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Cell-to-Cell Communication

Cell-to-Cell Communication

Cell-to-Cell Communication

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Cell Communication Basics - The Cellular Hotline

  • Purpose: Cells communicate to coordinate activities, control growth, and maintain homeostasis.
  • Key Players:
    • Signaling cell: Produces signal.
    • Ligand: Chemical signal (e.g., hormone, neurotransmitter).
    • Receptor: Protein on/in target cell; binds ligand.
    • Target cell: Responds to signal.
  • General Steps: Reception → Transduction → Response.
  • Direct Contact: Cells physically connect via gap junctions or surface molecules.

    ⭐ Gap junctions allow direct passage of ions and small molecules between adjacent cells, enabling rapid, synchronized responses (e.g., cardiac muscle contraction).

Local Signaling - Neighborhood News

  • Short-range communication; cells influence their immediate vicinity.
  • Autocrine: Signal acts on the secreting cell.
    • E.g., IL-2 & T-lymphocyte proliferation; tumor cell growth.
  • Paracrine: Signal acts on nearby target cells.
    • Mediators (histamine, prostaglandins, NO) diffuse locally via ECF.
    • Action localized by rapid uptake/degradation.
  • Synaptic: Specialized paracrine. Neuron signals target cell across synapse.
    • Neurotransmitters (ACh, NE) cross synaptic cleft (~20-40 nm). Forms of Chemical Signaling

⭐ Nitric Oxide (NO), a gaseous paracrine signal, induces vasodilation by relaxing smooth muscle.

Long-Distance Calls - Hormonal Highways

  • Endocrine Signaling: Hormones, secreted by endocrine glands, circulate via bloodstream to reach distant target cells. Specificity is dictated by receptor presence on target tissues.
    • Effects: Generally slower onset but longer duration than nervous signals.
    • Examples: Insulin, cortisol, TSH.
  • Neuroendocrine Signaling: Specialized neurons (neurosecretory cells) release neurohormones into the bloodstream. These act on distant target cells.
    • Examples: ADH, oxytocin from posterior pituitary. Autocrine, Paracrine, and Endocrine Signaling

⭐ Many hormones exhibit pulsatile or circadian release patterns, crucial for normal physiological function and receptor sensitivity.

Signal Reception & Relays - The Cellular Switchboard

Types of Cell Receptors Diagram

  • Receptors: Bind specific ligands.
    • Cell-Surface Receptors: For hydrophilic ligands.
      • Ligand-gated ion channels (LGICs)
      • G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs)
      • Enzyme-linked receptors (e.g., Tyrosine Kinase)
    • Intracellular Receptors: For hydrophobic ligands (steroids, thyroid hormone); alter gene expression.
FeatureCell-Surface ReceptorsIntracellular Receptors
Ligand TypeHydrophilic (peptides)Hydrophobic (steroids)
LocationMembraneCytosol/Nucleus
Response SpeedFast (ms-min)Slow (hrs-days)
Mechanism2nd messengers, ion flux, kinasesGene regulation
-   Players: Kinases, phosphatases, 2nd messengers (cAMP, $Ca^{2+}$, IP3, DAG).

G-protein activation cycle: GDP-GTP exchange

  • G-Proteins: Molecular switches.
    • GDP-bound (inactive) ↔ GTP-bound (active).
    • Types: 📌 Gs (stimulatory), Gi (inhibitory), Gq. (KICK-ASS: Gq→PLC→IP3/DAG/↑$Ca^{2+}$; Gs→↑cAMP; Gi→↓cAMP)

⭐ Many enzyme-linked receptors are tyrosine kinases (e.g., Insulin receptor).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Gap junctions allow direct cell-to-cell communication via connexin channels.
  • Autocrine signals target the same cell; Paracrine signals act on nearby cells.
  • Endocrine signals (hormones) travel via blood to distant target cells.
  • Synaptic signaling involves neurotransmitters across a synaptic cleft for rapid communication.
  • Juxtacrine signaling requires direct physical contact between cells (e.g., Notch signaling).
  • GPCRs, the largest receptor family, use second messengers like cAMP, IP3, DAG, and Ca2+.

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