Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of...

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Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names of the receptors that have been identified. The drugs listed in these slides are drugs that affect neuronal transmission by attaching to the post and pre-synaptic receptors. Other drugs (not listed in these slides) affect neuronal functioning by altering some other function of a neuron.

description

Types of drugs base on their effects on receptors Agonist - a drug that binds with and activates a postsynaptic receptor. Antagonist - a drug that binds with a postsynaptic receptor and does not activate it; may block the natural transmitter from binding with the receptor Different subtypes of Agonists and antagonists are described on the next slide

Transcript of Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of...

Page 1: Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names.

Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their

receptors

The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names of the receptors that have been identified. The drugs listed in these slides are drugs that affect

neuronal transmission by attaching to the post and pre-synaptic receptors. Other drugs (not listed in these slides) affect neuronal

functioning by altering some other function of a neuron.

Page 2: Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names.

Neurotransmitters (NT) & Neuromodulators (NM)

1. Acetylcholine (NT)

2. Monoamines (NT; NM)

3. Amino Acids (NT; NM)

4. Peptides (NT; NM)

5. Lipid-like substances (NT)

6. Nucleosides (NM)

7. Soluble gases

A. Catecholamines

B. Indolamines

•Dopamine

•norepinephrne

•epineprine

•Serotonin

• Glutamate• GABA

• GlycineEndorphins, enkephalins

Anandamide, leptin

adenosine

Nitric Oxide, Carbon Monoxide(atypical)

Page 3: Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names.

Types of drugs base on their effects on receptors

Agonist - a drug that binds with and activates a postsynaptic receptor.

Antagonist - a drug that binds with a postsynaptic receptor and does not activate it; may block the natural transmitter from binding with the receptor

Different subtypes of Agonists and antagonists are described on the next slide

Page 4: Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names.

(also called Receptor Blocker)

(A better but never used term is indirect antagonist)

Page 5: Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names.

Receptor subtypes

Receptors belonging to one class of neurotransmitters (e.g. Dopamine) may respond differently to various drugs. When this is the case the receptors are divided into subclasses.

E.g. There are several Dopamine receptors, each responding to dopamine but differently to different drugs. These receptors are called D1, D2, D3, D4, and D5 receptors

Page 6: Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names.

1. Acetylcholine (cholinergic or acetylcholinergic neurons)

Competitive agonist & antagonists

Agonist AntagonistNicotinic Receptor Nicotine Curare

Muscarinic Receptor Muscarine Atropine

Page 7: Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names.

A. Catecholamines (primarily neuromodulators)

1. Dopamine (Dopaminergic neurons; produces EPSPs orIPSPS)

Agonist AntagonistD1 – D5Receptors

Apomorphine(note: this drug is an

antagonist ofautoreceptors, but because

neuronal activity isfacilitated it is classified

as an Da agonist)

Chlorpromazine(D2)

2. Norepinephrine (Noradrenergic neurons)Agonist Antagonist

1, 2; 1,2Receptors

Clonidine(2)

Yohimbine (2)

3. Epinephrine (Adrenergic neurons)

2. Monoamines

Page 8: Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names.

B. Indolamines

1. Serotonin (5-HT; Serotonergic neurons)

Agonist AntagonistA1, A2 Floxetine

(Prozac)PCPA

2. Monoamines

Page 9: Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names.

A. Glutamate (glutamatergic neurons)Principle Excitatory neurotransmitter in brain& spinal cord

Agonist commentsNMDA receptor

(ionotropic)NMDA 6 binding sites; controls

Na+ & Ca++; EtOH binding site?;PCP ("angel dust") is

antagonistAMPA receptor

(ionotropic)AMPA Most common; controls

Na+Kainate receptor

(ionotropic)Kainate acid controls Na+

metabotropicreceptor

--- May be 6 or more ofthese; some areautoreceptors

3. Amino Acids

Page 10: Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names.

B. GABA (GABA-secreting neurons)- Principle Inhibitory neurotransmitter in brain & spinalcord- Drugs at Sites 2-5 acts as noncompetitiveagonists/antagonists- B-CCM may be a natural transmitter for thebenzodiazepine site.

Agonist AntagonistsGABA A Site 1: GABAIonotropicControls Cl-channel

Site 2: Benzodiazepines(Valium; Librium, alcohol?) –AnxiolyticsSite 3: BarbituratesSite 4: steroids

Site 5: picrotoxin(inverse agonist)

GABA BMetabotropic Controls K+channel

Baclofen (opens K+channels)

3. Amino Acids cont.

Page 11: Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names.

C. Glycine

Inhibitory neurotransmitter in the spinal cord & lowerbrainstem

Agonist AntagonistsGlycine receptor strychnine none

3. Amino Acids cont.

Page 12: Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names.

- Chains of two or more amino acids- produced from larger polypeptide chains (precursor

molecules)- no reuptake or recycling of peptides- serve as neurotransmitters and neuromodulators

e.g., endogenous opioid peptides (endorphins,enkephalins)

Agonist AntagonistsMu opiate receptor Morphine, heroin,

Percodannaloxone

Delta opiate receptorKappa opiate receptor

4. Peptides

Page 13: Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names.

A. anandamideAgonist Antagonists

THC receptor THC ?

B. LeptinAgonist Antagonists

Leptin receptor ? ?

5. Lipid-like substances

Page 14: Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names.

e.g., adenosine- serves as a neuromodulator- released by adenosinergic neurons & glial cells- produces inhibitory effects by opening K+ channels

Agonist Antagonists3 types ofmetabotropic receptors

? Caffeine

6. Nucleosides (sugar molecule +purine or pyrimidine)

Page 15: Neurotransmitters, Neuromodulators, and their receptors The following slides provides a summary of the major classes of neurotransmitters and the names.

- produced in several regions of neurons includingdendrites

- released as soon as produced- dilates blood vessels in active brain areas and

causes penile erection- enters cells and activates second messenger cyclic

GMP

A. nitric oxide (NO)B. carbon monoxide (CO)

7. Soluble Gases