Glutamate Flashcards
4 criteria for a neurotransmitter
chemical messengers
synthesised and stored in pre-synaptic neurone, taken up into vesicles via specific transporter proteins
molecule is released from presynaptic axon terminal upon stimulation (AP, Ca2+ ions for vesicle mobilisation)
produce a response in the post-synaptic cell via diffusion
How is glutamate synthesied and stored?
Glutamine > glutamate via glutaminase (substitution of amine group to carboxylic acid group)
Transported into pre-synaptic vesicle via vesicular glutamate transporter (VGLUT)
Counter-transport with H+ via ATP-H+ pump
How is glutamate re-uptaken and degraded?
re-uptake: Presynaptic neurones and glial cells have Na+ dependant amino acid transports (EAATs) - transfer glutamate back into presynaptic cell bulb or glial cell
glutamine is transported out of glial cells via SN1 then into neurone via SAT2
degradation: glutamate -> glutamine via glutamine synthetase
what are the 3 ionotropic glutamate receptors? And where are they found?
all post-synaptic, named after agonists, influx of Na+ and efflux of K+ (NMDA also allows Ca2+)
AMPA - GluA1-4 = heterotetrameric structure, forming 4 orthosteric binding sites, at least 2, GluA2 prevents Ca2+ flow = excitotoxicty help
NMDA - GluN1-3 = heterotetrameric, ligand and voltage gated, glutamate for GluN2, glycine/D-serine for GluN1 GluN3 are inhibitory, requires 4, Mg2+ ion block at resting
Kainate - GluK1-5, 1-3 can form homers or heteromers, 4&5 only heteromers with 1-3
What are the 3 groups of metabotropic receptors and their subtypes?
Group 1 - mGlu1 & 5
Group 2 - mGlu 2 &3
Group 3 - mGlu 4,6,7,8
What is the effect of Group 1 activation
Gq coupled - PIP2 -> GAG and IP3
IP3R activation on ER = ^Ca2+
Synaptic plasticity and long-term potentiation
What is the effect of Group 2 & 3 activation
Gi/o coupled = down-regulates AC
↓cAMP formation
Inhibit NT release
thus auto-receptors on presynaptic membrane
How to treate glutamte-mediated excitotoxicity in Alzheimer’s disease
Memantine - NMDA receptor antagonist, blocking
What are the mechanisms of long term potentiation?
Glutamate activates AMPA receptor
depolarisation
NMDA receptors open due to depolarisation (Mg2+ removed)
Ca2+ enters the cell, activating post-synaptic protein kinases such as calmodulin kinase 2 and PKC
leading to insertion of new AMPA receptors in post synaptic membrane
inceases glutamate sensitivity and ion channel conductance