I am in an embryology course right now and we\'ve just started covering cell-cel
ID: 31636 • Letter: I
Question
I am in an embryology course right now and we've just started covering cell-cell communication in development. We were talking about the roles of the various cadherins and their discoveries but we got to cell signaling pathways and in reading my textbook I'm finding myself confused by these pathways-- some of those that are mentioned include Notch, Wnt, FGF, TGF-beta, RTK, Jak-Stat, SMAD, integrins, PTHrP, Hedgehog, Discoidin domain receptors 1&2, and the unfolded protein response (UPR).
I know the RTK pathway and I know the SMAD pathway, but the others just seem to be specific ligands that are using these pathways -- is this correct?
Explanation / Answer
JAK is a tyrosine kinase which binds to cell receptors and STAT is dimerized by JAK action. JAK specificity seems to be your question. A specific JAK protein (e.g. JAK1 or JAK2..) may mediate for different receptors in different cells.
There may be hetero- or homo-dimers of JAK, there may be more than one receptor in a cell using the same JAK enzyme, which may result in cross-talk between the two signals. I think its a pathway dynamic that can vary quite a bit from one cell to another, depending on the receptor and cytokine environment the cell is seeing. JAK action can be modulated by any number of proteins which respond to other pathway signals or the cell state. The diagram below from a review of heart muscle cell JAK action is not unusual nor is it complete.
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