- Autocrine signalling
Autocrine signaling is a form of signaling in which a cell secretes a hormone, or chemical messenger (called the autocrine agent) that binds to autocrine receptors on the same cell, leading to changes in the cell. This can be contrasted with
paracrine signaling ,intracrine signaling, or classical endocrine signaling.Examples
An example of an autocrine agent is the
cytokine interleukin-1 inmonocytes . When this is produced in response to external stimuli, it can bind to cell-surface receptors on the same cell that produced it.Another example occurs in activated
T cell lymphocytes , i.e. when a T cell is induced to mature by binding to apeptide :MHC complex on a professionalantigen presenting cell and by the B7:CD28 costimulatory signal. Upon activation, "low affinity" IL-2 receptors are replaced by "high affinity" IL-2 receptors consisting of α, β, and γ chains. The cell then releases IL-2 which binds to its own new IL-2 receptors, causing self-stimulation and ultimately amonoclonal population of T cells. These T cells can then go on to perform effector functions such asmacrophage activation,B cell activation, and cell-mediatedcytoxicity .ee also
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Paracrine signaling
*Intracrine
*Endocrine system External links
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* [http://www.sysbio.org/research/bsi/cellsignal/ligand.stm "Autocrine versus juxtacrine signaling modes" - illustration at sysbio.org]
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