Mechanisms of Hormone Action

Description

Flashcards on Mechanisms of Hormone Action, created by leahtee on 12/10/2014.
leahtee
Flashcards by leahtee, updated more than 1 year ago
leahtee
Created by leahtee over 9 years ago
38
0

Resource summary

Question Answer
How do hydrophilic hormones work? - Can't diffuse across the PM - Need to interact w/ protein on the PM - That protein changes conformation - Induces change in the cell
How do hydrophobic hormones work? - Receptors within cells - Receptors act as transcription factors - Must be activated by ligands - Result in changes in expression
Define a receptor. Binding protein in/on cell interacts with H in highly specific manner Elicits a characteristic response
What are 5 characteristics of receptors? 1. High affinity - holds on stronger, holds on longer 2. High specificity - ensures only intended H interacts 3. Saturable - add more H, no more response after a point 4. Reversible 5. Tissue distribution appropriate for H function
How are receptors regulated? (3) 1. Regulation of affinity - phosphorylation (change conformation, change affinity) - Dimers/oligomers (higher affinity when formed) 2. Change in # of receptors - at genetic level - degradation 3. Regulation of Receptor-Effector coupling - break apart = termination of activity - desensitization
Describe the process of degradation. Internalization - ligand binds receptor, gets internalized by endocytosis pH level causes uncoupling of complex 2 options: 1. Receptor gets degraded by lysosome 2. Receptor recycled (usu. w/ transporter receptors that bring it across the PM)
How does desensitization work? Only in peptide H Results from degradation/receptor transduction uncoupling Desensitization: phosphorylation of receptor by BARK + recruitment of arresting protein (e.g. chemical castration)
What are the five main types of receptors? 1. Cell surface 2. Enzyme linked 3. Ion channel receptor 4. Intracellular (nuclear) 5. Signal transduction (non-genomic)
Describe cell-surface receptors. - for hydrophilic H - G-protein linked - involves recruitment of second messengers
What are the two possible signal transduction pathways? 1. H binds receptor Adenylate cyclase (AC) activates cAMP PKA phosphorylates a substrate for a response 2. H binds receptor Phospholipase C (PLC) turns phospholipids into either DAG or IPG DAG: PKC phosphorylates substrate for response IPG: releases Ca, which acts on DAG
What is the structure of G-protein-linked receptors? (4) 1. Single-chain peptide 2. 7 transmembrane domains 3. Extracellular ligand binding site 4. Intracellular G-protein coupling site
Describe G-proteins and their function. - have alpha, beta, gamma subunits - couple a membrane-bound receptor to intracellular receptors - forms heterotrimer of alpha, beta, gamma - dissociation of alpha from beta-gamma at GTP binding (binding inactivates alpha)
What are the three G-protein families and what do they do? Gs - activates cAMP pathway Gi - deactivates cAMP pathway Gq - phospholipid pathway
How is cAMP formed? degraded? What does it activate? What are its responses? (5) formation: adenylate cyclase (AC) catalysis degradation: phosphodiesterase activates PKA, leading to cellular responses 1. enzyme activation 2. protein synthesis 3. muscle relaxation 4. nerve stimulation 5. hormone secretion
How does PKA initiate protein synthesis? Phosphorylates CREB (the protein that recognizes and binds) i.e. the transcription factor
Describe the phospholipid pathway. What activates it? Activated by Gq DAG becomes AA, catalyzed by DG lipase AA catalyzed by PLA2 to create phospholipids
What is IP3? What does it do? Inositol triphosphate Activates Ca channel, Ca released form smooth ER Binds channel, letting Ca out Ca activates DAG
What is DAG? What does it do? Diacylglycerol Changes into prostaglandin group of H Activates PKC and its substrates Activated by IP3 release of Ca Acts on Arachidonic acids (AA)
What is AA? What does it do? Arachidonic Acid Releases Ca form ER Gets acted on by DG to form phospholipids
What are some features of enzyme-linked receptors? (4) - key domain: intracellular region that either has its own enzyme activity or is associated w/ an enzyme - recognize various enzymes - have extracellular H-binding domain - Single transmembrane domain
What are the 4 categories of enzyme-linked receptors? 1. Tyrosine kinase receptors 2. Tyrosine-kinase-associated receptors 3. Serine-Threonine Kinase receptors 4. Guanylate cyclase receptors
What are 3 main tyrosine kinase receptors? 1. EGF-R: part of phospholipid pathway 2. PDGF-R: 2 different subunits 3. Insulin-R: unique
How do the Tyrosine Kinase Receptors work? Hormone binding triggers dimerization (homodimerization) Receptor autophosphorylates the other subunit Phosphorous residues on receptor MC act as site of protein binding
