synaptic transmission Flashcards

1
Q

what types of neuronal communication are there?

A

gap junction/electrical synapse
synapse/chemical synapse
neuromuscular junction
neuroendocrine system

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2
Q

what type of neuronal communication does the majority occur?

A

chemical synapse, mediated by transmitters

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3
Q

what type of neurotransmitters are there?

A

conventional
neuropeptide
gas
lipid

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4
Q

are lipid and gas neurotransmitters stored?

A

no

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5
Q

where are conventional and neuropeptide neurotransmitters stored?

A

vesicles

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6
Q

why are gas and lipid neurotransmitters not stored?

A

can easily cross the lipid bilayer

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7
Q

what happens to neurotransmitters in neurodegenerative diseases?

A

loss of both main neurotransmitters and co-transmitters

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8
Q

what happens in the trasnmitter release step of neurotransmission?

A

1: actional potential arrives
2: the depolarization activates Ca gate and influx occurs
3: exocytosis of neurotransmitter

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9
Q

what 4 mechanisms clear neurotransmitters after the release?

A

uptake
degredation
receptor activation
diffusion

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10
Q

what methods of neurotransmission are specific to neurotransmitter type?

A

synthesis
uptake
degredation
receptor activation

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11
Q

what methods of neurotransmission are common to every synapse?

A

action potential arrival
Ca2 influx
exocytosis

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12
Q

how are ionotropic receptors characterized?

A

rapid, slow-acting synaptic potential
chemically gated channel
excitatory vs inhibatory = depends on ion

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13
Q

how is a metabotropic receptor characterized?

A

slow synaptic potential, long term
NOT an ion channel
G-protein linked
excitatory vs inhibitory = depends on pathway
second messenger

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14
Q

which receptor is commonly targeted by drugs?

A

GPCR/metabotropic

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15
Q

what type of receptors are neuropeptide receptors?

A

GPCR/metabotropic

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16
Q

what triggers neurotransmitter release?

A

Calcium

17
Q

how is neurotransmission terminated?

A

uptake, degredation
diffusion

18
Q

what is the physiological significance of receptor diversity for a given transmitter?

A

different receptors can mediate distinct responded ( excitatory or inhibitory, time course, subcellular localization)
different receptors can be regulated differently

19
Q

what type of potential is the post-synaptic potential?

A

graded (diminishes with distance)

20
Q

what is temporal summation?

A

a single synapse activating multiple times in quick succession

21
Q

what is spatial summation?

A

occurs when multiple synapses activate simultaneously

22
Q

is synpatic strength constant?

A

no

23
Q

what steps of neurotransmission can be targeted by modulation? (psychoactive substances or drugs) ?

A

all the steps

24
Q

what is synaptic plasticity?

A

the ability of a neuron tomodify their own strength

25
Q

where do different types of synaptic plasticity vary?

A

different synapses
under physiological/pathological states

26
Q

what is synaptic modeulation dependent on?

A

neuromodulators

27
Q

what is synpatic plasticity dependent on?

A

synpatic activity

28
Q

where does summation occur?

A

cell body

29
Q

where does modulation and plasticity occur?

A

synpases

30
Q

what are the differences between action potential and synaptic potential?

A

action potential - all or none, regeberative
synpatic potential - graded

31
Q
A