PCL102H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Signal Transduction, Cyclooxygenase, Cell Nucleus

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Drug target: a molecule involved in a medical problem that is acted on by a drug to stop that disease. Aspirin stops the protein cyclooxygenase from working (without cox, no pain: most drugs bind to proteins, modifying their activity. Receptors: biological molecule that a drug binds to in order to produce an effect. Involved in cellular communication: relays information, mostly cell surface proteins, ligands: chemical messenger that binds tightly to receptor, there are different types of receptors that elicit different effects, signal transduction: Extracellular signaling molecule activates cell surface receptor. Receptor alters intracellular molecules to generate a response: g-protein coupled receptors: Respond to a diverse array of ligands such as hormones, neurotransmitters, prostaglandins, light, and smells: enzyme linked receptors: Bind ligand on the extracellular side and have enzymatic activity on the intracellular side. Allow ions to pass into or out of a cell. Expressed in excitable cells like neurons and muscle cells.

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