BIOL 411 Lecture Notes - Lecture 20: Cytosol, Transmembrane Protein, Adenylyl Cyclase

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11 Jan 2017
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The receptor is on/in the receiving/sponding cell. Signal transduction ( results in amplification in responses/modulation: occurs inside the cell, there is a response and then termination of the signal. G-protein: heterotrimeric protein- 3 different subunits (alpha, betc, and gamma) is attached to the receptor on the inside of the cell. When a ligand binds to the extracellular domain of the receptor, the inactive gdp is converted to active gtp and the 3 subunits of the g-protein dissociate. Alpha subunit then interacts with adenylyl cyclase, which is an enzyme that converts atp to cyclic amp (camp), which is a second messenger molecule. The second messenger (camp) then activates a protein kinase, which leads to a response. Receptor (mainly tyrosine) kinases: add phosphate groups to proteins covalently, which can change structure, behavior, localization, activity, etc. Phosphatases break the covalent bond and remove the phosphate groups. Can help to terminate the signal once done.

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