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Proteins & Signaling Membranes ~ Part II

Membranes pt. 2

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Page 1: Membranes pt. 2

Proteins & Signaling

Membranes ~ Part II

Page 2: Membranes pt. 2

Maintaining Homeostasis• Cells must communicate with their external

environment• Monitoring external conditions determines

cellular responses• Example – E. coli:

– If the bacteria detects a high concentration of lactose, it synthesizes proteins to import and metabolize lactose

– If it detects a higher concentration of glucose, it it synthesizes proteins to import and metabolize gluose

• Membrane proteins help gather information about the environment

Page 3: Membranes pt. 2

Cellular Communication• In multi-cellular organisms,

communication is more complex• Each cell communicates with

dozens of other cells• Determines:

– When it should grow– When it should differentiate or die– When it should release protein

products needed by other cells

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Mechanisms of Cell Communication

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Communication Through Contact

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Two Types of Membrane Proteins

• The membrane is a barrier • Prevents interchange of materials

– Special channels are needed to transport some materials into & out of the cell

• It also prevents free exchange of information– Special receptors are needed to gather

information• Therefore the cell membrane has 2 major

types of proteins:– Transporters – Receptors

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Intrinsic & Extrinsic Proteins

• Intrinsic membrane proteins– Embedded in the lipid bilayer– Some extend through it– Transmembrane proteins

• Extrinsic membrane proteins– Absorbed to the surface of the lipid

bilayer– Can be separated from the lipid bilayer

without destroying the membrane

Page 8: Membranes pt. 2

Transmembrane Proteins

• Intrinsic proteins that extend from one side of the membrane to the other are transmembrane proteins.

• Cells pump ions in and out through their plasma membranes.

• More than half the energy that we consume is used by cells to drive the protein pumps in the brain that transport ions across plasma membranes of nerve cells.

• How can ions be transported across membranes that are effectively impermeable to them?

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Ligand Gated Ion Channel

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Domains• Many transmembrane proteins have three

different domains:• A hydrophilic domain at the N-terminus

– consists of hydrophilic amino acids – pokes out in the extracellular medium

• A hydrophobic domain in the middle of the amino acid chain– often only 20-30 amino acids long– threaded through the plasma membrane– made of amino acids having hydrophobic side

chains

• A hydrophilic domain at the C-terminus – protrudes into the cytoplasm.

Page 11: Membranes pt. 2

Glycoproteins• Many transmembrane proteins are glycoproteins • Sugar side chains are covalently attached to the

hydrophilic domains that protrude into the extracellular membrane.

• A typical mammalian cell may have several hundred distinct types of glycoproteins studding its plasma membrane.

• Each glycoprotein has its extracellular domain glycosylated with a complex branching bush of sugar residues covalently linked to the asparagine side chains.– Some glycoproteins may have 2 or 3 asparagine-

linked sugar side chains, others may have dozens.

Page 12: Membranes pt. 2

Multi-membrane Spanning Proteins

• Some transmembrane proteins have multiple transmembrane domains.

• Hydrophilic domains alternate with hydrophobic domains.

• The protein chain weaves back and forth between opposite sides of the plasma membrane.

• Called serpentine membrane proteins b/c they are snake-like– A common structure in many serpentine

transmembrane proteins involves 7 hydrophobic domains inserted into the plasma membrane, separated by hydrophilic regions that are looped out alternatively into either the cytoplasm or the extracellular space = 7 membrane spanning proteins

Page 13: Membranes pt. 2

Receptors• Specialized transmembrane proteins that

acquire information from the extracellular space

• Relay this information into the cell through the plasma membrane

• Cell surface receptors act as the antennae of the cell.

• Mammalian cells have wide variety of transmembrane receptors

• Two important types: – Growth Factor Receptors – G Protein Receptors

Page 14: Membranes pt. 2

Growth Factor Receptors• Help the cell determine whether or not it

should grow by binding growth factors• Growth factors may be present in the

medium around the cell – Sometimes called mitogens because they

induce the cell to grow and pass through mitosis

– They are polypeptides, often 50-100 amino acids long.

• When present in sufficient quantity, a growth factor (GF) will stimulate a cell to enter into a round of growth and division.

Page 15: Membranes pt. 2

Specificity of Binding

• GFs bind to cell surface GF receptors. • Each type of GF binds to the extracellular

domain of its own specific receptor – will not bind to receptors for other growth

factors.

• Each type of receptor binds specifically to its own ligand– accommodates the appropriate growth factor

in a lock-and-key fashion

Page 16: Membranes pt. 2

Variety of Ligand: Receptor Pairs

• Other ligands besides growth factors convey signals from cell to cell through intercellular space.

• There are at least several hundred distinct receptor: ligand pairs in our body

• Each devoted to the binding of a distinct extracellular ligand such as a growth factor to its cognate receptor.

• Each ligand originates elsewhere and is secreted by a cell or cells specialized for its release.

