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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Computational modelling of GPCR signalling dynamics
- GPCR signalling bias (1)
- GPCR signalling bias (2)
- Model organism Schizosaccharomyces pombe
- GPCR signalling in yeast
- Reporter gene activity is time- and ligand-dependent
- Sz. pombe reporter strains…what have they done for us?
- GPCR signalling in fission yeast
- A dual role for RGS proteins?
- How can we understand this?
- Development of models
- Biological data informs the model
- Inert state hypothesis (1)
- Inert state hypothesis (2)
- New model works
- Could the model make predictions that we could test?
- RGS over-expression (1)
- RGS over-expression (2)
- Other ongoing systems modelling projects….
- Modelling the ‘other yeast’ system
- Expand the use of our models beyond yeast
- Adenosine receptors
- Adenosine A1R displays signalling bias
- But the operational model does not tell us everything
- Modelling the adenosine data (1)
- Modelling the adenosine data (2)
- Pertussis toxin inactivates many inhibitory G proteins (1)
- Pertussis toxin inactivates many inhibitory G proteins (2)
- Acknowledgment
Topics Covered
- GPCRs signalling kinetics can be model using simple equations
- Link between computational modelling and pharmacology
- Yeast are excellent system for computational models
- RGS proteins show non-intuitive activity
- Kinetic models of GPCRs can model agonist bias
Links
Series:
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Talk Citation
Ladds, G. (2020, January 30). Computational modelling of GPCR signalling dynamics [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/VDOM8165.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- There are no commercial/financial matters to disclose.
Other Talks in the Series: G Protein-Coupled Receptors (GPCRs) Signaling in Health and Disease
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
I'm Dr. Graham Ladds in the Department of Pharmacology at the University of Cambridge.
I'm going to be talking today about how we've been using
computational modeling techniques to investigate
G-protein-coupled receptor signaling dynamics.
0:14
I'm sure the vast majority of people who will be listening
to this know quite a bit about G-protein-coupled receptors,
but we'll start with just a brief introduction to how they function,
and where computational modeling can come in and explain things.
0:29
GPCRs are typically seven-transmembrane receptors.
They typically bind agonists on the outside of the cell and
transmit the signal to an intracellular or second messenger,
cascaded with inside a cell.
The example I've shown here is a GPCR coupled to a single heterotrimeric G protein,
which is known as Gq, and it activates an IP3 cascade, bringing about a cellular response.
This would have been the idea that we understood about
GPCRs up until more recently in the last 10 years or so.
Now, we understand that they're much more complex with
a single receptor being able to bind multiple ligands.
1:01
As we can see here on this slide,
I've depicted a number of different agonists binding into a single receptor,
bringing about a range of different signaling cascades,
be that signaling through different intracellular the G proteins.
Each mammalian cell typically contains somewhere in
the region of 16 different G Alpha subunits,
and all of these can bring about different intercellular signaling cascades.
Furthermore, we now understand that GPCRs can also bind to proteins known as arrestins,
and this promotes either internalization or,
in fact, independent signaling from the different G-proteins.
Now, when we first started working on GPCRs,
we always thought that this mammalian based system was very complex.
Therefore, if we were going to apply any form of modeling techniques,
we actually need to get down to a more simple understandable system.
To do that, we chose to use a range of different cells and organisms.