1 / 37

Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain, 3e

Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain, 3e. Chapter 6: Neurotransmitter Systems. Introduction. Three classes of neurotransmitters Amino acids, amines, and peptides Many different neurotransmitters Defining particular transmitter systems

perezjames
Download Presentation

Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain, 3e

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain, 3e Chapter 6: Neurotransmitter Systems

  2. Introduction • Three classes of neurotransmitters • Amino acids, amines, and peptides • Many different neurotransmitters • Defining particular transmitter systems • By the molecule, synthetic machinery, packaging, reuptake and degradation, etc. • Acetylcholine (Ach) • First identified neurotransmitter • Nomenclature (-ergic) • Cholinergic and noradrenergic

  3. Studying Neurotransmitter Systems • Neurotransmitter - three criteria • Synthesis and storage in presynaptic neuron • Released by presynaptic axon terminal • Produces response in postsynaptic cell • Mimics response produced by release of neurotransmitter from the presynaptic neuron

  4. Studying Neurotransmitter Systems • Studying Transmitter Localization • Transmitters and Transmitter-Synthesizing Enzymes • Immunocytochemistry – localize molecules to cells

  5. Studying Neurotransmitter Systems • Studying Transmitter Localization (Cont’d) • In situ hybridization • Localize synthesis of protein or peptide to a cell (detect mRNA)

  6. Studying Neurotransmitter Systems • Studying Transmitter Release • Transmitter candidate: Synthesized and localized in terminal and released upon stimulation • CNS contains a diverse mixture of synapses that use different neurotransmitters • Brain slice as a model • Kept alive in vitro  Stimulate synapses, collect and measure released chemicals

  7. Studying Neurotransmitter Systems • Studying Synaptic Mimicry • Qualifying condition: Molecules evoking same response as neurotransmitters • Microionophoresis: Assess the postsynaptic actions • Microelectrode: Measures effects on membrane potential

  8. Studying Neurotransmitter Systems • Studying Receptor Subtypes • Neuropharmacology • Agonists and antagonists • e.g., ACh receptors • Nicotinic, Muscarinic • Glutamate receptors • AMPA, NMDA, and kainite

  9. Studying Neurotransmitter Systems • Studying Receptors (Cont’d) • Ligand-binding methods • Identify natural receptors using radioactive ligands • Can be: Agonist, antagonist, or chemical neurotransmitter

  10. Studying Neurotransmitter Systems • Studying Receptors (Cont’d) • Molecular analysis- receptor protein classes • Transmitter-gated ion channels • GABA receptors • 5 subunits, each made with 6 different subunit polypeptides • G-protein-coupled receptors

  11. Neurotransmitter Chemistry • Evolution of neurotransmitters • Neurotransmitter molecules • Amino acids, amines, and peptides • Dale’s Principle • Oneneuron, one neurotransmitter • Co-transmitters • Two or more transmitters released from one nerve terminal • An amino acid or amine plus a peptide

  12. Neurotransmitter Chemistry • Cholinergic (ACh) Neurons

  13. Neurotransmitter Chemistry • Cholinergic (ACh) Neurons

  14. Neurotransmitter Chemistry • Catecholaminergic Neurons • Involved in movement, mood, attention, and visceral function • Tyrosine: Precursor for three amine neurotransmitters that contain catechol group • Dopamine (DA) • Norepinephrine (NE) • Epinephrine (E, adrenaline)

  15. Neurotransmitter Chemistry • Serotonergic (5-HT) Neurons • Amine neurotransmitter • Derived from tryptophan • Regulates mood, emotional behavior, sleep • Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) - Antidepressants • Synthesis of serotonin

  16. Neurotransmitter Chemistry • Amino Acidergic Neurons • Amino acidergic neurons have amino acid transporters for loading synaptic vesicles. • Glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) • Key enzyme in GABA synthesis • Good marker for GABAergic neurons • GABAergic neurons are major of synaptic inhibition in the CNS

  17. Neurotransmitter Chemistry • Other Neurotransmitter Candidates and Intercellular Messengers • ATP: Excites neurons; Binds to purinergic receptors • Endocannabinoids • Retrograde messengers

  18. Transmitter-Gated Channels ‘Ionotropic receptors’ • Introduction • Fast synaptic transmission • Sensitive detectors of chemicals and voltage • Regulate flow of large currents • Differentiate between similar ions

  19. Transmitter-Gated Channels • The Basic Structure of Transmitter-Gated Channels • Pentamer: Five protein subunits

  20. Transmitter-Gated Channels • Amino Acid-Gated Channels • Glutamate-Gated Channels • AMPA, NMDA, kainite

  21. Transmitter-Gated Channels • Amino Acid-Gated Channels • Voltage dependent NMDA channels

  22. Transmitter-Gated Channels • Amino Acid-Gated Channels • GABA-Gated and Glycine-Gated Channels • GABA mediates inhibitory transmission • Glycine mediates non-GABA inhibitory transmission • Bind ethanol, benzodiazepines, barbiturates

  23. G-Protein-Coupled Receptors and Effectors • Three steps • Binding of the neurotransmitter to the receptor protein • Activation of G-proteins • Activation of effector systems • The Basic Structure of G-Protein-Coupled Receptors (GPCRs) • Single polypeptide with seven membrane-spanning alpha-helices

  24. G-Protein-Coupled Receptors and Effectors • The Ubiquitous G-Proteins • GTP-binding (G-) protein • Signal from receptor to effector proteins

  25. G-Protein-Coupled Receptors and Effectors • The Ubiquitous G-Proteins (Cont’d) • Five steps in G-protein operation • Inactive: Three subunits - , , and  - “float” in membrane ( bound to GDP) • Active: Bumps into activated receptor and exchanges GDP for GTP • G-GTP and G - Influence effector proteins • G inactivates by slowly converting GTP to GDP • G recombine with G-GDP

  26. G-Protein-Coupled Receptors and Effectors • GPCR Effector Systems • The Shortcut Pathway • From receptor to G-protein to ion channel; Fast and local

  27. G-Protein-Coupled Receptors and Effectors • GPCR Effector Systems • Second Messenger Cascades • G-protein: Couples neurotransmitter with downstream enzyme activation

  28. G-Protein-Coupled Receptors and Effectors • GPCR Effector Systems (Cont’d) • Push-pull method (e.g., different G proteins for stimulating or inhibiting adenylyl cyclase)

  29. G-Protein-Coupled Receptors and Effectors • GPCR Effector Systems (Cont’d) • Some cascades split • G-protein activates PLC generates DAG and IP3 activate different effectors

  30. G-Protein-Coupled Receptors and Effectors • GPCR Effector Systems (Cont’d) • Signal amplification

  31. G-Protein-Coupled Receptors and Effectors • GPCR Effector Systems (Cont’d) • Phosphorylation and Dephosphorylation • Phosphate groups added to or removed from a protein • Changes conformation and biological activity • The Function of Signal Cascades • Signal amplification by GPCRs

  32. Divergence and Convergencein Neurotransmitter Systems • Divergence • One transmitter activates more than one receptor subtype greater postsynaptic response • Convergence • Different transmitters converge to affect same effector system

  33. Concluding Remarks • Neurotransmitters • Transmit information between neurons • Essential link between neurons and effector cells • Signaling pathways • Signaling network within a neuron somewhat resembles brain’s neural network • Inputs vary temporally and spatially to increase and/or decrease drive • Delicately balanced • Signals regulate signals- drugs can shift the balance of signaling power

  34. End of Presentation

More Related