Download How do neurotransmitters generate electrochemical signals in

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Membrane potential wikipedia , lookup

Holonomic brain theory wikipedia , lookup

Types of artificial neural networks wikipedia , lookup

Artificial general intelligence wikipedia , lookup

Biochemistry of Alzheimer's disease wikipedia , lookup

Aging brain wikipedia , lookup

Brain wikipedia , lookup

Neural modeling fields wikipedia , lookup

Neural engineering wikipedia , lookup

Caridoid escape reaction wikipedia , lookup

Neural coding wikipedia , lookup

Mirror neuron wikipedia , lookup

Multielectrode array wikipedia , lookup

NMDA receptor wikipedia , lookup

Neural oscillation wikipedia , lookup

Axon guidance wikipedia , lookup

Central pattern generator wikipedia , lookup

Metastability in the brain wikipedia , lookup

Long-term depression wikipedia , lookup

Signal transduction wikipedia , lookup

Premovement neuronal activity wikipedia , lookup

Feature detection (nervous system) wikipedia , lookup

Axon wikipedia , lookup

Single-unit recording wikipedia , lookup

Electrophysiology wikipedia , lookup

Optogenetics wikipedia , lookup

Spike-and-wave wikipedia , lookup

Activity-dependent plasticity wikipedia , lookup

Nonsynaptic plasticity wikipedia , lookup

Biological neuron model wikipedia , lookup

Endocannabinoid system wikipedia , lookup

Development of the nervous system wikipedia , lookup

Circumventricular organs wikipedia , lookup

Neuromuscular junction wikipedia , lookup

Synaptogenesis wikipedia , lookup

Channelrhodopsin wikipedia , lookup

Neuroanatomy wikipedia , lookup

Pre-Bötzinger complex wikipedia , lookup

Nervous system network models wikipedia , lookup

Synaptic gating wikipedia , lookup

Stimulus (physiology) wikipedia , lookup

End-plate potential wikipedia , lookup

Clinical neurochemistry wikipedia , lookup

Chemical synapse wikipedia , lookup

Neurotransmitter wikipedia , lookup

Molecular neuroscience wikipedia , lookup

Neuropsychopharmacology wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Psychology 304: Brain and Behaviour
Lecture 14
1
Transmission of Electrochemical Neural Signals and
Neuropharmacology
1. How do neurotransmitters generate electrochemical
signals in postsynaptic neurons?
2. What mechanisms terminate synaptic transmission?
3. What neurotransmitters have been identified?
2
How do neurotransmitters generate electrochemical
signals in postsynaptic neurons?
• Neurotransmitters produce signals in postsynaptic
neurons by binding to receptors in the postsynaptic
membrane.
• A neurotransmitter that binds to a receptor is referred to
as a ligand.
• Most neurotransmitters can bind to a number of receptor
subtypes. Among these subtypes are:
3
Ionotropic receptors: When activated by a
neurotransmitter, ionotropic receptors cause ligandactivated ion (e.g., Na+, K+, Cl-) channels to open or
close, producing an immediate change in potential (EPSP
or IPSP) on the postsynaptic membrane.
4
Ionotropic Receptor Activity
5
Metabotropic receptors: When activated by a
neurotransmitter, metabotropic receptors cause a
subunit of an associated G protein to break away. The
subunit either:
1. binds to a ligand-activated ion (e.g., Na+) channel,
causing the channel to open or close, producing an
immediate change in potential (EPSP or IPSP) on
the postsynaptic membrane (Figure A).
2. triggers the synthesis of a second messenger
which: (a) binds to a ligand-activated ion channel,
causing the channel to open or close, or (b)
diffuses through the cytoplasm where it influences
the activities of the neuron (Figure B).
6
Figure A
Figure B
Metabotropic Receptor Activity
7
• If a sufficient number of EPSPs are generated on the
postsynaptic membrane by the binding of
neurotransmitters to receptors, an action potential will be
generated in the postsynaptic neuron.
8
What mechanisms terminate synaptic transmission?
• Two mechanisms terminate synaptic transmission:
1. Reuptake.
Neurotransmitters are repackaged into vesicles in
the cystoplasm.
2. Enzymatic degradation.
Example: Acetylcholinestrase.
9
Mechanisms of Neurotransmitter Deactivation
10
What neurotransmitters have been identified?
• Four classes of small-molecule neurotransmitters have
been identified:
1. Acetylcholine (Ach)
 Found at neuromuscular synapses, synapses in the
autonomic nervous system, and synapses in parts of
the central nervous system.
11
 Cholinergic neurons: associated with movement,
autonomic function, learning, and memory.
2. Monoamine neurotransmitters
 Found in neurons whose cell bodies are largely
located in the brain stem. These neurons tend to
have long and highly branched axons with many
varicosities from which neurotransmitters are diffusely
released.
12
A Branched Axon with Varicosities
13
 Subdivided into two groups:
(a) Catecholamines:
Include dopamine, epinephrine, and
norepinephrine.
Dopaminergic neurons: associated with
movement, attention, reinforcement/reward, verbal
learning, and planning.
14
Production of the Catecholamines
15
Adrenergic neurons: associated with attention and
arousal.
Noradrenergic neurons: associated with attention,
arousal, mood, feeding, and sexual behaviour.
(b) Indoleamines:
Include serotonin (5-HT or 5-hydroxytryptamine)
and melatonin.
16
Serotonergic neurons: associated with mood,
sleep, feeding, sexual behaviour, and pain.
Melatonergic neurons: associated with sleep.
3. Amino acid neurotransmitters
 Found in fast-acting neurons in the central nervous
system.
17
 Include glutamate, gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA),
glycine, and aspartate. Of these, the first two are
most important.
 Glutamatergic neurons: the principle excitatory
neurotransmitter in the brain and spinal cord;
associated with learning and memory.
 GABA-secreting neurons: the principle inhibitory
neurotransmitter in the brain and spinal cord;
associated with mood and the “seizure threshold.”
18
4. Soluble gas neurotransmitters
 Include nitric oxide (NO) and carbon monoxide (CO).
 Unconventional neurotransmitters. After production in
the cytoplasm, they immediately diffuse through the
presynaptic cell membrane. Thereafter, the diffuse
through the postsynaptic cell membrane and stimulate
the production of a second messenger.
19
 Function as retrograde transmitters: Diffuse back to
the presynaptic neuron and regulate its activity.
 Little is known about the functions of CO. NO is
associated with autonomic activity, learning, and
memory.
20
Transmission of Electrochemical Neural Signals and
Neuropharmacology
1. How do neurotransmitters generate electrochemical
signals in postsynaptic neurons?
2. What mechanisms terminate synaptic transmission?
3. What neurotransmitters have been identified?
21