BSC 118 Lecture Notes - Lecture 11: G Protein–Coupled Receptor, Guanosine Triphosphate, Protein Kinase

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Cell communication: cell-to-cell communication is essential for growth, development, and other processes in multicellular organisms. It also plays important roles in the normal life cycles of many unicellular eukaryotes: cell-to-cell communication signals are relayed within a cell by signal transduction pathways. Physiological responses and adaptations to extracellular and intracellular environments (e. g. , nutrient availability, osmolality, temperature, oxidative stress) Response to and repair of cellular damage (e. g. , dna and protein damage) Regulation of cell growth, proliferation, and differentiation. The three stages of cell signaling: cells receiving signals go through 3 processes: Reception signal molecule binds to specific receptor, most often a transmembrane protein, in target cell(s) Transduction signal from activated signal receptor is relayed, typically by one or more proteins, to downstream effectors of the signaling pathway. Response (cid:373)ost (cid:862)do(cid:449)(cid:374)strea(cid:373)(cid:863) (cid:272)o(cid:373)po(cid:374)e(cid:374)t(cid:894)s(cid:895) of sig(cid:374)al tra(cid:374)sdu(cid:272)tio(cid:374) pathway, often transcription factors, activate or inhibit their targets to trigger cellular response(s) to the signal molecule. Features of a typical signal transduction pathway.

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