Title: The Doogie mouse
1The Doogie mouse
2Dales principle
- Dales principlea neuron releases the same
neurotransmitter at all its synaptic terminals. - Neurons appear to be metabolically setup for
particular NTs - Postsynaptic responses to the same NT can vary
widely
3How to identify a NT
- NT must be present in the presynaptic terminal
with its precursors and synthetic enzymes. - NT must be released upon presynaptic stimulation.
- Application of NT should produce same effects as
stimulation. - A mechanism for removal must exist. (peptides?)
- Effects of drugs on neurotransmission must be
consistent with effects of NT when applied within
an experimental protocol.
4NT criteria
- NT criteria does not account for gases that may
function as NT. - The criteria are difficult to establish
experimentally at particular synapses. - The list of possible and probable NT is greater
than those that have been demonstrated to be NT.
5Modes of Action
- Most synapses in CNS use AA NTs.
- Glutamate produces EPSPs.
- GABA produces IPSPs
- Biogenic amines are in few neurons that project
widely with broadly distributed endings. - Peptides are in substantial minorities of neurons
and are often cotransmitters with AA NTs and
biogenic amines.
6Multiple receptors
- NTs often have more than one type of receptor.
- Fast vs slow effects
- IPSPs and EPSPs
- Two ACh receptors
- Nicotinic receptor is ionotropic and produces a
fast signal, found at NMJ - Muscarinic receptor is metabotropic and is found
on cardiac muscle.
7Neurotransmitters2 kinds
- Small molecule NTs
- AAs are the most abundant NT
- Neuroactive peptides
8Termination of NT actions
- Release, diffusion and binding of NT happens in a
few milliseconds. - Temporal and spatial effects are regulated by
enzymatic destruction or by uptake. - Breakdown of ACh occurs within 5ms of release.
- NT is taken up by presynaptic cells, glial cells
and other neurons. - Recycling NT includes uptake into vesicles, which
is an active process that occurs against a
gradient.
9Peptide and small molecule synthesis
- Small molecule NTs are synthesized in axon
terminals. - Peptides are synthesized in the cell body.
- Made up of 3-55 AAs.
- Synthesized as propeptides and transported to
terminal where they are cleaved into smaller
pieces and/or active forms. - Peptides are degraded by peptidases and are not
taken up.
10Conservation of NT systems
- The same NTs are found in a wide range of
organisms. - The NTs are often functioning in different roles.
- ACh is major excitatory NT at NMJ in vertebrates
but glutamate plays same role in arthropods. - ACh plays a sensory role in arthropods but
glutamate plays a similar role in vertebrates
11(No Transcript)
12Figure 12.16 The molecular structure and
function of a ligand-gated channel (Part 1)
13Figure 12.16 The molecular structure and
function of a ligand-gated channel (Part 2)
14Ionotropic receptors
- Produce direct effects by opening ligand gated
ion channels. - ACh nicotinic receptors
- Produce an all-or-none response.
- Opening the channel depends on concentration of
ACh. - The net ionic current contributes to synaptic
potential. - The currents through all channels can summate.
This is the synaptic current.
15Figure 12.17 Patch-clamp recordings of
acetylcholine receptorchannel currents
16Evolution and ligand gated channels
- Ligand gated channels evolved from a common
ancestor called the ligand-gated channel
superfamily. - Receptors for glutamate are superficially similar
but have multiple subunits of greater weight and
probably evolved separately.
17Metabotropic receptors
- Metabotropic receptors
- Alter permeability to ions to indirectly change
Vm - Induce metabolic changes that dont gate ion
channels.
18Figure 12.18 Metabotropic receptors cyclic AMP
as a second messenger
19Figure 12.19 G proteincoupled neurotransmitter
receptors activate G proteins (Part 1)
20Figure 12.19 G proteincoupled neurotransmitter
receptors activate G proteins (Part 2)
21Figure 12.20 G proteins can activate ion
channels, without a second messenger
22Neurotransmitter effects
- G proteins can directly act on channels
- Channels can be gated by a number of mechanisms
- Voltage
- Ligand binding
- G proteins
23cGMP and calmodulin
- G proteins can activate guanylyl cyclase to
produce cGMP - cGMP activates cGMP-dependent protein kinase
which phosphorylates proteins. - Ca2 ions bind to cytoplasmic protein calmodulin.
- Activation of calmodulin can activate
calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase.
24Figure 12.21 Diacylglycerol and inositol
trisphosphate are other second messengers
25Metabotropic actions
- G-protein coupled receptors represent most of the
metabotropic receptors. - All have 7 membrane spanning regions and are
evolutionarily related. - G-proteins have 3 subunits, a is the activated
unit, b and g have regulatory roles. - G-proteins activate an intracellular effector.
- Second messengers include cAMP, DAG, IP3 and Ca2
ions. - Second messengers activate protein kinases, which
phosphorylate ion channels and other proteins,
changing their activity. - Metabotropic receptors also produce slow synaptic
potentials and can decrease permeability of
membrane to ions.