Gap junctions
These junctions allow communication between adjacent cells via the passage of small molecules directly from the cytoplasm of one cell to that of another. Molecules that can pass between cells coupled by gap junctions include inorganic salts, sugars, amino acids, nucleotides, and vitamins but not large molecules such as proteins or nucleic acids.
Gap junctions are crucial to the integration of certain cellular activities. For example, heart muscle cells generate electrical current by the movement of inorganic salts. If the cells are coupled, they will share this electrical current, allowing the synchronous contraction of all the cells in the tissue. This coupling function requires the regulation of molecular traffic through the gaps. The junctions are not open pores but dynamic channels, which change their permeability with changes in cellular activity. They consist of proteins completely crossing the cell membrane as six-sided columns with central pores. Under certain conditions the proteins are thought to change shape, causing the pores to become smaller or larger and thus changing the permeability of the junction.
Gap junctions are also found in tissues that are not electrically active. In these tissues, the junctions allow nutrients and waste products to travel throughout the tissue. Cells in such tissues are said to be metabolically coupled. During the formation of embryos, gap junctions are crucial to establishing differences between separate groups of cells, the coupled cells undergoing development together to become a specialized tissue.
Cell-to-cell communication via chemical signaling
In addition to cell-matrix and cell-cell interactions, cell behaviour in multicellular organisms is coordinated by the passage of chemical or electrical signals between cells. The most common form of chemical signaling is via molecules secreted from the cells and moving through the extracellular space. Signaling molecules may also remain on cell surfaces, influencing other cells only after the cells make physical contact. Finally, as noted above, gap junctions allow small molecules to move between the cytoplasms of adjacent cells.
Types of chemical signaling
Chemical signals secreted by cells can act over varying distances. In the autocrine signaling process, molecules act on the same cells that produce them. In paracrine signaling, they act on nearby cells. Autocrine signals include extracellular matrix molecules and various factors that stimulate cell growth. An example of paracrine signals is the chemical transmitted from nerve to muscle that causes the muscle to contract. In this instance, the muscle cells have regions specialized to receive chemical signals from an adjacent nerve cell. In both autocrine and paracrine signaling, the chemical signal works in the immediate vicinity of the cell that produces it and is present at high concentrations. A chemical signal picked up by the bloodstream and taken to distant sites is called an endocrine signal. Most hormones produced in vertebrates are endocrine signals, such as the hormones produced in the pituitary gland at the base of the brain and carried by the bloodstream to act at low concentrations on the thyroid or adrenal glands.
The concentration at which a chemical signal acts has significance for its target cell. Chemical signals that act at high concentration act locally and rapidly. On the other hand, chemical signals that act at low concentrations act at distances and are generally slow.
Signal receptors
The ability of a cell to respond to an extracellular signal depends on the presence of specific proteins called receptors, which are located on the cell surface or in the cytoplasm. Receptors bind chemical signals that ultimately trigger a mechanism to modify the behaviour of the target cell. Cells may contain an array of specific receptors that allow them to respond to a variety of chemical signals.
Signal molecules are either soluble or insoluble. Water-soluble molecules, such as the polypeptide hormone insulin, bind to receptors at cell surfaces. On the other hand, lipid-soluble molecules, such as the steroid hormones produced by the ovary or testis, pass through the lipid bilayer of the cell membrane to reach receptors within the cytoplasm. Extracellular matrix molecules are chemical signals, but, because of their size and insolubility, they act only on cell surface receptors and are neither taken up by the cells nor rapidly destroyed.