AP BIOLOGY

THE CELL

CELL COMMUNICATION

Question [CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
After a cellular response, how is it terminated?
A
separate the ligand and receptor
B
block the transduction pathway
C
it will keep responding
D
send out a different signal
Explanation: 

Detailed explanation-1: -Receptor inactivation can operate in several ways including removal of the ligand by degradation or sequestration, and desensitization of the target cell. Binding of a ligand to its receptor is a reversible process, as the ligand will ultimately dissociate from the receptor and may be degraded.

Detailed explanation-2: -When the ligand binds to the internal receptor, a conformational change is triggered that exposes a DNA-binding site on the protein. The ligand-receptor complex moves into the nucleus, then binds to specific regulatory regions of the chromosomal DNA and promotes the initiation of transcription (Figure 4).

Detailed explanation-3: -When a ligand binds to a cell-surface receptor, the receptor’s intracellular domain (part inside the cell) changes in some way. Generally, it takes on a new shape, which may make it active as an enzyme or let it bind other molecules. The change in the receptor sets off a series of signaling events.

Detailed explanation-4: -The ligand crosses the plasma membrane and binds to the receptor in the cytoplasm. The receptor then moves to the nucleus, where it binds DNA to regulate transcription.

There is 1 question to complete.