Neurotransmitters Flashcards

1
Q

Dopamine synthetic mechanisms

A
  1. Tyrosine hydroxylase converts tyrosine to DOPA
  2. DOPA is decarboxylated to create Dopamine
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2
Q

Dopamine metabolism

A

Dopamine is released from the nerve terminals.
It is taken back to the nerve terminals via DAT.
In the neurone it is metabolised by Monoamine oxidase B (MAOB) / Catechol-O-Methyl transfersase (COMT) creating DOPAC and HVA

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3
Q

Key dopamine pathways

A
  • Nigrostriatal. Substantia nigra pars compacta to striatum. Control of movement
  • Mesolimbic. VTA to the nucleus accumbens. Reward pathway.
  • Mesocortical. VTA to the prefrontal cortex. Cognitive control, motivation, mood.
  • Tubularinfandibular. Ventral hypothalamus to medial eminence / pituitary. Dopamine release regulates prolactin secretion.
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4
Q

Dopamine receptor subtypes

A

ALL metabotrophic

  • *D1 like:** D1, D5. Both GPCRs linked to Gs. Increasing cAMP and stimulating the cell.
  • *D2 like:** D2, D3, D4. GPCRs linked to Gi/o. Decreasing cAMP and inhibiting the cell.
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5
Q

Acetylcholine synthetic mechanisms

A

ACh is synthesised from Choline and acetylcoA by the enzyme, choline acetyltransferase (CAT)

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6
Q

Inactivation mechanisms of ACh

A

ACh is inactivated by enzymatic degradation. It is broken down in the synaptic cleft by Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) to acetate and choline. Choline is taken back to presynaptic cleft by choline carrier.

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7
Q

Key neuronal pathways of ACh in the CNS

A

Striatum, cortex, hippocampus, thalamus

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8
Q

AChR subtypes

A

Ionotrophic/nicotinic (nAChRs):
Can be heteromers or homomers of alpha and beta subunits e.g. α42β23 α75.
These are both ligand gated cation channels on the post-synpatic membrane that cause cellular depolarisation.

Metabotrophic/muscarinic (mAChRs):
m1, m3, m5:
Postsynaptic excitatory Gq coupled GPCRs. Cleaves PIP2 into IP3 and DAG, increasing cytosolic Ca++.

m2, m4: Postsynaptic inhibitory Gi/o coupled GPCRs. Decrease cAMP.

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9
Q

Enkephalin synthesis

A

Cleaved from precursor proteins e.g. pre-proenkephalin

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10
Q

Enkephalin metabolism

A

Breakdown by aminopeptidase N (APN) and enkephalinase (extracellular) into inactive metabolites.

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11
Q

Key enkephalin pathways in the CNS

A

Spinal cord: descending pathway consisting of nucleus raphe magnus and periaductal gray (pain pathway), dorsal horn

Bidirectional connections between the Central amygdala and Nucleus Accumbens modulate food intake.

Some modulation of sexual reinforcement via action in medial preoptic area of thalamus.

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12
Q

Enkephalin receptor subtypes

A

All metabotrophic

Mu1/2. Presynaptic in the PAG and the dorsal horn. Gi/o. VDCC block. Inhibits adenylyl cyclase (decreasing cAMP) and opens K+ channels. membrane hyperpolarisation.

Delta + Kappa. Pre and post synaptic. Gi/o. VDCC block. Inhibits adenylyl cyclase (decreasing cAMP) and opens K+ channels. membrane hyperpolarisation.

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13
Q

GABA Synthetic mechanisms

A

Glutamine is converted to glutamate, which is converted to GABA by glutamate decarboxylase.

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14
Q

Glutamate synthetic mechanisms

A

Glutamine (from astrocyte) is transported into nerve terminal via Glutamine transporters. Once in a nerve terminal Glutaminase converts it to Glutamate.
It can also be synthesised from glucose.

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15
Q

NA Synthetic mechanisms

A
  1. Tyrosine converted to Dopa by tyrosine hydroxylase.
  2. Dopa converted to dopamine by aromatic amino acid decarboxylase.
  3. Dopamine converted to noradrenaline by dopamine- β-hydroxylase.
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16
Q

Tachykinins/neurokinins synthetic mechanisms

A

These are peptides, thus synthesised from 2 main genes - different splice variants give rise to different peptide e.g. NK1, substance P.

