Second Messengers 1 Flashcards

1
Q

cAMP: a secondary messenger

A

cyclic Adenosine MonoPhosphate (cAMP) is derived from ATP

  • adenylyl cyclase cleaves a pyroshosphate (2x Pi) from ATP
  • Acts through a protein kinase to stimulate glucose mobilisation, fight/flight and triglyceride breakdown

cAMP phosphodiesterase alters conformation to produce AMP, a useful intracellular metabolite

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2
Q

Phosphodiesterases (PDEs)

A

Same complexity as adenylyl cyclase
- made of a catalytic core and regulatory/targeting features

Target cAMPs and cGMPs
- inhibit cAMP (hydrolysed to AMP)

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3
Q

Adenylyl cyclase

A

ATP –> cAMP (turnover of 1000 per minute)

  • found in the sarcolemma
  • differential regulation by CaM (calcium binding protein) as well as the alpha and beta-gamma subunits of the heterotrimeric G-protein
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4
Q

GPCR activating cAMP

A

1) ligand (adrenaline/noradrenaline) binding to Beta-adrenergic receptor causing conformational change to bind GTP intracellularly (activation)
2) alpha subunit dissociates and binds adenylyl cyclase to activate it

all compartments in close proximity speeds up response

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5
Q

Role of cAMP in fight/flight response

A

Sudden stress triggers increased adrenaline levels which in turn increases beta-adrenergic receptor activation and cAMP production

  • PDEs contain the cAMP to a specific area
  • cAMP binds specific kinases to increase heart rate and force of muscle contraction (increase Ca2+ flux levels)
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6
Q

Importance of control of cAMP

A

cAMP activation must be limited to short pulses and must not be constitutive.

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7
Q

Pathogens disrupting cAMP regulation

A

1) Cholera toxin
- covalently modifies G-alpha with an ADP ribose group
- prevents GTPase activity, extending activation
- constant cAMP disturbs ion flux thus disrupting water potentials leading to cholera symptoms

2) Bordettella pertusis (Whooping cough)
- injects soluble adenylyl cyclase into host, preventing any host regulation

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8
Q

Control points to limit cAMP production

A

1) Keeping cAMP concentration low:
- destructive enzyme (PDEs) constitutively active
- Production enzymes (a cyclase) require ligand activation
2) Receptor optimised for inactivity
- can ONLY become active when ligand binds
3) Receptor internalised (endocytosed) upon binding
- reduces exposure time to curb activation levels
4) Heterotrimer G-protein activates GTPase to inactivate the alpha subunit

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9
Q

cAMP (cyclic 3’:5’ AMP) mode of signalling

A

Activate the cAMP-dependent Protein Kinase A (PKA)

  • it’s autoinhibitory domain occupies kinase activity as a substrate look-alike (pseudosubstrate)
  • ATP binding N-terminal lobe allows binding to protein in C-terminus (seq consensus RRxSxxxx)
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10
Q

Protein Kinase A downstream signalling pathways

A

1) Binding phospholamban (on Ser16) accelerates Ca2+ uptake into SR
2) Binding RYR2 (on Ser2808) increases Po of channel
3) Binding TnI (on Ser23) reduces sensitivity of contractile proteins

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11
Q

Containing reactions/pathways using Binding Partners

A

cAMP signalling is very localised to maximise efficiency. A-Kinase Anchoring Proteins (AKAPs) located on sub-cellular structures bind PKA along with other signalling components

  • Localise signalling machinery in close proximity to substrate proteins (creating local circuits and speeding reaction response)
  • Associate with E-C coupling proteins
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12
Q

Altered signalling outcome at receptor level:

Beta-1 and Beta-2 Adrenergic receptors

A

B1-AR and B2-AR both found in the heart trigger cAMP pathways but give different responses:

1) B1-AR (fight/flight)
- Substantial (400%) enhancement in contractility
- Cardiotoxicity when chronically active

2) B2-AR (very moderate)
- Modest (25%) enhancement in contractility
- Cardioprotective

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13
Q

Chronic cAMP affects other pathways (non-PKA) to cause disease as well

A
  • Active Epac = hypertrophy
  • Active Src = hypertrophy

Activating CaMKII

  • short term = increased contractility
  • long term = apoptosis
  • a major target for treating heart disease due to its role in so many signalling pathways
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