Term
Which is more common, electrical or chemical transmission? |
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Definition
Chemical. Also, electrical is not limited to nervous system. |
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Term
Chemical Neurotransmission |
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Definition
Neurons are seperated by a cleft. |
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Term
Distances between cell membranes of electrical/chemical synapses |
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Definition
Electrical - 3.5 nm (usually 20) Chemical 20-40nm No direct connection. Vessicles, active zone. Postsynaptic receptor. |
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Term
Are chemical and electrical channels uni or bidirectional? |
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Definition
Electrical - usually bidirectional chemical - unidirectional |
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Term
Four criteria of a neurotransmitter |
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Definition
Must by synthesized by the presynaptic neuron. Must be present in presynaptic terminal and released in amounts sufficient to exert an action on the postsynaptic terminal When applied exogenously, it mimics the action of the endogenously released transmitter, activating the same ion channels or 2nd messengers A specific mechanism exists for removing it from its site of action (usually the synaptic cleft). |
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Term
Where does neurotransmitter synthesis occur? |
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Definition
In the cell body or at the axon terminal. Stored in synaptic vessicles. Can be more than one type per axon. |
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Term
What causes release of neurotransmitter from the synaptic cleft? |
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Definition
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Term
What three ways can a neurotransmitter be inactivated? |
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Definition
Degraded by extracellular enzymes, diffuse into the extracellular space, orbe taken back up into the presynaptic terminal and repackaged. |
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Term
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Definition
Along with Ca2+, controls the docking and function of synaptic vesicles. It is a low-molecular-weight GTP binding protein. |
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Term
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Definition
Rab3A targets vesicles to their release sites. Complexed to GTP it binds synaptic vesicles. When Rab3A hydrolyzes its bound GTP to GDP, it prevents vesicles from leaving the active zone.
DURING FUSION AND EXOCYTOSIS: Rab3A-GDP dissociates from the vesicle. There is then an exchange of GTP for GDP. This Rab3A GTP then binds a new synaptic vesicle. |
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Term
What mediates the interactions between the synaptic vesicle and the cytoskeletal elements of the nerve terminal? |
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Definition
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Term
What trafficks target vesicles to active zones? |
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Definition
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Term
What docks vesicles at active zones and primes them for release? |
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Definition
Vesicle proteins and corresponding nerve terminal proteins. VAMPs to (SNAP-25 and syntaxin). Also, synaptotagmin to syntaxin and neurexin. |
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Term
What modulates release of a neurotransmitter? |
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Definition
Synaptophysin is a intergral membrane protein in synaptic vessels is phosphorylated by tyrosine kinases and may regulate release. |
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Term
Direct gating of ion channels is mediated by what? |
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Definition
Ionotropic receptors. Sometimes called ligand-gated. Usually five subunits, each with four transmembrane alpha helices. |
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Term
What is indirect gating mediated by? |
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Definition
Metabotropic receptors. Distinct from ion channel it regulates. |
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Term
Examples of neurotransmitter receptors |
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Definition
ACh, GABA, Glycine, AMPA, NMDA |
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Term
Examples of secondary messenger receptors |
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Definition
alpha and beta adrenergic, serotonin, dopa, muscarinic ACh receptors and receptors for neuropeptides. |
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Term
What are the four second messenger pathways? |
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Definition
cAMP cascade, Inositol Polyphosphate pathway, diacylglycerol, arachidonic acid. |
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Term
Arachadonic acid is metabolized to? |
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Definition
Mainly eicosanoids. Prostaglandins and thromboxanes by cyclooxygenase and leukotriense also. |
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