The Bioactive peptides are cleaved from the large inactive peptide precursors encoded by these genes in the endoplasmic reticulum.

17
Q

Synthetic mechanisms of 5HT

A

Synthesised from L-tryptophan (dietary amino acid) in two steps by two enzymes.

18
Q

Storage of neuro/tachy kinins

A

Stored in large dense core vesicles in varicosities in PNS and synapses in CNS. These vesicles are located further from the synaptic membrane, therefore greater depolarisation is required to cause release of neuro/tachy kinins. For this reason, they are often co-released with other excitatory neurotransmitters such as glutamate.

19
Q

GABA metabolism

A

It is taken up both by pre-synaptic cells and glial cells, where it is broken down by GABA transaminase.

20
Q

Types of GABA receptors

A
  1. Ionotrophic.
    GABA<strong>A</strong> and GABAC are both post-synaptic ion channels that cause inhibition by allowing Cl- entry.
  2. Metabotrophic.
    GABAB is coupled to Gi/o, causing inhibition by cAMP and opening K+ channels.
21
Q

metabolism of glutamate

A

80% of glumate is taken up by EAAT1 on astrocytes, where it is converted back to glutamine so that it can be transported back to pre-synpatic neurons.

22
Q

Types of glutamate receptors

A
  1. Ionotrophic:
    * *AMPA:** Post-synaptic excitation via Na+ influx
    * *NMDA:** Post-synpaptic exitation via Ca++ and Na+ influx. Higher activation threshold, as it requires removal of Mg++ by depolarisaion.
    * *Kainate:** Pre/Post synaptic exciation via Na+ influx
  2. Metabotrophic
    * *Group 1:** (mGlu1, 5). Coupled to Gq, activating PLC and thus increasing IP3 and DAG to cause postsynpatic excitation
    * *Group 2** (mGlu2, 3) & Group 3 (mGlu4, 6, 7 and 8): Cause presynaptic inhibition by coupling Gi/o to decrease adenlyate cyclase activity and open K+ channels.
23
Q

NA metabolism

A

Taken up by Noradrenaline reuptake transporter (NET), metabolised by COMT (glial cells) and Monoamine Oxidase B (Glia and neurons)

24
Q

Main NA pathways

A

Associated with mood and arousal

Locus Coeruleus (nuclei) project to thalamus, frontal cortex, hypothalamus and limbic system, as well as the cerebellum.

Raphe nuclei ascend to the amygdala and descend to the spinal cord (peripheral functions and pain perception).

25
Q

Types of NA receptor

A

ALL metabotrophic.

  1. alpha-1. Gq, pre/post stimulation.
  2. alpha-2. Gi/ Go, pre/post inhibition.
  3. beta-1. Gs, post stimulation.
  4. beta-2. Gs, post stimulation.
26
Q

Neuro/Tachykinin breakdown

A

Substance P and neuropeptides A, B and K are degraded by enkephalinase in extracellular spaces. Substance P is also hydrolysed by angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE).

27
Q

Neuro/tachkinin pathways

A

Substance P regulates affective behaviour and emesis in the brain.

Neurokinin A and substance P regulate nociception in the spinal cord.

28
Q

Neuro/tachykinin receptor types

A

ALL excitatory pre/post metabotrophic Gq coupled (PLC activation)

  1. NK1. substance P > neurokinin A > neurokinin B
  2. NK2. neurokinin neurokinin B > substance P
  3. NK3. neurokinin B > neurokinin A > substance P
    (rank order of potency.)
29
Q

5HT metabolism

A

Reuptake of 5-HT into neurons with co transport of NA+ by SERT on the axons.

Broken down by Monoamine oxidase A and B

30
Q

5HT pathways

A

Serotonin is primarily found in the Raphe nuclei of brain stem with widespread projections to areas such as amygdala, hippcampus, spinal cord, neocortex

31
Q

5HT receptor subtypes

A
  1. ionotrophic:
    * *5HT3. **Non selective cation channel. Post-synpatic excitation.
  2. Metabotrophic:
    * *5-HT1 A;B;D;E;F:** Pre/post inhibition by Gi/Go
    * *5HT2:** Pre/post synaptic stimulation
    * *5HT4,6,7: Postsynaptic stimulation by Gs coupling
    * *5Ht5:
    Post-synpatic inhibition by Gi/Go