Receptors Flashcards
what is the “central dogma” of receptor activation?
lock and key
what is the lock and key mechanism?
Binding is SPECIFIC, based on the complimentary shape and charge of the ligand and the receptor
what are the two basic types of receptors?
1) Generalized or Drug receptor: anything that a drug binds to (enzyme, channel, transporter, cytoskeleton, etc.) is the receptor for that drug…
2) Specialized or biological: proteins that mediate the transfer of information from outside of a cell to inside the cell; they have no other function.
what are the 4 superfamilies of receptors?
- Ligand-gated channels
- G protein coupled receptors (GPCRs)
- Enzyme/cytokine receptors
- Ligand-activated transcription factors
what are the 3 basic steps of signal transduction?
- reception
- transduction
- response
T or F: I am really tired of studying this shit
TRUE
where are logan-gated ion channels located and what are they activated by?
located on cell surface and activated by neurotransmitters
ligand-gated ion channels are usually composed of one or multiple subunits?
multiple
what is an example of a logan-gated ion channel that we effect regularly in anesthesia?
nicotinic acetylcholine receptor—-succinylcholine
what receptor type comprises a diverse array or activators and is the largest mammalian gene family?
GPCR
what are beta-adrenergic receptors in the heart?
Single polypeptide chain spans the memberane 7 times, activates Gs to activate adenylate cyclase and make cyclic AMP
what activates enzyme/cytokine receptors?
growth factors or cytokines
homeboy is going wayyy too fast…
stopping on slide 15