Term
All receptors have the ability to recognize _______________________________________ |
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Definition
endogenous chemical messengers (or endogenous ligands) |
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Term
true or false: receptors are most commonly proteins? |
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Definition
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Term
Ligand binding produces a ________________ transformation of the receptor that alters _____________ |
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Definition
physiochemical, subsequent cellular events |
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Term
true or false: receptors can only have one binding site? |
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Definition
false, some receptors have multiple binding sites for different ligands |
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Term
name four types of ligand-receptor binding. order them from most to least common. |
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Definition
Van der waal's interactions/hydrogen bonds (most common), ionic bonds, covalent bonds (very rare) |
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Term
An (agonist/antagonist) is a ligand that activates a series of cellular events while an (agonist/antagonist) deactivates cellular events |
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Definition
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Term
What are factors affecting drug-receptor interactions at the binding site? |
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Definition
1. local chemical environment 2. pKa of aa's and drug 3. hydrophobicity and hydrophilicity of drug and receptor 4. the steriochemistry of the drug (sometimes one isomer fits where another does not, not superimposable) |
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Term
true or false: specific drugs have more side effects than non-specific drugs |
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Definition
false. non-specific drugs have more side effects because they bind to many different types of cells/receptors. their effect, however, is going to be weaker than a more specific drug. |
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Term
what do the classifications D/L, R/S and +/- tell you about a drug? |
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Definition
how strong the interaction/binding and specificity of a drug to receptor will be |
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Term
chemical interactions determine ______________, ____________ and _______________ |
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Definition
affinity, specificity and selectivity |
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Term
what are 4 major types of receptors? |
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Definition
1. ion channels 2. G-protein coupled receptors 3. Tyrosine-kinases 4. Internal receptors |
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Term
(hydrophilic/hydrophobic) drugs are able to pass through cell membranes without a receptor. |
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Definition
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Term
hydrophilic drugs generally act on _______________ receptors, which affect ___________________ |
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Definition
internal (intracellular), transcription/translation |
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Term
what are two main effects of a drug binding to a receptor? |
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Definition
1. blocks access of endogenous (natural) ligand to binding site 2. induces a conformational change of the receptor |
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Term
what are a few possible outcomes of a conformational change of a receptor? |
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Definition
1. an active (enzymatic) site could be exposed 2. could change the active site of a natural ligand so it can no longer bind 3. could open ion-channels 4. could create an induced fit (increased ligand-receptor affinity) |
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Term
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Definition
what drugs do to the body (ie. receptor biding affinity, potency, etc.) |
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Term
what is the law of mass action |
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Definition
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Term
what is the purpose of competition curves? |
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Definition
used to help determine the specific binding of a drug (affinity) and measure the effectiveness of a compound at inhibiting binding of a known drug |
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Term
what is the purpose of drug-receptor binding curves? |
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Definition
to describe receptor binding across drug concentrations. can also use to determine specificity of a binding. |
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Term
graded dose-response relationships tell us about the _______________ and ________________ of a drug on a system |
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Definition
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Term
quantal dose-response relationships tell us about the ______________ of a drug |
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Definition
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Term
polar compounds are (hydrophilic/hydrophobic) |
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Definition
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Term
a ________________ binds to a receptor and can initiate a maximal effect but regardless of dose a _____________ can only ever initiate a partial effect |
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Definition
full agonist, partial agonist |
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Term
a (full/partial) agonist can can at as both an agonist and an antagonist |
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Definition
partial. at first acts as an agonist but because it blocks natural ligand and never produces a maximal effect it eventually becomes an antagonist. |
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Term
what does a competitive antagonist do? |
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Definition
binds at the same site as an agonist |
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Term
what does a non-competitive antagonist do? |
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Definition
binds at sites outside the primary binding site for the agonist thereby disrupting binding (generally by inducing a conformational change of the protein) |
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Term
what does an inverse agonist do? |
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Definition
binds to the receptor and inhibits the intrinsic activity of that receptor (ie turns something OFF that is usually ON) |
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Term
what do allosteric modulators do? |
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Definition
bind to a receptor at a site distinct from the active site and induce a conformational change that alters the affinity of the receptor for the endogenous ligand |
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Term
______________ allosteric modulators increase the affinity of the agonist for the modulator and ____________ allosteric modulators decrease it. |
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Definition
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Term
what is a suicide substrate? |
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Definition
a substrate that binds to a receptor irreversibly (via a covalent bond) and turns on or off the receptor until it is recycled by the cell |
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Term
what are three types of drug-drug interactions (drugs acting on different systems that in turn interact)? |
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Definition
1. physiological antagonism 2. additive effects 3. potentiation |
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Term
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Definition
what the body is doing to/with the drug (ie where does it go? how long until it takes effect, gets excreted etc.) |
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Term
name the nine routes of drug administration used on humans |
