Nitric oxide (NO)
Because it is small and lipid soluble
It acts as a neurotransmitter, vasodilator and bactericide
It diffuses into smooth muscle cells and activates guanylyl cyclase
Nitric oxide synthase
It acts as a receptor for NO and produces cGMP
It causes the smooth muscle to relax and increases blood flow?
It causes vasodilation by relaxing smooth muscle in artery walls
A sequence of molecular interactions triggered by a signal molecule binding to a receptor
A protein kinase transfers a phosphate group from ATP to a protein
The removal of a phosphase group from a protein by a protein phosphatase
Small non protein molecules or ions that diffuse through a cell to transmit a signal
Adenylyl cyclase coverts ATP into cAMP in response to an extracellular signal
cAMP activates protein kinase A, which then modifies target proteins to produce a cellular response.
1. signal binds to a G protein linked receptor
2. G protein activated and stimulates adenylyl cyclase
3. cAMP levels rise inside cell
4. cAMP activates protein kinase A
5. Protein kinase A modifies target proteins
They amplify and spread the signal throughout the cell
Because cytosolic calcium levels are normally much lower than outside the cell, so small changes in calcium ion concentration causes large relative changes
Inositol triophosphate and diacylglycerol
Amplification of signal
Specificity of response
Overall efficiency
Termination of signal
It binds to G protein linked receptors, raises cAMP levels, activates protein kinase A which phosphorylates enzymes that break down glycogen
It phosphorylates and activates enzymes that break down glycogen
By organising multiple proteins in a pathway close together to increase efficiency
To stop the response once it is no longer needed
Because different cells have different collections of proteins, including receptors and signalling molecules
Pathway branching occurs when a signal activates multiple downstream pathways, and cross talk occurs when different signalling pathways interact
Large relay proteins that attach other relay proteins involved in the same signalling pathway
To prevent uncontrolled or continuous signalling once it is no longer needed
Ligand concentration fall, leaving fewer receptors bound
Unbound receptors revert to inactive site
Protein phosphatases reverse phoshorylation
Second messengers are degraded or sequestered
