Signal transduction Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Signal transduction – conversion of an external chemical/physical cue into a series of intracellular molecular events.
Receptor – protein that detects the stimulus; can be extracellular (membrane‑spanning) or intracellular (cytoplasmic/nuclear).
Ligand (first messenger) – the extracellular signal that binds a receptor (e.g., growth factor, hormone, neurotransmitter).
Primary effector – the protein directly altered by the activated receptor (e.g., G protein, kinase).
Second messenger – small diffusible molecule generated downstream (e.g., cAMP, IP₃, Ca²⁺, NO).
Signal amplification – one activated receptor can produce thousands–millions of downstream active molecules.
Feedback & feed‑forward – regulatory loops that sharpen, dampen, or sustain the signal.
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📌 Must Remember
GPCR activation: ligand → receptor conformational change → GDP→GTP exchange on Gα → Gα‑GTP + Gβγ dissociate.
RTK activation: ligand → dimerization → autophosphorylation of Tyr residues → docking of SH2‑containing proteins.
PLC pathway: PIP₂ → IP₃ + DAG.
IP₃ → Ca²⁺ release from ER.
DAG + Ca²⁺ → PKC activation.
cAMP pathway: Gs‑stimulated adenylyl cyclase → ↑cAMP → PKA activation.
PI3K/Akt cascade: RTK‑/GPCR‑driven PI3K → PIP₃ → Akt recruitment & activation → promotes survival/metabolism.
MAPK/ERK cascade: Ras → Raf → MEK → ERK → nuclear transcription factors → cell proliferation.
NO signaling: NO → soluble guanylyl cyclase → ↑cGMP → PKG activation → vasodilation.
Integrin signaling: ligand binding → clustering → FAK/Src activation → downstream MAPK/PI3K pathways.
TLR MyD88 vs. TRIF: MyD88 → IRAK → NF‑κB (early); TRIF → IRF3 → type I IFN (late).
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🔄 Key Processes
Ligand‑binding → Receptor activation
Extracellular ligand → conformational shift (GPCR) or dimerization (RTK).
Generation of second messengers
GPCR‑Gs: ↑adenylyl cyclase → cAMP.
GPCR‑Gq: PLCβ → IP₃ + DAG.
RTK: PI3K → PIP₃; Src → STAT.
Signal propagation
Second messenger binds effector (PKA, PKC, CaM, guanylyl cyclase).
Kinase cascades phosphorylate downstream targets.
Transcriptional response
Phosphorylated TFs (e.g., ERK‑activated Elk‑1, PKA‑phosphorylated CREB) enter nucleus → gene expression changes.
Termination
Phosphatases (PTP, PP2A) dephosphorylate kinases; GTPases hydrolyze GTP; second‑messenger degradation (PDE for cAMP, phosphodiesterases for cGMP).
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🔍 Key Comparisons
GPCR vs. RTK
GPCR: 7‑TM, activates heterotrimeric G proteins → rapid, reversible.
RTK: single‑pass TM, intrinsic kinase activity → autophosphorylation, creates docking sites.
cAMP vs. IP₃/DAG
cAMP: soluble, diffuses widely, activates PKA.
IP₃/DAG: membrane‑localized; IP₃ releases Ca²⁺, DAG stays in membrane to activate PKC.
Integrin signaling vs. Ligand‑gated ion channel
Integrin: no intrinsic enzymatic activity; signals via associated kinases (FAK, Src).
Ligand‑gated channel: directly opens pore → ion flux (e.g., Ca²⁺) acting as second messenger.
MyD88‑dependent vs. TRIF‑dependent TLR signaling
MyD88: fast NF‑κB activation, pro‑inflammatory cytokines.
TRIF: delayed IRF3 activation, type I interferon production.
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⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“All receptors are membrane proteins.” Intracellular (nuclear/cytoplasmic) receptors bind lipid‑soluble ligands (steroids, retinoids).
“Second messengers act alone.” They usually work together (e.g., Ca²⁺ + DAG → PKC).
“GPCR signaling ends with Gα‑GTP hydrolysis.” Gβγ subunits also have important downstream roles.
“RTK autophosphorylation = activation of every downstream pathway.” Specific phosphotyrosine motifs recruit distinct adapters, dictating pathway choice.
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🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
“Lock‑and‑key → lever” – ligand (key) fits receptor (lock); the lock flips a lever (conformational change) that pulls a rope (G protein or kinase) to lift the downstream cascade.
“Amplifier circuit” – one activated receptor can turn on many G proteins, each G protein can activate many enzymes, creating a geometric cascade (signal gain).
“Domino effect” – phosphorylation of one protein (first domino) creates a binding site for the next, propagating the signal linearly (e.g., MAPK cascade).
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🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Constitutively active receptors (e.g., HER2 overexpression, CXCR2 mutations) signal without ligand → oncogenesis.
Lipid‑soluble ligands cross the membrane and bind cytoplasmic/nuclear receptors; they do not use second messengers.
Mechanotransduction can bypass classic ligand binding; integrin clustering or stretch‑activated channels generate signals directly from force.
TLR4 uniquely uses both MyD88 and TRIF pathways, providing a dual‑phase response.
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📍 When to Use Which
Identify the stimulus → if hydrophobic hormone → think intracellular/nuclear receptor.
Rapid ion flux needed (neuronal synapse) → ligand‑gated ion channel.
Broad metabolic response (glucose uptake, lipolysis) → cAMP‑PKA or PI3K‑Akt pathways.
Growth‑factor–driven proliferation → RTK → MAPK/ERK (and possibly PI3K‑Akt).
Stress/apoptosis → lipid messengers (DAG, ceramide) or NO/cGMP pathways.
Mechanical cues → integrin‑FAK or YAP/TAZ pathways.
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👀 Patterns to Recognize
“Ligand → Dimerization → Autophosphorylation” → hallmark of RTKs.
“GDP→GTP exchange on Gα” → indicates GPCR activation.
“PIP₂ → IP₃ + DAG” → signals involvement of PLC‑β (Gq‑coupled or RTK).
“Phosphotyrosine motifs + SH2 domain” → recruitment of downstream adapters (Grb2, PLCγ).
“Rapid Ca²⁺ spike + PKC activation” → concurrent IP₃/DAG pathway.
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🗂️ Exam Traps
Confusing Gα vs. Gβγ functions – remember Gβγ can open ion channels independently of Gα.
Assuming all GPCRs use Gs – many couple to Gi (inhibit adenylyl cyclase) or Gq (activate PLC).
Mixing up second messenger degradation – PDEs break down cAMP/cGMP; phosphatases dephosphorylate proteins, not second messengers.
Attributing all calcium signals to IP₃ – Ca²⁺ can also enter via voltage‑gated or ligand‑gated channels.
Believing every RTK activates MAPK – some primarily signal through PI3K‑Akt or STAT pathways; pathway choice depends on docking motifs.
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