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Neurotransmitters

Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

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Page 1: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Neurotransmitters

Page 2: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel)

• Excitatory neurotransmitters – cause depolarization• Inhibitory neurotransmitters

– cause hyperpolarization

Neurotransmitters

Page 3: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Attributes of “classical” neurotransmitters

Synthesized in the presynaptic cell Stored in membrane-bound vesicles

(synaptic vesicles) Released from the presynaptic vesicle in

response to membrane depolarization Induction of a physiological response in the

post synaptic cell (by depolarizing or hyperpolarizing its membrane)

inactivated (rapidly) in the synaptic cleft

Page 4: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Classification of neurotransmitters

GROUP EXAMPLES amines acetylcholine (Ach),

norepinephrine, epinephrine, dopamine, 5-HT

amino acids glutamate, GABApurines ATP, adenosinegases nitric oxidepeptides endorphins, tachykinins, many

others

Page 5: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

EXCITATORYAcetylcholine GlutamateNorepinephrine AspartateEpinephrine Histamine

INHIBITORYGABA Glycine

MIXEDDopamine Serotonin

Excitatory/inhibitory neurotransmitters

Page 6: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Release of neurotransmitters

Page 7: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Neurotransmitters bind to receptors

Ionotrophic receptors: these act as ion channel themselves to produce their effects.

Metabotrophic receptors: these activate second messenger system (cAMP, PIP3) to produce their effects.

Page 8: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

biogenic amines

Page 9: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Neurotransmitters – biogenic amines

Catecholamines• Dopamine• Norepinephrine• Epinephrine

Indoleamines• Serotonin (5-HT)• Melatonin

Page 10: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Catecholamines – functionsDopamine: control of voluntary movement (nigrostriatal tract), emotional responses and memory (limbic system)

Norepinephrine: “fight or flight response” such as stimulation of heart rate, sweating, skin vasoconstriction and bronchodilation (sympathetic nervous system), state of alertness (brain stem)

Epinephrine: response to stress, redirection of blood from skin to heart, glycogen metabolism, blood pressure (adrenal medulla under influence of Ach-containing nerves)

Page 11: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Tyrosine

L-Dihyroxyphenylalanine (DOPA)

Tyrosine hydroxylaseBH4

BH2

Dopamine

Dopa decarboxylase PLPCO2

Norepinephrine

Dopamine β hydroxylase Cu++, Vit CO2

NEU

RON

SAD

RENAL M

EDU

LLA

Epinephrine

Phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase

SAM

SAH

Vit B12 Folate

Catecholamines - Synthesis

Page 12: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Parkinson’s disease

• Degeneration of nigrostriatal dopamine neurons in the brain resulting in a deficiency of Dopamine

• Symptoms include trembling of hands, arms, legs, jaw and face; stiffness of the arms, legs and trunk; slowness of movement; poor balance and coordination

• Treatment with L-DOPA which enters the brain and is decarboxylated to dopamine.

• L-DOPA is given together with carbidopa, DOPA carboxylase inhibitor that cannot enter the brain, preventing unwanted formation of dopamine outside the brain

Page 13: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Serotonin: involved with mood, anxiety, appetite, sleep induction, memory and learning

Melatonin: involved in response to light-dark cycle organizing seasonal and circadian rhythms, regulating reproductive functions

Indoleamines – functions

Page 14: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Tryptophan

5’hyroxytryptophan

Tryptophan hydroxylaseBH4

BH2

Serotonin

Dopa decarboxylase PLPCO2

Vit B12 Folate

Synthesis – indoleamines

Acetyl CoA

Melatonin

SAM

SAH

CoASH

Page 15: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Degradation–Norepinephrine

Page 16: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Degradation–monoamines Norepinephrine

epinephrine

Vanillylmandelic acid

Dopamine

Homovanillic acid

Serotonin

Hydroxyindoleaceticacid

MAO-A,-BCOMT

MAO-BCOMT

MAO-A

Endocrine tumors (pheochromocytoma, Carcinoid syndrome) diagnosed by the measurements of these breakdown products in urine.

