein that produces the final cellular response is
activated.
·
The
relay molecules that relay a signal from receptor to response are mostly
proteins.
°
The
interaction of proteins is a major theme of cell signaling.
°
Protein
interaction is a unifying theme of all cellular regulation.
·
The
original signal molecule is not passed along the pathway and may not even enter
the cell.
°
It
passes on information.
°
At
each step, the signal is transduced into a different form, often by a
conformational change in a protein.
°
The
conformational change is often brought about by phosphorylation.
Protein phosphorylation, a common mode of
regulation in cells, is a major mechanism of signal transduction.
·
The
phosphorylation of proteins by a specific enzyme (a protein kinase) is a widespread cellular mechanism for regulating
protein activity.
°
Most
protein kinases act on other substrate proteins, unlike tyrosine kinases that
act on themselves.
·
Most
phosphorylation occurs at either serine or threonine amino acids of the
substrate protein (unlike tyrosine phosphorylation in tyrosine kinases).
·
Many
of the relay molecules in a signal-transduction pathway are protein kinases
that act on other protein kinases to create a “phosphorylation cascade.”
·
Each
protein phosphorylation leads to a conformational change because of the
interaction between the newly added phosphate group and charged or polar amino
acids on the protein.
·
Phosphorylation
of a protein typically converts it from an inactive form to an active form.
°
Rarely,
phosphorylation inactivates protein activity.
·
A
single cell may have hundreds of different protein kinases, each specific for a
different substrate protein.
°
Fully
2% of our genes are thought to code for protein kinases.
°
Together,
they regulate a large proportion of the thousands of cell proteins.
·
Abnormal
activity of protein kinases can cause abnormal cell growth and may contribute
to the development of cancer.
·
The
responsibility for turning off a signal-transduction pathway belongs to protein phosphatases.
°
These
enzymes rapidly remove phosphate groups from proteins, a process called
dephosphorylation.
°
Phosphatases
also make the protein kinases available for reuse, enabling the cell to respond
again to a signal.
·
At
any given moment, the activity of a protein regulated by phosphorylation
depends on the balance of active kinase molecules and active phosphatase
molecules.
·
When
the extracellular signal molecule is absent, active phosphatase molecules
predominate, and the signaling pathway and cellular response are shut down.
·
The
phosphorylation/dephosphorylation system acts as a molecular switch in the
cell, turning activities on and off as required.
Certain signal molecules and ions are key
components of signaling pathways (second messengers).
·
Many
signaling pathways involve small, water-soluble, nonprotein molecules or ions
called second messengers.
°
These
molecules rapidly diffuse throughout the cell.
·
Second
messengers participate in pathways initiated by both G-protein-linked receptors
and tyrosine-kinase receptors.
°
Two
of the most widely used second messengers are cyclic AMP and Ca2+.
·
Once
Sutherland knew that epinephrine caused glycogen breakdown without entering the
cell, he looked for a second messenger inside the cell.
·
Binding
by epinephrine leads to increases in the cytosolic concentration of cyclic AMP, or cAMP.
°
This
occurs because the activated receptor activates adenylyl cyclase, which converts ATP to cAMP.
°
The
normal cellular concentration of cAMP can be boosted twentyfold within seconds.
°
cAMP
is short-lived, as phosphodiesterase converts it to AMP.
°
Another
surge of epinephrine is needed to reboost the cytosolic concentration of cAMP.
·
Caffeine-containing
beverages such as coffee provide an artificial way to keep the body alert.
°
Caffeine
blocks the conversion of cAMP to AMP, maintaining the system in a state of
activation in the absence of epinephrine.
·
Many
hormones and other signal molecules trigger the formation of cAMP.
°
G-protein-linked
receptors, G proteins, and protein kinases are other components of cAMP
pathways.
°
cAMP
diffuses through the cell and activates a serine/threonine kinase called protein kinase A.
°
The
activated kinase phosphorylates various other proteins.
·
Regulation
of cell metabolism is also provided by G-protein systems that inhibit adenylyl
cyclase.
°
These
use a different signal molecule to activate a different receptor that activates
an inhibitory G protein.
·
Certain
microbes cause disease by disrupting G-protein signaling pathways.
°
The
cholera bacterium, Vibrio cholerae,
may be present in water contaminated with human feces.
°
This
bacterium colonizes the small intestine and produces a toxin that modifies a G
protein that regulates salt and water secretion.
°
The
modified G protein is unable to hydrolyze GTP to GDP and remains stuck in its
active form, continuously stimulating adenylyl cyclase to make cAMP.
°
The
resulting high concentration of cAMP causes the intestinal cells to secrete
large amounts of water and salts into the intestines, leading to profuse
diarrhea and death from loss of water and salts.
·
Treatments
for certain human conditions involve signaling pathways.
°
One
pathway uses cyclic GMP, or cGMP, as a signaling molecule. Its
effects include the relaxation of smooth muscle cells in artery walls.
°
A
compound was developed to treat chest pains. This compound inhibits the
hydrolysis of cGMP to GMP, prolonging the signal and increasing blood flow to
the heart muscle.
