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Lecture 12 : Metabotropic signaling and mechanoreceptors

Lecture 12 : Metabotropic signaling and mechanoreceptors. Fain begin ch 5 10/12/09. 2009 Nobel prize in Literature. Writes about life in Romania under a dictatorship German minority. Nobel Peace prize. Awarded the prize for who he is and what he hopes to accomplish

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Lecture 12 : Metabotropic signaling and mechanoreceptors

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  1. Lecture 12 : Metabotropic signaling and mechanoreceptors Fain begin ch 5 10/12/09

  2. 2009 Nobel prize in Literature Writes about life in Romania under a dictatorship German minority

  3. Nobel Peace prize Awarded the prize for who he is and what he hopes to accomplish Change in attitude and galvanizing the world

  4. Nobel homework • Due on Wednesday but… • We are going to discuss two papers on Wed - each of you will be responsible for one figure • …so Nobel homework can be handed in Wednesday (10/14) or next Monday (10/19)

  5. Signal transduction • Ionotropic • Directly gate ion channel • Metabotropic • Gate ion channel through a G protein and 2nd messenger

  6.  +  M  GTP M=2nd messenger sends signal to ion channel GPCR signaling Receptor Effector GPCR*    GDP G protein

  7. Mechanoreceptors Fain ch 5

  8. Mechanoreception • Responds to mechanical pressure or distortion • Hearing • Touch • Acceleration detection • Why are ionotropic mechanisms good for mechanoreception?

  9. Express and patch clamp piece of membrane - record current as apply pressure

  10. MscL - Mechanosensative channel, large • Large conductance • 5 subunits x 2 TMs • M1 faces pore • M2 faces membrane • Hydrophobic pore keeps water from flowing across membrane

  11. Pore opens like iris M1/M2 rotate-Opens S1 helices Sukarev and Ankirin 2004 Channel responds to membrane tensions Opening enables ion flow/water to relieve osmotic pressure

  12. Anishkin and Sukharev 2009

  13. Gillespie and Walker 2001

  14. Mechanoreception • Evolved multiple times • Recruited different ion channels each time • 3 means of tethering and pulling to open channel • Direct • Indirect through molecule • Indirect through mechanosensitive protein

  15. Questions • How do mechanosensory cells work? • Is there a common mechanical structure? • Is there a common molecular transduction mechanism? Gillespie and Walker 2001

  16. Goals for mechanosensation • Maximize speed of signal detection • Maximize sensitivity of response

  17. Paramecium sense of touch • Differential response: • If touch front, reverses direction, turn and go another way • If touch back, swims faster

  18. Paramecium sense of touch • Touch front (anterior) • Depolarization • Inflow of Ca+2 • If > 10-6 M causes cilia to reverse direction • Touch back • Hyperpolarization • Outflow of K+ • Cilia beat faster • Touch middle • Nothing happens • Difficult to figure out what the genes are Eckert 1972

  19. Genomics of Paramecium sensory receptors??? 72 Mb 40,000 genes

  20. C. elegans • The worm • 959 cells • 302 neurons • Many methods available for studying pathways • C. briggsae is closely related worm

  21. Forward genetics approach • Find or make mutants with particular phenotype • Chemical mutagen • ENU • N-ethyl N-nitrosourea • Transposons Normal Mutant

  22. Forward genetics approach • Find or make mutants with particular phenotype • Discover which gene is broken and so critical for phenotype Normal Mutant Li..Xu 2006

  23. Li et al 2006 : Sixth sense in worms One of papers we will read for Wed

  24. Reverse genetics • Have the genes and need to figure out what they do • Make GFP reporters • See where gene is expressed • Make knock-outs • See what happens if gene is removed

  25. C. elegans methods are worked out

  26. C. elegans • Touch front • Worm moves backward • Touch back • Worm moves forward • Touch middle • No effect • C. briggsae is closely related worm

  27. Wormbook

  28. C. elegans sense of touch Front • 6 mechanosensory neurons • Anterior - AVM, ALML, ALMR • Posterior - PLML, PLMR • Can ablate cells and see if sense is affected

  29. Wormbase describes all 959 cells…

  30. ..including its cell lineage But not what it’s name means!!!

  31. C. elegans sense of touch Front • AVM - anterior ventral microtubule cell • ALML/R - anterior lateral microtubule cell • Left/right • P = posterior • Microtubule cell - filled with tubulins

  32. Skin connected to cytoskeleton by receptor Ion channel Tubulins MEC - mechanosensory proteins identified from mutants

  33. Mechanoreceptor

  34. Worm touch • Touch causes ion channel to open and cell to depolarize • Uses many proteins which are all necessary • Can make knockins or outs of each gene and figure out how mechanoreceptor works • But hard to record from neurons • Ion channel is similar to epithelium Na channel • Humans have a dozen of these - likely important in mechanosensation

  35. Crayfish • Large enough for intracellular recording • Genetics are difficult • Abdominal stretch receptors • MRO = muscle receptor organ

  36. Stretch receptor

  37. Crayfish mechanoreceptor • Intracellular recording from cell attached to muscle • Stretch muscle and record

  38. Depolarize and generate action potentials MRO1 - continuous response during stretch - slow adapt MRO2 - respond only at first - fast adapt

  39. Another differences in MRO1 and MRO2 adaptation • Also differences under voltage clamped conditions • Rate of fiber relaxation • Greater adaptation in MRO2

  40. Crayfish stretch receptors • May be directly responding to membrane stretch • To test this, pull off patch and apply pressure to see response

  41. Two kinds of channels • Stretch activated - independent of voltage, in dendrites, many SA channels • Rectifying SA depend on voltage, in cell body, few RSA channels SA RSA

  42. Cray fish genomics? • Genome size 5-6 Gb

  43. Insect mechanoreceptors • Type I • Bipolar • Cilium at base of outer segment • Extracellular structures • Bathed in high K+ medium secreted by supporting cells • Type II • Multipolar - many dendrites • Associate with internal organs or skin • No supporting cells

  44. Type I - Hair plate sensillum • Outer segment • Connects to base of bristle • Microtubules surround by extracellular matrix

  45. Hair cell sensillum • Bristle motion causes cuticle to push on cap • Cap pushes on tubular body • Depolarization • Likely cation channels open

  46. Type I - Campaniform sensillum Senses compression of cuticle

  47. Type I - Scolopidial organ • Scolopale cell - supporting cell • Secretes extracellullar membrane • Detect vibrations transmitted from cuticle through accessory cell • Tympanal organs • Johnston’s organ

  48. Johnston’s organ • Located in antennae • Sense vibrations • May be important in “hearing” mates

  49. Johnston organ Sound causes segment 3 to rotate relative to segment 2 Responds w/in 1.2 ms Hear with antennae

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