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Definition
oral, sublingual, topical, transdermal, intramuscular, subcutaneous, intravenous, intrathecal, epidural |
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Term
name the three routes of administration used exclusively on animals |
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Definition
intraperitoneal (i.p), intracraneal, intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) |
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Term
which three routes of drug administration are used for lipid soluble drugs? |
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Definition
transdermal, intramuscular, subcutaneous |
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Term
what are the three most common types of injections? |
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Definition
subcutaneous, intramuscular and intravenous |
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Term
put these three types of injections in order of speed of effect (from fastest to slowest: intramuscular, subcutaneous, intravenous |
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Definition
subcutaneous, intramuscular, intravenous |
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Term
why does oral administration take so much longer than other types of admin? |
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Definition
because a lot of the drug is metabolized by enzymes in the stomach and liver before it reaches the circulatory system (plasma) where it takes effect |
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Term
non-polar drugs such as ______________ and ______________ can easily pass through cell membranes via ______________________________ |
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Definition
steroids, hormones, passive diffusion |
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Term
______________ and ______________ diffusion require a transporter |
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Definition
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Term
(facilitated/active) diffusion is energy-dependent. (facilitated/active) diffusion is energy-independent. |
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Definition
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Term
what are organic anion and organic cation transporters? |
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Definition
large families of proteins that transport ions and are often hijacked and used by drugs |
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Term
what are three factors that affect the rate of transport of a drug? |
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Definition
concentration gradient, electrical gradient, pH |
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Term
true or false: most drugs are weak acids or weak bases |
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Definition
true. this means that they can ionize or deionize in certain situations. |
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Term
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Definition
a mechanism for the body to keep a substance from entering or leaving a certain part of the body by changing the pH of tat substance (different parts of the body have different pH's). |
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Term
what is one example of pH trapping that was used in class? |
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Definition
asprin (salicylic acid) is deionized in the stomach (where there is a low pH). it then enters the blood stream where it is re-ionized (due to a higher pH) keeping it from reentering the stomach |
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Term
true or false: drugs travelling in typical capillaries use the same mechanisms to get to the target organ as drugs traveling in brain capillaries |
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Definition
false. at the end of typical capillaries the drugs are released via intercellular clefts and fenestration. due to the blood-brain barrier drugs traveling in brain capillaries need transporters to reach their target organ |
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Term
how does sex affect the absorption of drugs? |
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Definition
there is a difference in the distribution of adipose and muscular tissue between men and women. the drug dosage is going to be different for men and women based on whether it is a fat-soluble or water-soluble drug |
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Term
____________ binding is nonspecific binding that occurs at inactive sites where drugs have no measurable biological effect |
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Definition
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Term
what are some examples of where depot binding occurs? |
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Definition
bone, fat, muscle and plasma proteins (such as albumin) |
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Term
what does depot binding do? |
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Definition
delays the onset of drug action, can lead to drug toxicity (other drugs and/or endogenous ligands cant bind to receptor, too many remain in circulation |
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Term
what is one example of depot binding given in class? |
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Definition
Phenytoin (anti-seizure medication), shares receptor with aspirin, aspirin has higher affinity, if take aspirin after taking phenytoin, aspirin will kick out phenytoin into blood stream which can lead to toxic effects. |
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Term
how do you calculate bioavailability? |
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Definition
quantity of drug reaching systemic circulation/quantity of drug administered |
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Term
true or false: oral administration is much more predictable in terms of bioavailability than intravenous |
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Definition
false. it is much less predictable because so much is metabolized along the way. |
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Term
what are the two types of biotransformation? |
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Definition
phase I metabolism and phase II metabolism |
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Term
what happens in phase I metabolism? |
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Definition
oxidation and reduction reactions occur -generally make drugs more hydrophilic by adding small functional groups |
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Term
phase I metabolism takes place in the ____________ |
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Definition
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Term
what three enzymes generally perform phase I metabolism reactions? |
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Definition
cytochrome P450, monoamine oxidase and alcohol dehydrogenase |
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Term
what happens in phase II metabolism? |
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Definition
the conjugation of a drug with small molecules, creates non-polar molecules that can be easily excreted |
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Term
true or false: hydrolysis reactions may be either phase I or phase II metabolism |
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Definition
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Term
true or false: the metabolism of drugs can lead to activation |
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Definition
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Term
what are some factors in the number of enzyme numbers available for drug metabolism? |
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Definition
sex, age and past drug history |
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Term
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Definition
the time it take for the plasma drug concentration to fall to half its peak level |
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Term
what is the difference between zero-order kinetics and first-order kinetics? |
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Definition
in zero-order kinetics a set amount of drug is eliminated at each interval, in first-order kinetics half of the drug previously present is eliminated at each time interval |
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Term
