Title: NEUROTRANSMITTERS
1NEUROTRANSMITTERS
- Dr Fawzia ALRoug, MBBS, Master, Ph.D
- Assistant Professor, Department of Physiology,
College of Medicine, King Khalid University
Hospital, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
2NEUROTRANSMITTERS
- DEFINITION Are chemical transducers which are
released by electrical impulse into the synaptic
cleft from presynaptic membrane from synaptic
vesicles. It then diffuse to the postsynaptic
membrane and react and activate the receptors
present leading to initiation of new electrical
signals.
3Discovery of neurotransmitters
- Loewi, 1921
- frog hearts in saline solution
- Stimulation of vagus nerve results in lower heart
rate - gave long vagal nerve stimulation
- Heart 2
- Exposed to saline solution from heart 1
- Slowed heart rate
- Conclusion Neurotransmission is chemical
- nerve releases chemical that can influence other
cells
Fig 8.1, Zigmond Fundamental Neuroscience
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7Fate of neurotransmitters
- Are as ,
- It is consumed ( broken down or used up) at
postsynaptic membrane leading to action potential
generation. - Degraded by enzymes present in synaptic cleft.
- Reuptake mechanism( reutilization) this is the
most common fate.
8Types of responses on postsynaptic membrane
- Excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSPs)
- It is caused by depolarization.
- Inhibitory Postsynaptic potential (IPSPs)
- It is caused by hyperpolarization.
9Fast Slow Postsynaptic potentials
- Fast EPSPs IPSPs work through ligand gated ion
channels.eg. Nicotinic receptors(at the level of
neuromuscular junction) - Slow EPSPs IPSPs are produced by multi step
process involving G protein eg. Muscarinic
receptors ( at the level of autonomic gangila)
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12Acetyl Choline Receptors
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14MAOmonoamine oxidase ,COMTcatechole-o-methyle-tr
ansferase
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17Formation of serotonin 5-HT Hydroxy
tryptamine HIAAhydroxyindoleacetic acid
18Histamine
- Histamine forming cells are in posterior
hypothalamus also found in gastric mucosa and in
mast cells. - Formed by decarboxylation of amino acid
histidine with the help of enzyme histaminase. - Three known types of histamine receptors in found
e.g. H1, H2, H3. - H3 receptors are presynaptic. Its function in
brain is not very certain. Its main function is
that it is excitatory.
19Glycine
- It is simplest of all aminoacids, consisting of
amino group and a carboxyl group attached to a
carbon atom
20Glycine..
- Its an inhibitory neurotransmitter.
- It binds to a receptor which makes the post
synaptic membrane more permeable to Cl- Ion and
cause hyperpolarization (inhibition). - The glycine receptor is primarily found in the
ventral part of the spinal cord. - Strychnine is glycine antagonist.
21Glutamic acid
- It is the most commonly found neurotransmitter in
the brain. - It is always excitatory.
- Glutamate is formed during Krebs cycle for a
ketoglutarate. - Glutamate is carried into astrocytes where it is
converted to glutamine and passed on to
glutaminergic neurones. - Glutamate is neurotoxic while glutamine is not.
- There are two types of receptors e.g.
metabotropic and iontropic receptors.
22NMDA N methyl-D-aspartate receptors, when
glutamate glycine bind to receptor ion channels
open, Mg block channels
23Gamma Aminobutyric acid(GABA)
- It is one of the inhibitory neurotransmitter of
CNS and is also found in retina. - It is formed by decarboxylation of glutamate.
- The enzyme that catalyzes this reaction is
glutamate decarboxylase(GAD) - There are three types of GABA receptors e.g.
GABAA B C. - GABA A B receptors are widely distributed in
CNS. - GABAC are found in retina only.
- GABA B are metabotropic (G-protein) in function.
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29RECEPTORS DYSFUNCTION
- Presynaptic effect
- i) Botulinum toxin Its an exotoxin that binds to
the presynaptic membrane and prevents the release
of Ach resulting in weakness and reduction of
tone. It is used to control dystonia in which
body shows overactive muscular activity.
30- ii) Lumbert Eaton syndrome
- Antibodies directed against Ca channels located
in presynaptic terminals and interfere with
transmitter release causing weakness. - iii)Neuromyotonia
- Patient complains of muscle spasm and stiffness
resulting in continuous motor activity in the
muscle. It is cased by antibody directed against
the presynaptic voltage gated K channel so that
the nerve terminal is always in a state of
depolarization
31- 2. Effects at Postsynaptic level
- Curare binds to the acetylcholine receptor (AchR)
and prevents Ach from acting on it and so that it
induces paralysis. - Myasthenia gravis is caused by an antibody
against the Ach receptors and Ach receptors are
reduced hence the Ach released has few Ach
receptor available to work and patients complain
of weakness that increases with exercise.
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33Synaptic strength
- Can be facilitated like long term potentiation.
- Can be depressed ( inhibited) by long-term
depression.
34Classification of Neurotransmitters
- Amines
- Acetyl choline (Ach)
- Monoamines
- Catecholamines
- Epinephrine
- Nor epinephrine
- Dopamine (Substantia nigra, sympathetic ganglia)
35- Serotonin ( hypothalamus, cerebellum, spinal
cord, retina) - Histamine ( Hypothalamus)
- Amino acids
- Excitatory eg. Glutamate ( cortex, brainstem)
- - Aspartate (visual cortex)
- Inhibitory eg. Gamma amino butaric acid GABA
cerebrum, cerebellum presynaptic inhibitory
neurone in retina - - Glycine spinal cord.
36- Purine derivatives
- eg. Adinosine ATP.
- Polypeptides ( a very long list of names)
- eg. Enkephaline, hormones ( VIP etc)
- ( refer to the list in Ganong 21st edition pg.97)
- Nonsynaptic transmitters
- eg. Gases, nitric oxide cabon mono oxide.
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