Synaptic Transmission Flashcards
What are the monoamine NTs?
Histamine
Serotonin
Melatonin
Dopamine
Norepinephrine
Epinephrine
What are the 5 steps in neurotransmission?
- NT synthesis
- Vesicular storage
- Synaptic release
- NT receptror binding
- Termination of NT action
How can drugs target NT synthesis?
- Therapeutic drugs can inhibit enzymes involved in neurotransmitter production.
- Precursor loading can be used to generate more NTs and increase NT activity
How do neuropeptides differ from monoamine NTs?
They require mRNAs from the nuclear DNA to synthesize and are packed into dense core vesicles in the ER
What is the difference in the trigger for release of NTs and neuropeptides?
Neuropeptides need a longer duration of increased Ca2+ to be released as they travel much farther than NTs do.
Can neuropeptides cross the BBB?
No
What is the rate limiting enzyme of dopamine synthesis?
Tyrosine Hydroxylase
What does the selectivity of a NT drug depend on?
Depends on access to target cell type
What is the function of vesicular storage?
Storage of neurotransmitters in synaptic vesicles protects them from degradation by cytosolic enzymes.
How does botulinum toxin function?
Botulinum toxin degrades SNAREs of the cholinergic neuromuscular junction resulting in skeletal muscle paralysis due to loss of acetylcholine release.
What is the renin angiotensin system?
Renin is released from the kidney which converts angiotensinogen from the liver into angiotensin I and ACE from the lung converts angiotensin I into angiotensin II which has effects that will increase BP.
How does amphetamine act on the synapse?
It is an indirectly acting drug (do not interact directly with a receptor) that stimulates the release of neurotransmitters in a calcium-independent manner.
It is taken up by re-uptake transporters at the axon terminal and it can activate signaling mechanisms that actually reverse the direction of neurotransmitter transport, resulting in the release of endogenous neurotransmitter back out to the extracellular side of the membrane without any membrane voltage change and calcium influx.
What kinds of drugs allow for the most selective control?
Drugs that bind directly to receptors
What are the mechanisms that result in the termination of NT action?
- Reuptake of the NT
- Diffusion of the NT out of the synapse
- NT degradation
What is the precursor to E and NE?
Dopamine
What is the action of metyrosine?
Metyrosine binds to tyrosine hydroxylase, but cannot be transformed to DOPA, and thus decreases production of dopamine.
Metyrosine indication
Metyrosine is used in the treatment of hypertension by reducing norepinephrine production.
What is the action of L-DOPA?
L-DOPA is a precursor of dopamine and it is used to load up on precursor to increase DOPA production.
What are some negative effects of L-DOPA?
DOPA loading can have adverse effects on the cardiovascular system due to enhanced norepinephrine neurotransmission in the peripheral autonomic nerves.
L-DOPA indication
It is used to treat Parkinson’s disease in which dopaminergic neurons in the brain are damaged.