PH2113 - Neuropharmacology 5 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the properties of metabotropic glutamate receptors?

A
Ca2+ sensing receptor
- CaSR
2 GABA(B) receptors
- 1 receptor, 2 subunits
- taste receptors
- sweet
- umami
7 orphan receptors
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2
Q

What are the different groups of metabotropic glutamate receptors?

A
Group 1
- mGluR1
- mGluR5
Group 2
- mGluR2
- mGluR3
Group 3
- mGluR4
- mGluR6
- mGluR7
- mGluR8
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3
Q

Where are glutamate receptors found?

A

Group 1
- post synaptic
Group 2 and 3
- presynaptic

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4
Q

What is the function of glutamate receptors?

A
Modulate other receptors
Modifiy excitotoxic activity
- NMDA receptors
Involved in synaptic plasticity
Differential distribution in the brain
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5
Q

What are G-protein coupled receptors also known as?

A

Metabotropic receptors

7-TM receptors

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6
Q

How do 7-TM receptors work?

A

Equilibrium between active and inactive conformations

- dynamic proteins that interchange between different conformations that are stabilised by ligans

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7
Q

What effect do agonists have on 7-TM receptors?

A

Stimulate the receptor by stabilising an active conformation by various mechanisms
- binding between transmembrane segments

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8
Q

What effect do antagonists have on 7-TM receptors?

A

Stabilise one or more of the many different inactive conformations of the receptor and thus prevents the receptor from going into the active signalling conformation

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9
Q

What are the complexities of G-protein signalling?

A

Some GPCRs are constitutively active
- adrenoceptors
Inverse agonists
- decrease G-protein receptor binding and reduce basal activity of receptors or reduction in binding receptor affinity
- induces a conformational change in the receptor that can produce a variable affinity for different G-proteins thereby having different actions

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10
Q

What is an allosteric modulator?

A

Negative, positive and silent

Receptors can be regulated by sites distant to the agonist binding site

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11
Q

What is homodimerisation?

A

Classically assumed that GPCRs existed as monomers and interacted with G-proteins with a 1:1 stoichiometry
Evidence that many form dimers to express function

Dimerisation may be via covalent or non-covalent interactions and may involve extracellular domains and/or C-terminal tails
Complex interactions with multiple G-proteins

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12
Q

What is heteromeric dimersation?

A

In the case of GABA receptors, function requires heteromeric expression
Opioid d- and k- receptors also form functional heteromers
Increases functional diversity economically

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13
Q

What is direct signal amplification?

A

At each stage of signalling from the activation of the receptor to generating a cellular response, the initial signal (i.e. ligand binding) is amplified

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14
Q

Why is Drug Discovery and Development risky?

A

10% of new pharmaceutical agents entering clinical development reach the market

  • CNS drugs entering clinical development lower probability
  • 6%
  • Industry average across other non-CNS therapeutic areas
  • 15%

CNS drugs take longer in development and regulatory approval
- 12 - 13 years
compared with cardiovascular/gastrointestinal indications
- 6 - 8 years

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15
Q

Why do success rates in CNS drug development fall below average?

A

Complexity of the brain and ability to identify highly selective targets
Propensity for CNS drugs to cause CNS-mediated side effects
- nausea
- dizziness
- seizures
Presence of the Blood-Brain Barrier across which most therapeutic agents need to penetrate
- further pharmacokinetic hurdle
Lack of validated biomarkers readily amenable to early drug development to inform whether a given neurotherapeutic agent is reaching the brain in sufficient concentrations to modulate the desired CNS target

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16
Q

What is the Blood-Brain Barrier (neurovascular unit)?

A

Capillaries
Pericytes
Astrocytes
Neurones

17
Q

What are the differences between brain and general capillaries?

A

General

  • continuous
  • some fenestrated
  • some sinusoidal
  • intercellular junctions not restrictive to small molecules
  • undertake pinocytosis

Brain capillary

  • continuous
  • no fenestra
  • regulation by neurovascular unit
  • restrictive intercellular junctions
  • tight junctions
  • reduced pinocytosis
  • efflux transporters
18
Q

Which regions of the brain are not enclosed by the Blood-Brain Barrier?

A

Circumventricular organs

  • surrounded by tanycytic membrane
  • specialised ependymal cells possessing tight junction and limiting diffusion of proteins from CVO to deeper brain tissues
19
Q

Which structures in the brain make up the circumventricular organs?

A

Area Postrema
- chemoreceptor trigger zone for vomiting
Subfornical organ (SFO)
- osmoregulation
- fluid
- electrolyte imbalance and cardiovascular regulation
Organum vasculosum of lamina terminalis (OVLT)
- involved in osmoregulation
- involved in sodium regulation
Subcommissural organ (SCO)
- formed by ependymal and hypendymal cells
- highly specialised in the secretion of proteins
Neurohypophysis (posterior pituitary)
- stores and releases oxytocin and vasopressin
Pineal gland
- secretes melatonin
- circadian rhythms
Median eminence
- regulates the anterior pituitary through the release of neurohormones

20
Q

How many ventricles are there are there in the brain?

A

Four

  • two lateral
  • third
  • fourth