Describe the Insulin-R receptor - A tyrosine kinase receptor Alpha - ligand binds Beta - transmembrane kinase domain - has alpha and beta subunits joined w/ disulphide bonds i.e. a-a and b-b to form a receptor complex, even in absence of H Receptor recruits a docking protein, Insulin Receptor Substrate 1 (IRS-1) to get: - protein-protein interaction - Kinase phosphorylates dimer
Describe the Map Kinase pathway - Takes place on EGF-R GRB2 Binds SOS Helps activate a G-protein (i.e. GDP exchanged for GTP) Activates Ras Ras activates kinase Activates another kinase Activates effector proteins E.g. Transcription factors, receptor MCs - Ras turns off when GTP --> GDP GTPase activates protein
How do the Tyrosine Kinase-Associated Receptors work? Give an example - Interact w/ GH, PRL - Receptors have no kinase activity themselves - Ligand binding triggers coupling of receptor to tyrosine to kinase Substrates phosphorylated e.g. STAT2 (TF) gets phosphorylated, then regulates gene expression
How do the Serine-Threonine Kinase Receptors work? Describe the ligands TGF beta superfamily mediates signalling Ligands have Type I and II receptors, and associated SMADs Types I and II come together to form a receptor complex 2 subfamilies: 1. TGF-Beta family 2. BMP family
Describe what the TGF-Beta family is and how it works. - part of Serine-Threonine Kinase receptor H binds Type II first, then recruits Type I Active when phosphorylated Activates downstream molecules
Describe what the BMP family is and how it works. High affinity for type I receptor, low for Type II Ligand binds w/ both at the same time
What is R-SMAD? When is it activated? Receptor-regulated SMAD Activated when complexes w/ another SMAD, Co-SMAD
What are SMADs, in general? Act as transcription factors, either alone or with a partner, bind to DNA
What is Co-SMAD? Common SMAD Activates other SMADs
What is an Inhibitory SMAD? Inhibits process of interaction b/w R and Co-SMAD
What do does Guanylate Cyclase (GC) catalyse? GTP --> cGMP
What is sGC? How is it activated? Soluble GC Activated by NO
What does NO do? What does it activate? Very potent, especially in the vascular system Enters cells, directly activates GC
What is pGC? What is it a receptor for? Particulate GC Receptor for natriuretic factor.
How are ion channel receptors activated? Activated by ligand-binding, mostly neurotransmitters with rapid responses
What is the typical ion channel receptor pathway? Signal > R > conformational change of R > channel opens > ions flow in (Na, K, Ca)
What are common features of ion channel receptors? (4) What is an example? 1. Multiple subunits 2. Each subunit has 4 transmembrane domains 3. N and C terminals are extracellular 4. Second transmembrane domain contributes most strongly to pore formation E.g. NAChR - Nicotinic acetyl choline receptor
What is the typical intracellular (nuclear) receptors pathway? H enters target cell by diffusion Binds receptor MC Receptor gets activated to DNA binding form H-R complex binds to HRE, activates transcription
What are the 6 domains of Intracellular (nuclear) receptors? A and B: Transcription activating C: DNA-binding D: Nuclear localization signal E: Ligand-binding domain F: C-terminal (function not clear)
What is the function of the DNA-binding section in Intracellular Receptors? Recognizes and binds a specific DNA sequence, i.e. the hormone response element (HRE)
What is the function of the Nuclear localization signal in Intracellular Receptors? Protein made in the cytoplasm that can transfer into the nucleus
What is the function of the Ligand-binding domain in Intracellular Receptors? And what does it activate? Region-specific intermediary between the hormone and the receptor activates: transcription dimerization heat-shock-protein-binding
What conformational changes does the intracellular (nuclear) receptor molecule undergo in order to be in its DNA-binding form? - more compact/protease resistant - dissociates from inhibitors (e.g. hsp 90) - dimerization - phosphorylation
What groups use the intracellular (nuclear) pathway? Steroids TH: T3 and T4 1,25 (OH)2 Vit D3
What would be a way to test if a hormone had a non-genomic action? Block transcription/translation and see what happens If action still takes place, then it's non-genomic
Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

Hormones
try2bangel
G- Couple Protein Receptors
Has Maj
Excitatory amino acids - AMPA and Kainate receptors subtypes
Anna mph
Cellular physiology II
Francisco Sacadura
Biology Unit 1a - GCSE - AQA
RosettaStoneDecoded
GCSE AQA Biology 1 Nerves & Hormones
Lilac Potato
The Nervous System and Hormones (Part 1)
Naomi Science
The Endocrine System
DrABC
Grade 10 Coordinated Science Quiz
Imani :D
B1.2: Responses to a changing environment
benprice99
Endocrine diseases
Anna4anatomy