Page 17: Membranes pt. 2

Transmembrane Signal Transduction

• The binding of a ligand to its receptor is the beginning of the signalling process.

• How does the interior of the cell learn that the ligand has bound?

• How is this translated into information the cell can use?

• Transmission of information by a protein is a form of signal transduction.

Page 18: Membranes pt. 2

An Overview of Cell Signaling

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Structure GF Receptor Proteins

• Outside the cell, they have a ligand-binding N- terminal ectodomain

• Inside is a single membrane-spanning transmembrane domain.

• At their C-termini in the cytoplasm, they have a specialized enzyme domain– This becomes activated whenever the

extracellular domain of the receptor binds a GF ligand.

– In the case of many GF receptors, the cytoplasmic enzyme domain contains protein kinase activity.

Page 20: Membranes pt. 2

Kinases & Signal Transduction

• Kinases are enzymes that attach phosphate groups to their substrates.

• Protein kinases take the gamma-phosphates from ATP and transfer them to protein substrates, resulting in the phosphorylation of the substrate proteins.

• The phosphate groups are attached to the tyrosine side chains of substrate proteins that communicate with or lie near the cytoplasmic domains of the GF receptors.

• These receptors are considered to have protein tyrosine kinase activity to distinguish them from many other protein kinases that are devoted to other signalling functions.

Page 21: Membranes pt. 2

Sequence of GF Signal Transduction

• The GF ligand binds to the extracellular domain of its receptor.

• This activates the tyrosine kinase domain at the other end of the receptor in the cytoplasm.

• The tyrosine kinase becomes active and phosphorylates a series of cytoplasmic substrate proteins.

• These are activated or altered functionally as a consequence of being phosphorylated.

• They then send signals further into the cell that result in the cell growing and dividing.

Page 22: Membranes pt. 2

An External Event

• GF ligand does not need to enter the cell in order for transmembrane signalling to occur.

• All active transmembrane signal transduction occurs while the ligand is still in the extracellular space.

Page 23: Membranes pt. 2

Mechanism of Kinase Activation

• How does the association of GF ligand outside the cell cause tyrosine kinase activation inside the cell?

• Some considerations:– There are many copies of each type of GF

receptor molecule that are displayed on the surface of a given cell.

– These receptor molecules, while tethered in the plasma membrane via their hydrophobic transmembrane domains, diffuse laterally through the plane of the plasma membrane.

Page 24: Membranes pt. 2

Dimerization

• When a GF ligand binds to a single receptor molecule, it encourages the dimerization of the receptor with another receptor molecule floating in the plasma membrane.

• Often the GF ligand itself has two receptor-binding ends– enables it to serve as a bridge between the

two receptors – attracts two receptors– encourages their dimerization– stabilizes the resulting receptor/ dimer pair.

Page 25: Membranes pt. 2

Passing the Message

• Dimerization pulls the cytoplasmic domains of the two receptor molecules closer.

• The tyrosine kinase (TK) of one receptor molecule then phosphorylates the kinase domain of the second receptor molecule

• This phosphorylation results in a steric shift in the 3-dimensional structure of the phosphorylated kinase domain

• This causes its functional activation.

Page 26: Membranes pt. 2

Tyrosine Kinase Receptor Dimers

Page 27: Membranes pt. 2

The Final Steps

• The two kinase domains phosphorylate and thereby activate each other.

• Once they are activated, they phosphorylate nearby cytoplasmic substrate proteins that then pass signals further into the cell.

Page 28: Membranes pt. 2

Phosphorylation Cascade

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7 Membrane-spanning Serpentine Receptors

Varied Functions• Receptors on cells of the tongue convey taste. • Hundreds of receptor types in our nose convey

information about odors.• A carotenoid molecule related to vitamin A binds

rhodopsin in the rods and cones of our eyes. – It picks up photons which alters its conformation, and

causes the receptor to which it is bound to release signals into the rod/cone cytoplasm that result in our perception of light.

• Baker's yeast cells communicate their sexual identity to each other by release of polypeptide mating factors that bind this type of receptor

• Epinephrine controls the “flight or fight response”

Page 30: Membranes pt. 2

Exchange of Yeast Mating Factors

Page 31: Membranes pt. 2

A G-Protein Receptor

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The Role of Epinephrine• Also known as adrenaline• Released by the adrenal glands above the

kidneys in response to stressful stimuli. • Epinephrine travels through the blood stream and

binds to specific receptors on cells in various tissues throughout the body.

• This results in the mammalian fight / flight reaction.

• This includes:– increased heart rate, – decreased blood flow to gut– increased blood flow to skeletal muscles– increased blood glucose

Page 33: Membranes pt. 2

Tracing One Action• Epinephrine acts at many sites to

produce a wide array of physiologic changes

• One of these is increased blood glucose

• Epinephrine causes liver and muscle cells to break down glycogen and release the resulting glucose into the circulation

• We will trace this one action of epinephrine

Page 34: Membranes pt. 2

How Epinephrine Acts

• Epinephrine binds to its receptor on the surface of a variety of cell types throughout the body.

