Chapter 1- Sarah Bailey Flashcards
Name three neurotransmitters implicated in the monoamine hypothesis
Noradrenaline
Serotonin
Dopamine
Name a benzodiazepine and say where it acts
Diazepam–> acts at GABAa receptors
Where does buspirone act?
5HT-1A receptors
How is the HYpothalamic pituitary adrenal axis involved in stress?
Hypothalamus-> corticotrophin releasing hormone (CRH)
Pituitary gland -> adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
Adrenals release cortisol = stress response
Name two cortisol biosynthesis inhibitors
Ketoconazole
Metyrapone
Name a glucocorticoid receptor antagonist
Mifepristone
What is the dexamethasone suppression test
Clinically administered test, non suppression of cortisol secretion in the dexamethasone suppression test is a biomarker for depression/treatment success
What is ketoconazole
An imidazole derivative which acts as a potent inhibitor or cortisol and aldosterone synthesis by inhibiting the activity of 17a-hydroxylase and 11-hydroxylation steps
True or false: cortisol has a higher affinity for the mineralocorticoid receptor over the glucocorticoid receptor
FALSE higher affinity for GR
List 6 neuropeptide transmitters implicated in anxiety/depression
Corticotrophin- releasing factor (CRF) Neurokinins (NK, sub P) Neuropeptide Y Cholecystokinin (CCK) Galanin Bombesin
What is adult neurogenesus
The ability of the adult brain to generate new neurones by proliferation, migration, differentiation,survival and integration and it’s localised to discrete brain regions
What is BDNF
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor is a protein that is encoded by the BDNF gene, it promotes the survival of neurones by playing a role in growth/maturation and maintenance
What is the amygdala involved in
Emotion and fear
What is the prefrontal cortex involved in
Mood, memory, cognition
How do neurotrophins stimulate neurogenesis
Bind to tropomyosin receptor kinases TrKA, B and C