Title: Synaptic Transmission
1Synaptic Transmission
2Otto Loewi
- 1920 - showed communication at gap between nerve
heart muscle was chemical - 1936 - Nobel Prize
3Loewis Experiment
- Stimulate Vagus Nerve - slows heart. Transfer
fluid, 2nd heart slows - Stimulate another nerve speed up rate
- CONCLUSION
- Chemical communication
- Different chemicals released from different
nerves, have different effects
Fig 5.2
4Chemical Signaling at Synapses
Postsynaptic Neuron
Presynaptic Neuron
5Anatomy of a Synapse
Synaptic Vesicle
Presynaptic Terminal
Enzymes
Synaptic Cleft
Receptors
Postsynaptic Neuron
6(No Transcript)
7Sequence of Events at the Synapse
EXCOCYTOSIS
1) synthesis
2) release
4) inactivation
3) receptor activation
Fig 5.5
Fig 5.6
84 Ways to Remove Neurotransmitter
REUPTAKE
DEGRADATION
- Degradation via enzymes in cleft
- Re-uptake via transporter protein
- Glial cell uptake
- Diffusion away from cleft
9Synaptic Transmission
Ion flow ? EPSP or IPSP
10Agonists Antagonists
11Types of Synapses
12Ionotropic Receptors
Fig 5.15
13Metabotropic Receptors
Fig 5.16
14Neurotransmitters
15- Acetylcholine (ACh)
- Monoamines
- Norepinephrine (NE)
- Dopamine (DA)
- Serotonin (5-HT)
- Soluble gases
- Nitric oxide
- CO
- Amino Acids
- GABA
- Glutamate
- Opioid peptides
16ACh
- 1st discovered
- Wide distribution in CNS PNS
- Can be excitatory or inhibitory
- Functionally involved in a variety of behaviors
including emotions, memory
17Cholinergic Pathways Ascending projections to
many brain regions
Note - cell bodies clustered in a few nuclei
in/near brainstem, but axons are widely
distributed in forebrain, brainstem SC.
18ACh Synthesis
vege's egg yolk kidneys liver legumes
Acetyl CoA (mitochondria) Choline (diet)
Choline Acetyltransferase (ChAT)
ACh
AChE (acetylcholinesterase) breaks ACh down in
cleft, Products taken back up in cell.
1 AChE can breakdown 14,000 ACh molecules/sec!
19ACh Receptors
- All ACh receptors respond to ACh
- NICOTINIC (NM junction ANS)
- 8 subtypes
- stimulated by nicotine, antagonized by curare
- MUSCARINIC (CNS)
- 5 subtypes
- stimd by muscarine, antagonized by scopolamine
atropine (used to dilate eyes)
20Neuromuscular Junction
Nicotinic receptors - stop Ach activity stop
muscle activity including diaphragm
21WHAT HAPPENS IF YOU BLOCK ACh Activity?!
22Direct Antagonist
- Atropine - muscarinic receptor blocker
- Dilates eyes
- In brain hallucinations
23Curare
Antagonist at Cholinergic Receptors on Muscles in
PNS
24Botulinum Toxin - indirect antagonist
25Blocks ACh release 1 gram enough to kill 350,000
people
26Black Widow Spider Venom
Massive exocytosis followed by vesicle
depletion no more neurotransmission
27AChE Inhibitors
- Antidote for curare - competes w/ curare
molecules - Nerve gases - affects CNS PNS
- Sweating, bronchia fill w/ mucus constrict,
dimmed vision, vomiting, convulsions, paralysis
asphyxiation
28MONOAMINES (aka bioamines)
- Nuclei located in brainstem and project
throughout brain - Modulate function of widespread regions of the
brain
29DOPAMINE (DA)
- 3 Important DA
- Projections
- Nigrostriatal
- Mesolimbic
- Mesocotical
Antagonists - antipsychotics Agonists -
recreational drugs Parkinsons Disease
VTA
30Central Vigilance, sleep, limbic hypothalamic
activities
31Behavioral Functions
- Food intake (satiety) -
- Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder - 5-HT agonists
improve - Mood
- Sleep/arousal
Only about200,000 cells, but fibers thruout the
brain
32Amino Acid NTs GABA Glutamate
- most common NTs
- Found throughout CNS at high concentrations
- Several Receptors
- Inactivation Reuptake into terminal Glial cell
33Neuropeptides
- Made in soma transported (SLOW PROCESS not
replaced quickly) -
- Opioid Peptides (endorphins enkephalins)
- Receptors - several subtypes
- Inactivation - Peptidase (NO RE-UPTAKE)
34Transmitter Gases Nitric oxide (NO) Carbon
monoxide (CO)
- Not stored or vesicular release
- Synthd as needed
- Produced in all regions of neuron