Neurotransmitters System l: Glutamate (neuro) Flashcards

1
Q

Neurotransmission

A
  • fundamental process that drives information transfer between neurons and their targets
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2
Q

Criteria for neurotransmitter

A
  • neurotransmitters are chemical messengers that transmit signals from a neuron to a target cell across a synapse (ie neurotransmission)
  • molecule must be synthesised and stored in pre-synaptic neuron
  • molecule must be released by the pre-synaptic axon terminal upon stimulation
  • molecule must produce a response in post-synaptic cell
    process:
  • neurotransmitter is synthesised in cell body or in terminal
  • neurotransmitter is packaged into vesicles
  • neurotransmitter is released when vesicles fuse
  • neurotransmitter binds to and activates post-synaptic receptors
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3
Q

Classification of neurons

A
  • neurons can be classified by the neurotransmitter they use
  • these differences arise due to the differential expression of proteins involved in neurotransmitter synthesis, storage and release
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4
Q

Glutamate intro

A
  • the major excitatory neurotransmitter in CNS
  • took a while to realise glutamate was a neurotransmitter
  • at the crossroad of multiple metabolic pathways
  • excitatory role of glutamate in brain and spinal cord, discovered in 1950s
  • not until late 1970s that. glutamate became recognised as principle excitatory neurotransmitter in CNS
  • nearly all excitatory neurons in CNS are glutamatergic and it has been estimated that over half of all brain synapses release glutamate
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5
Q

Glutamate synthesis and storage

A
  • glutamine turns to glutamate using phosphate-activated glutaminase
  • synthesised in nerve terminals
  • transported into vesicles by vesicular glutamate transporters (VGLUT)
  • counter transport with H+ to drive glutamate entry into vesicles
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6
Q

Glutamate re-uptake and degradation

A

reuptake:
- pr-synaptic terminal to post-synaptic neuron
- neurons and glial contain Na+ dependant excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs)
degradation:
- enzymatic reaction - glutamate to glutamine via glutamine synthetase
- transport - glial cells to neurons via SN1 (system N transporter expressed on glial cells) and SAT2 (system A transporter 2 expressed on neurons)

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7
Q

Neurotransmitter receptors

A

2 broad families of neurotransmitter receptor:

  • ligand-gated ion channels (ionotrophic)
  • G-protein coupled receptors (metabotrophic)
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8
Q

Glutamate receptors

A
ionotropic:
- AMPA receptors 
- NMDA receptors
- kainate receptors 
metabotropic:
- group l
- group ll
- group lll
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9
Q

Ionotropic glutamte receptors

A
  • ionotropic glutamate receptors are named after antagonists that activate them
  • AMPA and NMDA (majority of excitatory neurotransmission in the brain) and kainic acid
    influx:
  • AMPA - Na+
  • NMDA - Na+, Ca2+
  • Kainate - Na+
    efflux:
  • AMPA, NMDA, Kainate - K+
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10
Q

AMPA receptors

A
  • hetero-tetrameric ‘dimer of dimers’
  • four orthosteric binding sites
  • 2 sites must be occupied for channel opening
  • current increases as more binding sites are occupied
    four subunit types (plus alternate splice variants):
  • GluA1
  • GluA2
  • GluA3
  • GluA4
  • most commonly 2 GluA2 subunits, 2 GluA1, 3 or 4
  • presence of GluA2 subunits prevents Ca2+ flow
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11
Q

NMDA receptors

A
  • hetero-tetrameric ‘dimer of dimers’
  • three subunit types (plus alternate splice variants):
  • GluN1 (or NR1)
  • GluN2 (or NR2)
  • GluN3 (or NR3)
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12
Q

Kainate receptors

A
  • tetrametric - GluK1-3 can form hormones or heteromers, GluK4 and 5 only heteromers with GluK1-3 subunits
    ligand-gated ion channel:
  • glutamate binding required for channel opening, not well understood
  • limited distribution in brain compared to AMPA/NMDA receptors
    five subunit types (plus alternate splice variants):
  • GluK1 (GluR5)
  • GluK2 (GluR6)
  • GluK3 (GluR7)
  • GluK4 (KA1)
  • GluK5 (KA2)
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13
Q

Metabotropic glutamate receptors

A
  • G-protein coupled receptor (GCPR)
  • 8 sub types: Group 1-3
  • synaptic plasticity and inhibit NT release
  • dimers: homomers, heteromers eg mGlu1 and mGlu5, and mGlu2 and 5-HT2A
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14
Q

Excitatory neurotransmitters and depolarisation

A
  • excitatory neurotransmitters (eg glutamate) can lead to neuronal membrane depolarisation- displacement of a membrane potential towards a more positive value
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15
Q

AMPA, NMDA and kainate receptors and EPSCs

A
  • the excitatory post synaptic current (EPSC) represents the flow of ions, and change in current, across a post-synaptic membrane
  • EPSCs lead to the generation of excitatory post synaptic potentials (EPSPs), which increase the likelihood of firing an action potential
  • EPSCs produced by the NMDA receptor and kainite receptor are slower and last longer than those produced by AMPA receptors
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16
Q

Glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity

A
  • excitoxicity is the pathological process by which excessive excitatory stimulation can lead to neuronal damage and death
  • excess Ca2+ can cause mitochondrial damage, oxidative stress and apoptosis
  • excitotoxicity linked to stroke, alzhemiers disease
17
Q

Glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity in Alzheimer’s

A
- memantine is a low affinity NMDA receptor antagonist that blocks the NMDA receptor ion channel to reduce glutamate mediated neurotoxicity 
effects on brain:
- extreme shrinkage of cerebral cortex
- extreme shrinkage of hippocampus 
- severely enlarged vesicles
18
Q

Long-term potentiation (LTP)

A
  • LTP refers to the persistent strengthening of a synapse based upon repeated patterns of activity
  • LTP underlies important processes, including learning and memory - initial phase involves glutamatergic neurotransmission
    mechanism of action:
  • glutamate activates AMPA receptors, with Na+ flowing into the post-synaptic neuron and causing depolarisation
  • NMDA receptors open, due to depolarisation removing the voltage-gated Mg2+ ion block
  • Ca2+ ions enter the cell activate post-synaptic protein kinases such as calmodulin kinase ll (CAMKll) and protein kinase C (PKC)
  • CaMKll and PKC trigger a series of reactions that lead to the insertion of new AMPA receptors into post-synaptic membrane
  • AMPA receptors increase the post-synaptic membranes sensitivity to glutamate and increases ion channel conductance
  • this underlies the initial phase of long-term potentiation (LTP)