Modulation of Neurotransmission Flashcards

1
Q

Are synapses excitatory or inhibitory?

A

Can be either, depending on the NT type and the nature of the post-synaptic receptors.

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2
Q

What are the steps of synaptic transmission?

A
  1. NT synthesis in synaptic terminal or neuronal cell body (peptides)
  2. NT released due to AP and Ca entry
  3. NT interacts with receptor across cleft
  4. Enzymatic degredation in cleft or in presynaptic terminal post-reultake
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3
Q

What enzymes are commonly used for enzymatic degradation?

A

MAO: monoamine oxidase
AChE: acetylcholinesterase

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4
Q

How is a SA node AP different to a ventricular AP?

A

No fast Na channels
No plateau phase as we don’t need contraction
NaIf current present so slow depolatisation

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5
Q

How do vagal and sympathetic transmitters interact presynaptically?

A

ACh inhibits the cardiac sympathetic terminal and NPY inhibits the cardiac vagal terminal.

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6
Q

What NTs have been involved in depression development?

A

Serotonin
Dopamine
NA

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7
Q

Pontine NA system: origin

A

Locus coeruleus in pons

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8
Q

Serotonin system: origin

A

Brainstem raphe nuclei

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9
Q

Midbrain dopamine system: origin

A

Substantia nigra and VTA

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10
Q

What is the monoamine theory of depression?

A

If antidepressant drugs help sx by increasing NT levels then surely the symptoms were caused by low NT levels in the first place?

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11
Q

What are the inconsistencies with this theory?

A

With drugs monoamines increase fast but 2-3 weeks for effect
Some drugs eg. cocaine increase monoamine NT but don’t fix it
Clinically ineffective in many patients

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12
Q

Where is dopamine released from/to to cause pleasurable sensation?

A

From the nucleus accumbens, made in the VTA. These neurons are activated by 5HT (which then autoinhibits raphe neurons from which it’s released)

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13
Q

Auto-inhibition of 5HT neurons

A
  1. Normally 5HT1A autoreceptors limit spontaneous activity of the serotoninergic neuron
  2. In depression these are hypersensitive so inhibit activity completely
  3. SSRI treatment increases serotonin and desensitises the receptors, restoring normal activity.
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14
Q

Neuroinflammation theory of depression

A

New! Sickness behaviour correlates with depression so maybe brain release of inflammatory cytokines causes an action on the brain?

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15
Q

What are microglia?

A

Reuptake NTs esp. glutamate
Important for synaptic plasticity
Control BBB and chemical environment
Release cytokines

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16
Q

What happens to microglia in chronic stress?

A

Increase

17
Q

What do antidepressants to do microglia activity?

A

Decrease activation and decrease their release of cytokines without involving serotonin (some other antidepressants also do this).

18
Q

How long is a sleep cycle and what proportion SWS and REM is it?

A

90 mins
80% SWS
20% REM

19
Q

What stage of sleep does growth hormone peak at?

A

Stage 4 SWS

20
Q

What brain structures modulate sleep?

A

Suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus is the brain’s biological clock (has clock genes, responds to light)

  • Sends messages to forebrain (attention and emotions), pineal gland (melatonin), hypothalamus (hormonal control, orexin and temperature modulation)
  • Brainstem does sleep/arousal state
21
Q

What are orexins?

A

Neuropeptides made in the dorsal hypothalamus that control appetite and arousal