Upstream and downstream (transduction)
The upstream signaling pathway is triggered by the binding of a signaling molecule, a ligand, to a receiving molecule, a receptor. Receptors and ligands exist in many different forms, and only recognize/bond to particular molecules. Upstream extracellular signaling transduce a variety of intracellular cascades.
Receptors and ligands are common upstream signaling molecules that dictate the downstream elements of the signal pathway. A plethora of different factors affect which ligands bind to which receptors and the downstream cellular response that they initiate.
TGF-β
The extracellular type II and type I kinase receptors binding to the TGF-β ligands. Transforming growth factor-β is a superfamily of cytokines that play a significant upstream role in regulating of morphogenesis, homeostasis, cell proliferation, and differentiation. The significance of TGF-β is apparent with the human diseases that occur when TGF-β processes are disrupted, such as cancer, and skeletal, intestinal and cardiovascular diseases. TGF-β is pleiotropic and multifunctional, meaning they are able to act on a wide variety of cell types.Mechanism
The effects of transforming growth factor-β are determined by cellular context. There are three kinds of contextual factors that determine the shape the TGF-β response: the signal transduction components, the transcriptional cofactors and the epigenetic state of the cell. The different ligands and receptors of TGF-β are significant as well in the composition signal transduction pathway.- the signal transduction components: ligand isoforms, ligand traps, co-receptors, receptor sub-types, inhibitory SMAD proteins, crosstalk inputs
- the transcriptional cofactors of SMAD proteins: pluripotency factors, lineage regulators, DNA-binding cofactors, HATs and HDACs, SNF, chromatin readers
- the epigenetic factors: heterochromatin, pluripotency marks, lineage marks, EMT marks, iPS cell marks, oncogenic marks.