• This beta adrenergic receptor is a 7 membrane-spanning, serpentine receptor embedded in the plasma membranes of these cells.

• As is the case with the growth factor receptors, the epinephrine ligand is not internalized into the cell.

• While bound for a short period of time to its receptor, epinephrine causes the latter to release biochemical signals into the cell cytoplasm.

Page 35: Membranes pt. 2

The Epinephrine Receptor

• These receptors do not depend upon receptor dimerization to transduce signals across the plasma membrane.

• Instead, single receptor molecules will change their 3 dimensional steric configuration in response to ligand binding.

• This steric shift affects the configuration of the cytoplasmic domains of the receptor (the loops of receptor protein that protrude into the cytoplasm).

Page 36: Membranes pt. 2

Cytoplasmic Signal Transduction

• The receptor communicates with the cytoplasm by stimulating a second protein

• This is known as a G protein (G = guanine)• The G protein normally lies near the

receptor in an inactive, quiet state. • When the receptor is activated by ligand

binding, it pokes the G protein. • The G protein responds by switching itself

on, into an active state. • Once in the active state, the G protein

sends signals further into the cell.

Page 37: Membranes pt. 2

The G Protein is Binary• The G protein remains in the active

state for only a brief period, after which it shuts itself off.

• The G protein's two states (ON or OFF) are determined by guanine nucleotide which it binds– thus the term G protein

• When it is inactive, it binds GDP• When active, it binds GTP.

Page 38: Membranes pt. 2

GTP Binding Activates the Protein

• The resting, OFF form of the G protein sits around with its bound GDP.

• When a ligand-activated receptor pokes it, the G protein releases its bound GDP

• It then allows a GTP molecule to jump aboard.

• The GTP-bound form of the G protein is the active ON state.

• While in the ON state, it releases downstream signals.

Page 39: Membranes pt. 2

Feedback Regulation• After a short period of time

(seconds or less), the G protein hydrolyzes its own GTP back to GDP . . .

• Thus shutting itself off. • This hydrolysis represents a

negative feedback mechanism • Ensures that the G protein is only in

the active, signal- emitting ON mode for a short period of time.

Page 40: Membranes pt. 2

Structure of the G Protein• Composed of 3 subunits: alpha, beta &

gamma• In its inactive OFF state, the 3 subunits

are bound together• The alpha subunit binds the guanine

nucleotide, in this case GDP. • When the beta adrenergic receptor

activates the G protein, the alpha subunit releases GDP,

• then binds GTP, • and falls away from the beta and

gamma subunits.

Page 41: Membranes pt. 2

The Signaling Cascade

• Once GTP is bound, the GTP-bound alpha subunit also loses affinity for the receptor.

• It dissociates from receptor, • moves over and pokes another nearby

protein• the enzyme adenylate cyclase, • which is activated by being poked, • and cyclizes ATP into 3'5' cyclic AMP.

Page 42: Membranes pt. 2

The Second Messenger

• cAMP is a second messenger• After G protein encounters adenyl cyclase enzyme,

the alpha subunit of the G protein hydrolyzes its bound GTP and releases the adenyl cyclase– Thus, the G protein reverts to an inactive OFF signalling

state.– The alpha subunit rejoins the beta and gamma subunits

• Adenyl cyclase, no longer poked by the activated a subunit of the G protein, shuts down – stops making cAMP from ATP

• The whole cycle results in only a brief signaling pulse– the production of several hundred cAMP molecules

Page 43: Membranes pt. 2

Cyclic AMP

Page 44: Membranes pt. 2

Second Messenger Action

• Once made, cAMP molecules act as intracellular glycogen

• The high cAMP concentrations enable A kinase to• phosphorylate and thereby activate an enzyme, that

– activates glycogen phosphorylase, which in turn – breaks down glycogen into glucose-l-phosphate

molecules; and

• phosphorylate glycogen synthase, which – turns it off, – preventing the reconversion of the released glucose to

glycogen.

Page 45: Membranes pt. 2

cAMP Second Messenger System

Page 46: Membranes pt. 2

Effect of cAMP on Blood Glucose

• These two changes together ensure the mobilization of glucose through the breakdown of glycogen stored in the liver.

• A number of other reactions are triggered as well that together contribute to the fight/flight response.

Page 47: Membranes pt. 2

Signal Amplification• There is enormous signal amplification in this

cascade. • A single epinephrine molecule (present at 1O-

10M) may cause the activation of dozens of alpha subunits of proteins.

• Each of these in turn will activate the synthesis of a single adenylate cyclase, and

• each of these in turn will synthesize hundreds of cAMP molecules.

• Each of these in turn can activate a cAMP-dependent kinase that will

• modify hundreds of target molecules in the cell.