Principles of GABA-ergic Transmission Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two main inhibitory amino acid neurotransmitters?

A

GABA

Glycine

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2
Q

What are the main excitatory amino acid neurotransmitters?

A

Glutamate
Aspartate
(L-homocysteine – sulphur containing)

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3
Q

What type of amino acids are the inhibitory neurotransmitters?

A

Neutral

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4
Q

What type of amino acids are the excitatory neurotransmitters?

A

Acidic

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5
Q

Why is GABA called GABA?

A

Gamma amino butyric acid

This is because the amino group is on the gamma carbon of GABA

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6
Q

Describe the distribution of GABA neurones.

A
Cerebral cortex 
Cerebellum 
Hippocampus  
Corpus striatum  
Hypothalamus  
Dorsal horn of spinal cord  
Relatively little in the PNS
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7
Q

Describe the morphology of GABA neurones.

A

They are generally short inhibitory interneurons

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8
Q

Where do you find longer GABA tracts?

A

Striato-nigral

Cerebellar

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9
Q

What is the main action of GABA neurones?

A

Widespread inhibitory action in the CNS

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10
Q

What are the main functions of GABA neurones in terms of CNS activity?

A

Emotional control
Motor control
Extrapyramidal activity
Endocrine function

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11
Q

What is the precursor for GABA and what enzyme converts it to GABA?

A

Glutamic acid

Glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD)

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12
Q

Where is this enzyme found?

A

This enzyme is exclusive to GABA nerve terminals – it is a marker for GABA neurones

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13
Q

What product of the Krebs’ cycle gives rise to glutamate?

A

Alpha-oxoglutarate

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14
Q

How is GABA broken down?

A

Initially by GABA-T (GABA transaminase) to succinic semialdehyde
Succinic semialdehyde is broken down by succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase (SSDH) to succinate
Succinate then enters the Krebs’ cycle

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15
Q

Describe the release of GABA from GABAergic nerve terminals.

A

Calcium-mediated exocytosis

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16
Q

What are the two main GABA receptors and why type of receptorsare they?

A
GABA-A = type 1 – ionotropic  
GABA-B = type 2 – metabotropic
17
Q

How is GABA inactivated?

A

By reuptake

18
Q

What are the uptake mechanisms dependent on?

A

Sodium dependent

Energy dependent

19
Q

Where are the transport proteins for GABA found?

A

Presynaptic neurones

Glial cells

20
Q

What type of enzymes are the enzymes that break down GABA?

A

Mitochondrial enzymes

21
Q

What type of enzyme is GAD?

A

Cytoplasmic enzyme

22
Q

Name two drugs that are used as anti-convulsants that decrease the metabolism of GABA.

A
Sodium valproate (acts on GABA-T and SSDH (but more so on SSDH)) 
Vigabatrin (selective GABA-T inhibitor)
23
Q

Where are GABA-A receptors found?

A

Postsynaptic

24
Q

Describe the structure of GABA-A receptors.

A
They are ionotropic receptors (type 1) 
They have a pentameric structure consisting of the following subunits:
 2 x alpha 
 2 x beta 
 1 x gamma
25
What is the mechanism of action of GABA-A receptors?
GABA binding causes opening of the chloride channel leading to chloride influx This causes hyperpolarisation of the postsynaptic neurone (inhibitory post-synaptic potential) This causes inhibition of firing
26
Name two agonists of GABA-A.
GABA | Muscimol
27
Name two antagonist of GABA-A
Bicuculline (competitive antagonist) | Picrotoxin (non-competitive antagonist)
28
What effect do the antagonists have?
They are convulsants | They are used experimentally but not therapeutically
29
Where are GABA-B receptors located?
Presynaptic
30
What is the effect of GABA-B?
It is the negative feedback receptor for GABA release (similar to the effect of alpha-2 receptors on noradrenaline release)
31
What are the two different terms used to describe GABA-B receptors that regulate GABA release and other neurotransmitter release (e.g. dopamine)?
Autoreceptors – when they regulate GABA release | Heteroreceptors – when they regulate the release of other neurotransmitters
32
Describe the mechanism of action of GABA-B receptors.
G protein linked receptor Causes a decrease in calcium conductance Reduction in neurotransmitter release Stimulation of GABA-B also causes a reduction in cAMP
33
Name two agonists of GABA-B receptors.
Baclofen | GABA
34
Name an antagonist of GABA-B receptors.
Saclofen (competitive antagonist)
35
What can GABA-B receptor agonists be used for?
Muscle relaxant and spasmolytic Mechanism – reduced GABA release in the spinal cord and reduced activation of alpha motor neurone output causes relaxation of skeletal muscles This reduces spasticity
36
Describe how G-protein coupling works.
GABA binds to the GABA receptor and changes its conformation so that it can bind the alpha subunit of the G protein The alpha subunit normally has GDP bound to it, when it binds to the receptor it exchanges GDP for GTP The alpha-GTP subunit is active at the target The alpha subunit breaks down GTP to GDP, which then inactivates it