BISC401 Lecture 17: Cell signaling

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In cells, a signal produces a specific response only in target cells with receptor proteins that bind that signal. Cell surface receptors consist of: an extracellular domain facing the extracellular fluid, a plasma-membrane-spanning (transmembrane, an intracellular domain facing the cytosol. The signaling molecule acts as a ligand, which binds to a structurally complementary site on the extracellular or the membrane-spanning domain of the receptor. Signal transduction: the process of converting extracellular signals into intracellular responses. Short term changes (seconds to minutes) in cellular function, metabolism, or movement. Amino acids, lipid derivatives, acetylcholine, steroids: gases. Vasopressin: soluble proteins insulin, growth hormone, membrane proteins. The binding of ligands (first messengers) to many cell surface receptors leads to a short- lived increase or decrease in the concentration of certain non-protein, low-molecular- weight intracellular signaling molecules called second messenger. They, in turn, bind to proteins, modifying their activity. Common intracellular second messengers: ca2+ ion, cyclic adenosine monophosphate (camp, 1,2-diacylglycerol (dag, 3,5-cyclic gmp (cgmp)

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