Cell that communicates to other cells usually with chemical signals made up of proteins or other molecules
Target cell
Cell that detects the signals sent by the sending cell with its receptors
Ligand
General term for a molecule that specifically binds to other molecules, like receptors
Intercellular signal
Signal between cells
Intracellular signal
Signal within a cell
Paracine signaling
When cells communicate over relatively short distances through ligands, allowing cells to locally coordinate with their neighbors. Important in development when clumps tell each other what they should become
Synaptic signaling
Unique type of paracine signaling where electrical impulses in neurons trigger their axon terminals to release neurotransmitter (ligands)
Synapse
Junction between two nerve cells where signal transmission occurs
Autocrine signaling
When a cell sends signals that bind to its own receptors. Important in dev because it affirms what cells do
Endocrine signaling
When hormones are put into the bloodstream and carried to far-off targets. Long-distance form of cell signaling that involves the pituitary gland, hypothalamus, thyroid, and gonads
Hormone
Signal that is produced in one part of the body and travels to another through the circulatory system
Growth hormone (GH)
Hormone released by the pituitary gland that helps us develop bigger bones and more cartilage, amongst other things, by telling cells to multiply faster
Gap junctions
Tiny channels that directly connect neighboring cells. When one cell changes state it transfers it to its neighbors
Intracellular mediators
Small signaling molecules that are able to diffuse through the gap junctions
Signaling through cell-cell contact
Using things like gap junctions or two cells with complimentary surface proteins binding to each other, sending signals through multiple cells when one interaction happens
Quorum sensing
When unicellular organisms use chemical signals from each other to see how dense the population is. Their gene expression and behaviors change if it gets too dense
Some organisms have evolved together so that unicellular organisms symbiotically use quorum sensing to see whether or not they're in their host so they can activate their otherwise useless thing that helps (e.g. bacteria becoming bioluminescent inside of a squid, protecting it from predators in exchange for food)
Autoinducers
Signaling molecules that are continually secreted by bacteria to alert their neighbors of their presence, letting then detect cell density and coordinate
Each species of bacteria has its own autoinducer that will diffuse out until they're in higher concentrations, when it will start to bind to other cells, affecting DNA transcription, leading to changes in gene expression
Biofilm
When some species of quorum-sensing bacteria form surface-attached communities that cover the substrate (thing beneath them). Can be made up of multiple coexisting colonies
Mating factor
Signaling chemical that lets fungi who reproduce sexually find each other
Plasmodemata
Specialized junctions in plant cells where a hole is punched in the cell wall to allow direct cytoplasmic exchange between them. Lined with a shared membrane with a super thin strand of ER in the cytoplasm. Can dilate to let proteins through but usually its just tiny molecules diffusing
Connexins
6 proteins that make up the connexon
Connexon
Donut like structure between two animal cells that make up a gap junction
Tight junctions
Watertight seal between two adjacent animal cells that stop water from escaping between two of them. Important in things like linings where you don't want liquids escaping
Claudins
Proteins that make up a tight junction
Desmosomes
Animal cell junctions that hold cells together, like making sure the epithelium stays in one sheet when it stretches
Cadherins
Specialized adhesion proteins that are found along the membranes of cells in desmosomes, both connecting cells on the outside through membranes and anchoring to red cytoplasmic plaque and intermediate filaments on the inside of the cell