Neuropharmacology of GABAA and iGLU receptors Flashcards
What was the main point of prof Bowie showing the slide of the GABAR cartoon when he was in school?
To show that there isn’t one discrete binding site, but rather that drugs can bind anywhere on the receptor
True/False? NMDARs, like AMPARs and KARs, have very few endogenous modulators
False
They have many, with different effects and sites
What happens when Exon 5 is alternatively spliced out of GluN subunits?
They become more less sensitive to pH
How does Alzheimer’s kill neurons and how does Memantine (try to) prevent this?
Extrasynaptic receptors signal for cell death (while synaptic receptors signal for cell survival)
Alzheimer’s patients tend to have excessive extrasynaptic signalling, and Memantine is supposed to prevent extrasynaptic signalling
What is common to all putative roles of NMDARs in Alzheimer’s disease?
They all end in increased NMDAR activation
Rank the three NMDAR subunit regions (NTD, LBD, TMD) in order of how likely a single aa change is to cause a functional mutation
NTD (lease likely)
LBD
TMD (most likely)
How come so many drugs that affect GABA A receptors have such different effects?
They affect different subunits (which have different localizations in the brain)
What are the two possible ligands that can bind GABAARs (generally speaking)? Where can they bind?
PAM and NAM
Extracellular region
Transmembrane helices
Pore region
In which subunit does a single point mutation knockout a mouse’s response to BDZ?
Alpha 2
What were the key findings of behavioural testing on mice?
Different alpha and beta subunit modifications can lead to different effects on a broad spectrum, and the same subunit in the brain can have a different effect on a subunit in the spinal cord