Neurochemistry Definitions – Flashcards

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
Dendrites
answer
- Multiple per cell forming arbors, non/spiny; clustered near soma; highly plastic - Organise, respond, synthesise inputs to neuron
question
DNA
answer
nucleus contains the DNA (DNA the same in every nucleus).. Chromatin determines cell expression ie. what gene is what
question
Process of DNA --> protein
answer
DNA transcribed to mRNA mRNA moves to cytoplasm in the ribosome --> aminio acids in the rough ER --.> protein
question
cell membrane
answer
phospholipid bilayer (impermeable to water) transmembrane spanning proteins allow for communication Hydrophilic messengers cannot cross the cell membrane.
question
The Synapse
answer
• Electrical to chemical to electrical signalling (if only electrical will just be excited - epilepsy) • Conversion of AP to Ca2+ influx -Calcium leaks in --> fusion of vesicles to membrane --> exocytosis • Colocalisation of neurotransmitters (Dale's law)
question
Selected neurotransmitters
answer
• Biogenic amines - Acetylcholine, adrenaline, dopamine, histamine, noradrenaline, serotonin • Amino acids - Excitatory: glutamate, aspartate - Inhibitory: GABA, glycine • Purines - ATP, adenosine
question
Peptides
answer
- Opioids: 20 peptides • Endorphins from pre-proopiomelanocortin • Enkephalins from pre-proenkephalin A • Dynorphins from pre-prodynorphin - Neurohypophyseal • Oxytocin, vasopressin - Pituitary releasing hormones • CRF, TRF, Somatostatin, GHRF - Others - Substance P, CCK, VIP, NPY
question
• Fast (ionotropic) - Milliseconds, ion channels, transmission of the AP
answer
mediated by glutamate and GABA magnesium blocks pore, when things bind - change shape and Mg displaced Influx of NA = depolarisation = AP = excitatory (glutamate) GABA --> Cl- --> hypopolarises
question
• Slow (metabotropic)
answer
- 10-1 to 101 seconds, intracellular messengers • Long-term (gene expression, protein synthesis) - Minutes to weeks
question
Initiation and adaptation
answer
Initiation: A drug or stimulus acts on a given target protein and causes an acute drug effect, with repeated administration perturbations in the target protein occur Adaptation Overtime and with continue administration adaptive changes in the neurons containing the target protein occurs Adaptive changes in these neurons leads to changes in their neuronal circuitry that are stable and having lasting effects Fundamentally psychotropic drugs bring about their effects by interfering with neurotransmission
question
Repeated agonist exposure................ receptors Repeated antagonist exposure..............receptors
answer
Repeated agonist exposure desensitises receptors Repeated antagonist exposure sensitises receptors
question
GABAA receptor
answer
5 subunits (pentamic ) usually comprising of 2α ,2β, 1γ BZD binds to α and γ
question
G protein coupled receptors
answer
They constitute a large family of receptors from many hormones and slow transmitters They are membrane receptors that are coupled to intracellular effector systems via a G-protein which is attached to the cytoplasmic side of the membrane and functions like a switch They are made or a single poly peptide chain threaded back and forth resulting in 7 transmembrane α helices (4 extracellular and 3 intracellular domains) The N terminal domain is intracellular whereas the C- terminal domain is extracellular (false = opposite) GPTase activity is associated with the α subunit of the G-protein. G proteins can activate / deactivate ion channels
question
second messenger source second messenger target protein
answer
1. Adenylate cyclase 2. cyclic AMP 3. Protein kinase A --> into cell nucleus and can turn on or off gene expression through chromatic. CREB ---> transcription nb. lithium increases IP3
question
Dale's law
answer
One neuron one neurotransmitter (exception rather than the rule)
question
Tyrosine Kinase
answer
eg. BDNF tyrosine kinase becomes phosphorylated - come together
question
Drugs work through..
answer
adaptation and chronic changes
question
drug actions Mirtazapine
answer
dual serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibition (venlafaxine); serotonin-2 antagonism/reuptake inhibition (nefazodone); a2 antagonism plus serotonin-2 and -3 antagonism (mirtazapine). The selective norepinephrine and dopamine reuptake inhibitor bupropion defines a novel class of antidepressant that has no direct actions on the serotonin system."
Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New