Page 17: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

monoamines- release and uptake

Page 18: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Monoamines and depression

• “amine theory of depression” states that depression is caused by a relative deficiency of amine neuro-transmitters at central synapses

• Prevention of catabolism of catecholamines and serotonin reduce depression by elevating the levels of these compounds. MAOA inhibitors act as antidepressants

• Inhibitors of norepinephrine and serotonin transport into neurons also act as antidepressants (e.g. prozac; serotonin reuptake inhibitor)

Page 19: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Histamine

Page 20: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Histamine – Functions

• Dilates blood vessels, increases capillary permeability, contracts bronchial and intestinal smooth muscle, stimulates gastric acid secretion and nasal fluid discharge

Page 21: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Histamine - synthesis and degradation

Page 22: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Acetylcholine

Page 23: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Acetylcholine - functions

• Major neurotransmitter at the neuromuscular junctions to induce muscle contraction

• Play an important role in attention, learning, reward pathways and memory by reinforcing the ability to detect and respond to meaningful stimuli

Neurons associated with Ach degenerate in Alzheimer's disease resulting in declining language and perception, confusion and memory loss.

Page 24: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Acetylcholine – synthesis and degeneration

Page 25: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Acetylcholine- release and inactivation

Page 26: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Disorders of acetylcholine metabolism

Myasthenia gravis: a disease characterized by muscle weakness. Autoimmune disorder due to formation of antibodies against the nicotinic Ach recptors, preventing trnsmission of nerve impulses to muscles. Treated by inhibitors of Ach esterase (pyridostigmine, neostimine) and corticosteroids

Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome: autoimmune disorder also characterized by muscle weakness. Due to auto-antibodies against the presynaptic voltage-gated calcium channels

Page 27: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors

• Organophosphate insecticides and nerve gases (sarin) inhibit acetylcholinesterase resulting in an excess of Ach, initially causing uncontrolled muscle contraction and eventually paralysis. Treatment by atropine.

Page 28: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Amino acids as neurotransmitters

Page 29: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Amino acids as neurotransmittersRecruited as neurotransmitters by packaging into

synaptic vesicles Their action is terminated by sodium dependent

high affinity uptake with need for any specific degradative enzymes

EXICTATORY INHIBITORYGlutamate GlycineAspartate GABA

Page 30: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Glutamate/GABA - synthesis

Page 31: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Inhibitors of Amino Acid NT

Benzodiazapines (valium, Xanax) bind GABA receptors reducing anxiety, inducing sleep and guarding against seizures (anticonvulsants)

Barbiturates produce a wide spectrum of effects, from mild sedation to total anesthesia by potentiating inhibitory GABA receptors and inhibiting excitatory AMPA glutamate receptors

Strychnine binds to glycine rectorss leading to convulsions, spastic contraction of skeletal muscles and death due to impairment ot muscles of respiration.

Page 32: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

NITRIC OXIDE

Page 33: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

NITRIC OXIDE

NO is not stored in vesicles but released directly into the extracellular space

Functions• Relaxation of vascular and intestinal smooth

muscle• Neural transmission• Regulation of mitochondrial energy production• Cytotoxic action on parasites and tumor cells

Page 34: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

NITRIC OXIDE - synthesis

Page 35: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Peptides

Page 36: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Peptides

Over 80 peptides shown to influence neural functionsSynthesized as precursor proteins, packaged into vesicles and cleaved to the active form by peptidases

e.g.Opioids peptides (endorphins, enkephalins)Regulate pain and pleasure pathways Substance P transmits signals in response to pain

Page 37: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

Opioid receptors are sites of action for morphine and codeine which are powerful analgesics

Opiates affect pleasure pathways in the brain resulting in the associated euphoric effects. Endorphins released after strenuous exercise give the so-called “jogger's high”

Peptides inhibitors

Page 38: Neurotransmitters. A chemical released by one neuron that affects another neuron or an effector organ (e.g., muscle, gland, blood vessel) Excitatory neurotransmitters

the end!!