transport diffusion active transport osmosis endo- & exocytosis

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Receptors & Cellular Transport Mechanisms James Peerless May 2011

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Page 1: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Receptors & Cellular Transport

MechanismsJames Peerless

May 2011

Page 2: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Objectives Cellular Transport Mechanisms

Types Mechanisms

Receptors What are receptors for? Types

Messenger systems

Page 3: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Membrane Transport Mechanisms

Page 4: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Membrane Transport of Substances

Membranes control movement of many types of particle between intra- and extracellular compartments

Phospholipid bilayer allows diffusion of water, small molecules and lipid-soluble substances

Passive and active mechanisms

Page 5: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Simple Diffusion Random movement of molecules

Passive process

Net movement occurs down a concentration gradient

kp dependent upon: Temperature, membrane permeability molecular properties (lipophilicity, charge, MW)

Q = kpA(C1-C2)/T

Page 6: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Facilitated Diffusion

Molecule moves down concentration gradient

Rate determined by carrier and solute concentration

Rate of transport is ‘facilitated’ by a carrier molecule Carrier Channel

Page 7: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Active Transport Specialized facilitated

diffusion

Mediated by membrane carrier proteins & requires energy

Transport of substances against their concentration gradient

Affecting transport: Carrier saturation and

density of carriers Speed of carrier

conformational change

Page 8: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Primary Active Transport

Page 9: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Secondary Active Transport

Transport of a substance and an ion together

No direct energy input

Page 10: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Exo- & Endocytosis

No transport of substances through membrane

Vesicles formed by invagination of the membrane

Pinocytosis is the specialized uptake of water

Page 11: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Summary

Page 12: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Receptors

Page 13: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Receptors

“A molecule that recognises specifically a second molecule whose binding brings about the regulation of a cellular process.”

Lambert DG (2004). Drugs & Receptors. Continuing Education in Anaesthesia, Critical Care & Pain; 4 (6): 181-4

Page 14: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Role of Receptors Cell communication

Chemical messengers can be local or widespread

Regulation, mediation and amplification of signals

Allows homeostatic control

Page 15: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

PropertiesLigands

Affinity

Competition

Activity (agonist/antagonist)

Half-life

Lipid solubility

Receptors

Specificity

Sensitivity

Saturation

Down- & Up-regulation

Page 16: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Signal Transduction

Membrane permeability

Membrane potential

Membrane transport

Contractile activity

Secretory activity

Protein synthesis

Page 17: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Clinically important

Receptor Types Ligand-gated ion channels

Acetylcholine receptors

G-protein coupled receptors Adrenergic receptors

Tyrosine kinase coupled receptors Insulin

Intracellular receptors Steroids

Page 18: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Ligand-gated Ion Channels

Page 19: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

The Ach Receptor Pentameric,

transmembrane structure

2 α and β, γ, δ subunits

Ion channel opens when 2x Ach binds to α-subunits

Page 20: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

G-protein Coupled Receptors

Extensive and important Adrenergic Muscarinic Opioid

Act via second messengers cAMP increased or decreased Activation of protein kinases

Protein phosphorylation Inactivated by phosphodiestereases

Page 21: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis
Page 22: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Key G-protein Subunits

Subunit Acts on Second Messenger

Example

Gs Adenyl cyclase

Increases cAMP

β-adrenergic receptors

Gi Adenyl cyclase

Decreases cAMP

Opioid receptors

Gq Phospholipase C

DAG & IP3 α-adrenergic receptors

Page 23: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Tyrosine Kinase Coupled

Receptors

Page 24: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Intracellular Receptors

Page 25: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Questions

Page 26: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

MCQ 1 The rate of diffusion of a gas (Fick’s Law)

across a membrane:

(a) is directly proportional to the area

(b) is directly proportional to the partial pressure gradient

(c) is inversely proportional to thickness of the membrane

(d) is directly proportional to the molecular weight

(e) is inversely proportional to the density of the gas

T

T

T

F

F

Page 27: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

MCQ 2

The following receptors are part of a ligand-gated ion channel:

A) opioid mu receptor

B) muscarinic cholinergic receptors

C) nicotinic cholinergic receptors

D) GABAA receptors

E) GABAB receptors

F

F

T

T

F

Page 28: Transport Diffusion Active Transport Osmosis Endo- & Exocytosis

Summary Cells have passive and active mechanisms

for controlling passage of molecules across boundaries

Intercellular communication allows homeostatic control via the specific use of chemical messengers and cellular receptors