13 Miller Chap 16 Lecture
13 Miller Chap 16 Lecture
13 Miller Chap 16 Lecture
Goals
• Learn the properties of RTKs.
• Learn about RTK signaling via the
Ras/MAP kinase signaling pathway.
• Learn the general features of the
PI-3 kinase signaling pathway.
• Learn about the TGFß/Smad
signaling pathway.
EGF receptor bound to EGF
Major Classes of Cell-surface Receptors
About one dozen classes of
cell-surface receptors occur
in human cells. An overview
of signaling by the two
receptor systems that are
covered in this chapter
(receptor tyrosine kinases,
RTKs, and TGF-ß receptors)
is shown in (Fig. 16.1a).
The signal transduction
pathways used by RTKs are
summarized in (Fig. 16.2).
Activation of RTKs via Ligand Binding
Receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) regulate cell differentiation and
proliferation. Ligands of RTKs include nerve growth factor (NGF),
fibroblast growth factor (FGF), and insulin. In some cases (e.g.,
the epidermal growth factor (EGF) RTK), ligand binding causes
receptor dimerization (Fig. 16.3). In other cases (e.g., the
insulin RTK), binding occurs to pre-existing dimers. RTKs exhibit
intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity located within their cytosolic
domains. The binding of ligand activates the kinase domains which
cross-phosphorylate the two monomers of the dimeric receptor.
Phosphorylation first occurs at a regulatory site known as the
activation lip.
Phosphorylation of
the lip causes
conformational
changes that allow
the kinase domain to
phosphorylate other
tyrosine residues in
the receptor and in
signal transduction
proteins.
Recruitment of Signal Transduction
Proteins to Activated Receptors
Signal transduction system
proteins interact with
phosphorylated RTKs via
phosphotyrosine binding
domains. Two main binding
domains--PTB and SH2
(Src homology domain-
2)--within signal
transduction proteins such
as the multi-docking
protein known as the
insulin receptor
substrate-1 (IRS-1)
perform this function (Fig.
16.12). The binding of
signaling
proteins either directly to the receptor or to IRS-1 allows
them to be phosphorylated by the receptor. Some of these
signaling proteins are involved in activation of the Ras
GTPase (next slides). Some such as phosphatidylinositol-3
kinase (PI-3 kinase) participate in lipid-mediated signaling
pathways. RTK signaling typically is down-regulated by
endocytosis of receptors from the cytoplasmic membrane.
RTKs and Ras/MAP Kinase Signaling
Nearly all RTKs signal via Ras/MAP kinase pathways. They also
may signal via other pathways. For example, the insulin receptor
uses the Ras/MAP kinase pathway to regulate gene expression
and the PI-3 kinase pathway to regulate enzyme activity (e.g.,
glycogen synthase). RTK-Ras/MAP kinase signaling controls cell
division, differentiation, and metabolism.