what does ADME stand for? |
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Definition
absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion (clinical application of pharmacokinetics) |
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Term
what is the value of the resting membrane potential (RMP)? |
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Definition
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Term
How do you calculate the RMP? |
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Definition
using the Nernst equation |
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Term
How is the RMP maintained? |
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Definition
the Na+/K+ pump maintains concentration gradients across the cell membrane by pumping 2 K+ molecules out of the cell and 3 Na+ molecules into the cell with the use of ATP |
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Term
what activates the Na+/K+ pump? |
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Definition
high intracellular concentrations of Na+ |
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Term
____________ are local (graded) potentials that make it more difficult for the neuron to fire |
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Definition
inhibitory postsynaptic potential (IPSP) |
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Term
______________ are local (graded) potentials that make the neuron more likely to fire |
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Definition
excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSP) |
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Term
what are some major differences between electrical and chemical synapses? |
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Definition
-electrical synapses are bidirectional, chemical synapses are typically unidirectional -elec syn's are fast, chem syn's are slow -elec syn's send messages via gap junctions (direct connection of 2 cells), chem synapses use nt's which travel in synaptic vesicles -elec syn's not very common in mammals |
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Term
describe what happens when an AP reaches the axon terminal |
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Definition
depolarization causes opening of Ca2+ channels, influx of Ca2+ causes vesicles to fuse with presynaptic membrane, nt is released into synaptic cleft via exocytosis, nt binds to receptors on postsynaptic membrane and opens channels, vesicular membranes are retrieved from plasma membrane |
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Term
true or false: neurotransmitters are released in quantal units |
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Definition
true. the smallest unit = 1 synaptic vesicle |
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Term
what are the names of the two places nt's are stored in a cell? |
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Definition
the readily releasable pool and the reserve pool |
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Term
where are the reserve pool nt's located in the cell? |
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Definition
they are anchored to the cytoskeleton (actin) by a protein call synapsin |
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Term
how are nt's released from the reserve pool? |
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Definition
the synapsin must be phosphorylated by CamKII (Ca2+/Calmodulin-dependent kinase II) which then releases the vesicle allowing it to travel to the presynaptic density |
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Term
______________ positions vesicles in the active zone using Vesicle (V-) Snares and Target (T-) Snares |
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Definition
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Term
_______________ is an example of a V-Snare |
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Definition
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Term
Syntaxin and SNAP-25 are examples of ____________ |
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Definition
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Term
what happens during the priming step of nt release preparation? |
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Definition
SNARE proteins (ie SNAP and NSF) on the vesicular and extracellular membranes bind to form SNARE complexes and pull the two membranes together (uses ATP). |
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Term
Ca2+ entering the cell binds to _______________ which catalyzes the fusion of the vesicle and cellular membranes |
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Definition
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Term
what are two examples of toxins that can interfere with nt release? and how? |
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Definition
1. Butulinum toxin: prevents exocytosis by cleaving SNAP-25 and/or synaptobrevin (T-snares) 2. Tatanus: prevents exocytosis by cleaving synaptobrevin in GABA and motor neurons |
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Term
what is one important experiment that illustrates the importance of Ca2+ in NT release? |
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Definition
1. When Ca2+ was injected artificially into presynaptic neuron of a giant squid shown that a response occurs (change in membrane potential) in the postsynaptic cell, indicating Ca2+ induced release of NT. SAme study showed that if a Ca2+ buffer is injected into the synaptic cleft no postsynaptic response is observed
Other studies have shown that the amount of NT released is proportional to the amount of Ca2+ that enters the cell (varying extracellular [Ca2+] alters postsynaptic response). |
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Term
What are three types of chemical synapses? |
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Definition
1. axoaxonic 2. axodendritic 3. axosomatic |
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Term
describe the experiment conducted by Heuser and Reese that demonstrated synaptic vesicle recycling |
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Definition
Injected horseradish peroxidase (HRP), ,which can be visualized, into synaptic cleft and stimulated neuron to induce NT release. Viewed the position of HRP over a short serious of time intervals. Found that immediately following NT release the HRP was in "coated vesicles" (special endocytotic organelles). A few minutes later it was in an endosome and finally ended up in synaptic vesicles. |
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Term
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Definition
a triskeleton molecule that binds to the plasma membrane (via adaptor proteins) and to other clathrins to create clathrin-coated pits which then beome clathrin-caoted vesicles with the aide of dynamin |
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Term
________________ is a protein that forms a ring around newly formed clathrin-coated pits and piches them off from the plasma membrane, making them free moving clathrin-coated vesicles |
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Definition
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Term
what are two functions of membrane recycling? |
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Definition
1. keeps the terminal bouton from exploding 2. keeps cell from having to make new membrane (which costs energy) |
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Term
_____________ and its cofactor ______________ remove clathrin coating from vesicle |
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Definition
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Term
what are three ways that nt's are inactivated? |
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Definition
1. reuptake into neurons (via transporters) 2. reuptake into glia cells 3. degredation by enzymes in the membrane or synaptic cleft |
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Term
what are two ways NT release is modulated? |
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Definition
1. terminal autoreceptors 2. somatodendritic receptors |
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Term
terminal autoreceptors inhibit the ___________ and ________________ of NT's |
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Definition
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Term
somatodendritic autoreceptors inhibit _________________ |
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Definition
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