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Cell-cell adhesion. Cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) Lots of them Involved in many cellular processes Cadherins Adhesive glycoproteins. Cell juctions. Adhesive junctions Strong links Tight junctions Prevent leaks between cells Gap junctions Forms direct link between cells.
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Cell-cell adhesion • Cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) • Lots of them • Involved in many cellular processes • Cadherins • Adhesive glycoproteins
Cell juctions • Adhesive junctions • Strong links • Tight junctions • Prevent leaks between cells • Gap junctions • Forms direct link between cells
Adhesive junctions • Desmosomes • Hemidesmosomes • Adherens junctions • Focal adhesions All contain - intracellular attachment proteins—link to cytoskeleton - transmembrane linker proteins—link the cells
Adherens junctions • Belt around cell • Connects to actin, not tonofilaments • Look a lot like desmosomes • Found in • Heart • Epithelial layers • Oftern form belt • Called “focal adhesion” if connects to ECM
Gap junctions • Direct electrical connection • Formed by connexons • Protein=connexin • Prominent in muscle and nerve—e.g. electrical tissues • Form of cell-cell communication
Plant cell walls • Cellulose (40%) • Branched polysaccharides • Hemicellulose (20%) • Pectins (30%) • Extensins--glycoproteins (10%) • Lignins—woody tissues • Insoluble aromatic alcohols • Cross-link to form wood
Types of Receptors • G-protein linked receptors • cAMP • Ca2+ • Inositol triphosphate • Diacylglycerol • Protein-kinase receptors • Serine/threonine kinases • Tyrosine kinase
G proteins • Large heteromeric G proteins • Alpha—binds GTP/GDP • Beta • Gamma • Together they control the alpha subunit • Small monomeric G proteins • Generally called by another name • Example: ras
Adenylate cyclase • Activated by G proteins • Makes cAMP • cAMP activates cAMP dependent protein kinase • aka protein kinase A (PKA)
Diseases • Cholera • Vibrio cholerae • Toxin modifies a G protein • Continually activates adenylate cyclase • Whooping cough • Bordetella pertussis • Pertussis toxin • Inactivates a G protein that inhibits adenylate cyclase
Tyrosine kinase receptors • Activated by ligand binding • Often growth factors • Form dimers • Autophosphorylation • On tyrosines • SH2 domain • Src homology (domain) 2 region • Bind to phosphorylated tyrosines • Activate various second messengers
Serine/threonine kinases • Two different subunits • Direct phosphorylation of transcription regulators