°
Under
the trade name Viagra, this compound is now widely used as a treatment for
erectile dysfunction. Viagra causes dilation of blood vessels, allowing
increased blood flow to the penis.
·
Many
signal molecules in animals induce responses in their target cells via
signal-transduction pathways that increase the cytosolic concentration of Ca2+.
°
In
animal cells, increases in Ca2+ may cause contraction of muscle
cells, secretion of certain substances, and cell division.
°
In
plant cells, increases in Ca2+ trigger responses such as the pathway
for greening in response to light.
·
Cells
use Ca2+ as a second messenger in both G-protein pathways and
tyrosine-kinase pathways.
·
The
Ca2+ concentration in the cytosol is typically much lower than that
outside the cell, often by a factor of 10,000 or more.
°
Various
protein pumps transport Ca2+ outside the cell or into the
endoplasmic reticulum or other organelles.
°
As
a result, the concentration of Ca2+ in the ER is usually much higher
than the concentration in the cytosol.
·
Because
cytosolic Ca2+ is so low, small changes in the absolute numbers of
ions causes a relatively large percentage change in Ca2+
concentration.
·
Signal-transduction
pathways trigger the release of Ca2+ from the cell’s ER.
·
The
pathways leading to release involve still other second messengers, diacylglycerol (DAG) and inositol trisphosphate (IP3).
°
DAG
and IP3 are created when a phospholipase cleaves membrane
phospholipid PIP2.
°
The
phospholipase may be activated by a G protein or by a tyrosine-kinase receptor.
°
IP3
activates a gated-calcium channel, releasing Ca2+ from the ER.
·
Calcium
ions activate the next protein in a signal-transduction pathway.
Concept 11.4 Response: Cell signaling leads to
regulation of cytoplasmic activities or transcription
·
Ultimately,
a signal-transduction pathway leads to the regulation of one or more cellular
activities.
°
This
may be the opening or closing of an ion channel or a change in cell metabolism.
°
For
example, epinephrine helps regulate cellular energy metabolism by activating
enzymes that catalyze the breakdown of glycogen.
·
The
stimulation of glycogen breakdown by epinephrine involves a G-protein-linked
receptor, a G protein, adenylyl cyclase, cAMP, and several protein kinases
before glycogen phosphorylase is activated.
·
Other
signaling pathways do not regulate the activity
of enzymes but the synthesis of
enzymes or other proteins.
·
Activated
receptors may act as transcription factors that turn specific genes on or off
in the nucleus.
Elaborate pathways amplify and specify the
cell’s response to signals.
·
Signaling
pathways with multiple steps have two benefits.
1.
They
amplify the response to a signal.
2.
They
contribute to the specificity of the response.
·
At
each catalytic step in a cascade, the number of activated products is much
greater than in the preceding step.
°
In
the epinephrine-triggered pathway, binding by a small number of epinephrine
molecules can lead to the release of hundreds of millions of glucose molecules.
·
Various
types of cells may receive the same signal but produce very different
responses.
°
For
example, epinephrine triggers liver or striated muscle cells to break down
glycogen, but stimulates cardiac muscle cells to contract, leading to a rapid
heartbeat.
·
The
explanation for this specificity is that different kinds of cells have
different collections of proteins.
°
The
response of a particular cell to a signal depends on its particular collection
of receptor proteins, relay proteins, and proteins needed to carry out the
response.
°
Two
cells that respond differently to the same signal differ in one or more of the
proteins that handle and respond to the signal.
·
A
signal may trigger a single pathway in one cell but trigger a branched pathway
in another.
·
Two
pathways may converge to modulate a single response.
·
Branching
of pathways and interactions between pathways are important for regulating and
coordinating a cell’s response to incoming information.
·
Rather
than relying on diffusion of large relay molecules such as proteins, many
signal pathways are linked together physically by scaffolding proteins.
°
Scaffolding
proteins may themselves be relay proteins to which several other relay proteins
attach.
°
This
hardwiring enhances the speed, accuracy, and efficiency of signal transfer
between cells.
·
The
importance of relay proteins that serve as branch or intersection points in
signaling pathways is underscored when these proteins are defective or missing.
°
The
inherited disorder Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS) is caused by the absence of a
single relay protein.
°
Symptoms
include abnormal bleeding, eczema, and a predisposition to infections and
leukemia, due largely to the absence of the protein in the cells of the immune
system.
°
The
WAS protein is located just beneath the cell surface, where it interacts with
the microfilaments of the cytoskeleton and with several signaling pathways,
including those that regulate immune cell proliferation.
°
When
the WAS protein is absent, the cytoskeleton is not properly organized and
signaling pathways are disrupted.
·
As
important as activating mechanisms are inactivation
mechanisms.
°
For
a cell to remain alert and capable of responding to incoming signals, each
molecular change in its signaling pathways must last only a short time.
°
If
signaling pathway components become locked into one state, whether active or
inactive, the proper function of the cell can be disrupted.
°
Binding
of signal molecules to receptors must be reversible, allowing the receptors to
return to their inactive state when the signal is released.
°
Similarly,
activated signals (cAMP and phosphorylated proteins) must be inactivated by
appropriate enzymes to prepare the cell for a fresh signal.