Anmelden

Despite the protective membrane that separates a cell from the environment, cells need the ability to detect and respond to environmental changes. Additionally, cells often need to communicate with one another. Unicellular and multicellular organisms use a variety of cell signaling mechanisms to communicate with the environment.

Cells respond to many types of information, often through receptor proteins positioned on the membrane. For example, skin cells respond to and transmit touch information, while photoreceptors in the retina can detect light. Most cells, however, have evolved to respond to chemical signals, including hormones, neurotransmitters, and many other types of signaling molecules. Cells can even coordinate different responses elicited by the same signaling molecule.

Typically, cell signaling involves three steps: (1) reception, (2) transduction, and (3) response. In most signal reception, a membrane-impermeable molecule, or ligand, causes a change in a membrane receptor; however, some signaling molecules, such as hormones, can cross the membrane to reach their internal receptors. The membrane receptor can then send this signal to intracellular messengers, transducing the message into a cellular response. This intracellular response may include changes in transcription, translation, protein activation, and other responses.

Unicellular organisms such as bacteria can use a type of cell signaling called quorum sensing to detect their concentration in a colony and generate coordinated responses. Eukaryotic cells can release ligands that target the same cell that produced the signal (autocrine signaling) or neighboring cells (paracrine signaling). Signals can even be sent over long distances, as in the case of some hormones, and produce responses in distant cells, called endocrine signaling. Contact-dependent signaling describes physical pathways created between neighboring cells through which cytoplasmic signals can rapidly pass. Nervous system cells can generate rapid responses through a specialization of cell signaling called synaptic signaling.

Tags
Cell SignalingReceptor ProteinsEnvironmental ChangesUnicellular OrganismsMulticellular OrganismsChemical SignalsHormonesNeurotransmittersLigandTransductionIntracellular MessengersQuorum SensingAutocrine SignalingParacrine SignalingEndocrine SignalingSynaptic Signaling

Aus Kapitel 21:

article

Now Playing

21.1 : Überblick über die Zellsignalisierung

Prinzipien der Zellsignalisierung

19.4K Ansichten

article

21.2 : Arten von Signalmolekülen

Prinzipien der Zellsignalisierung

9.6K Ansichten

article

21.3 : Arten von Rezeptoren: Zelloberflächenrezeptoren

Prinzipien der Zellsignalisierung

16.1K Ansichten

article

21.4 : Arten von Rezeptoren: Interne Rezeptoren

Prinzipien der Zellsignalisierung

17.2K Ansichten

article

21.5 : Aufbau von Signalkomplexen

Prinzipien der Zellsignalisierung

5.6K Ansichten

article

21.6 : Wechselwirkungen zwischen Signalwegen

Prinzipien der Zellsignalisierung

6.1K Ansichten

article

21.7 : Verstärkung von Signalen über Second Messenger

Prinzipien der Zellsignalisierung

6.5K Ansichten

article

21.8 : Verstärkung von Signalen über eine enzymatische Kaskade

Prinzipien der Zellsignalisierung

7.9K Ansichten

article

21.9 : Vielfalt der Signalübertragung in den Zellen

Prinzipien der Zellsignalisierung

6.0K Ansichten

article

21.10 : Rückkopplungsschleifen der Zellsignalisierung

Prinzipien der Zellsignalisierung

6.1K Ansichten

article

21.11 : Zellsignalisierung in Pflanzen

Prinzipien der Zellsignalisierung

5.2K Ansichten

article

21.12 : Pflanzliche Hormone

Prinzipien der Zellsignalisierung

4.7K Ansichten

JoVE Logo

Datenschutz

Nutzungsbedingungen

Richtlinien

Forschung

Lehre

ÜBER JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Alle Rechte vorbehalten