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Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 23rd Edition

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52 SECTION I Cellular & Molecular Basis <strong>of</strong> <strong>Medical</strong> <strong>Physiology</strong><br />

distinct pathways for primary messengers to alter transcription<br />

<strong>of</strong> cells. First, as is the case with steroid or thyroid hormones,<br />

the primary messenger is able to cross the cell<br />

membrane and bind to a nuclear receptor, which then can directly<br />

interact with DNA to alter gene expression. A second<br />

pathway to gene transcription is the activation <strong>of</strong> cytoplasmic<br />

protein kinases that can move to the nucleus to phosphorylate<br />

a latent transcription factor for activation. This pathway is a<br />

common endpoint <strong>of</strong> signals that go through the mitogen activated<br />

protein (MAP) kinase cascade. MAP kinases can be<br />

activated following a variety <strong>of</strong> receptor ligand interactions<br />

through second messenger signaling. They comprise a series<br />

<strong>of</strong> three kinases that coordinate a stepwise phosphorylation to<br />

activate each protein in series in the cytosol. Phosphorylation<br />

<strong>of</strong> the last MAP kinase in series allows it to migrate to the nucleus<br />

where it phosphorylates a latent transcription factor. A<br />

third common pathway is the activation <strong>of</strong> a latent transcription<br />

factor in the cytosol, which then migrates to the nucleus<br />

and alters transcription. This pathway is shared by a diverse<br />

set <strong>of</strong> transcription factors that include nuclear factor kappa<br />

B (NFκB; activated following tumor necrosis family receptor<br />

binding and others), and signal transducers <strong>of</strong> activated<br />

transcription (STATs; activated following cytokine receptor<br />

binding). In all cases the binding <strong>of</strong> the activated transcription<br />

factor to DNA increases (or in some cases, decreases) the<br />

transcription <strong>of</strong> mRNAs encoded by the gene to which it<br />

binds. The mRNAs are translated in the ribosomes, with the<br />

production <strong>of</strong> increased quantities <strong>of</strong> proteins that alter cell<br />

function.<br />

INTRACELLULAR Ca 2+<br />

AS A SECOND MESSENGER<br />

Ca 2+ regulates a very large number <strong>of</strong> physiological processes<br />

that are as diverse as proliferation, neural signaling, learning,<br />

contraction, secretion, and fertilization, so regulation <strong>of</strong> intracellular<br />

Ca 2+ is <strong>of</strong> great importance. The free Ca 2+ concentration<br />

in the cytoplasm at rest is maintained at about 100 nmol/<br />

L. The Ca 2+ concentration in the interstitial fluid is about<br />

12,000 times the cytoplasmic concentration (ie, 1,200,000<br />

nmol/L), so there is a marked inwardly directed concentration<br />

gradient as well as an inwardly directed electrical gradient.<br />

Much <strong>of</strong> the intracellular Ca 2+ is stored at relatively high concentrations<br />

in the endoplasmic reticulum and other organelles<br />

(Figure 2–21), and these organelles provide a store from which<br />

Ca 2+ can be mobilized via ligand-gated channels to increase<br />

the concentration <strong>of</strong> free Ca 2+ in the cytoplasm. Increased cytoplasmic<br />

Ca 2+ binds to and activates calcium-binding proteins.<br />

These proteins can have direct effects in cellular<br />

physiology, or can activate other proteins, commonly protein<br />

kinases, to further cell signaling pathways.<br />

Ca 2+ can enter the cell from the extracellular fluid, down its<br />

electrochemical gradient, through many different Ca 2+ channels.<br />

Some <strong>of</strong> these are ligand-gated and others are voltagegated.<br />

Stretch-activated channels exist in some cells as well.<br />

Ca 2+<br />

(volt)<br />

Ca 2+<br />

(lig)<br />

Ca 2+<br />

(SOCC)<br />

CaBP Effects<br />

Ca 2+<br />

ATP<br />

Mitochondrion Endoplasmic reticulum<br />

FIGURE 2–21 Ca 2+ handling in mammalian cells. Ca 2+ is<br />

stored in the endoplasmic reticulum and, to a lesser extent, mitochondria<br />

and can be released from them to replenish cytoplasmic Ca 2+ . Calciumbinding<br />

proteins (CaBP) bind cytoplasmic Ca 2+ and, when activated in<br />

this fashion, bring about a variety <strong>of</strong> physiologic effects. Ca 2+ enters the<br />

cells via voltage-gated (volt) and ligand-gated (lig) Ca 2+ channels and<br />

store-operated calcium channels ( SOCCs). It is transported out <strong>of</strong> the cell<br />

by Ca, Mg ATPases (not shown), Ca, H ATPase and an Na, Ca antiport. It is<br />

also transported into the ER by Ca ATPases.<br />

Many second messengers act by increasing the cytoplasmic<br />

Ca 2+ concentration. The increase is produced by releasing Ca 2+<br />

from intracellular stores—primarily the endoplasmic reticulum—or<br />

by increasing the entry <strong>of</strong> Ca 2+ into cells, or by both<br />

mechanisms. IP 3 is the major second messenger that causes<br />

Ca 2+ release from the endoplasmic reticulum through the direct<br />

activation <strong>of</strong> a ligand-gated channel, the IP 3 receptor. In effect,<br />

the generation <strong>of</strong> one second messenger (IP 3 ) can lead to the<br />

release <strong>of</strong> another second messenger (Ca 2+ ). In many tissues,<br />

transient release <strong>of</strong> Ca 2+ from internal stores into the cytoplasm<br />

triggers opening <strong>of</strong> a population <strong>of</strong> Ca 2+ channels in the cell<br />

membrane (store-operated Ca 2+ channels; SOCCs). The<br />

resulting Ca 2+ influx replenishes the total intracellular Ca 2+<br />

supply and refills the endoplasmic reticulum. The exact identity<br />

<strong>of</strong> the SOCCs is still unknown, and there is debate about the<br />

signal from the endoplasmic reticulum that opens them.<br />

As with other second messenger molecules, the increase in<br />

Ca 2+ within the cytosol is rapid, and is followed by a rapid<br />

decrease. Because the movement <strong>of</strong> Ca 2+ outside <strong>of</strong> the cytosol<br />

(ie, across the plasma membrane or the membrane <strong>of</strong> the internal<br />

store) requires that it move up its electrochemical gradient,<br />

it requires energy. Ca 2+ movement out <strong>of</strong> the cell is facilitated<br />

by the plasma membrane Ca 2+ ATPase. Alternatively, it can be<br />

transported by an antiport that exchanges three Na + for each<br />

Ca 2+ driven by the energy stored in the Na + electrochemical<br />

gradient. Ca 2+ movement into the internal stores is through the<br />

action <strong>of</strong> the sarcoplasmic or endoplasmic reticulum Ca 2+<br />

ATPase, also known as the SERCA pump.<br />

CALCIUM-BINDING PROTEINS<br />

2H +<br />

Ca 2+<br />

Ca2+ 3Na +<br />

Many different Ca 2+ -binding proteins have been described, including<br />

troponin, calmodulin, and calbindin. Troponin is the

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