NEUR 310 Lecture Notes - Lecture 16: Reuptake, Striatum, Transferase

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Golgi apparatus, where they are packaged into regulated dense secretory vesicles. Slow neurotransmission: classical transmitters are released at the active zone and can mediate both fast and slow neurotransmission, while neuropeptides are released from outside the active zone and only mediate slow neurotransmission. Fast neurotransmission --> ligand-gated ion channels; start electrical signal: the neurotransmitters act quickly at the post-synaptic terminal - in milliseconds. Slow neurotransmission --> g-protein linked receptors; start chemical signal by altering second messengers: alters states and long-lasting effects - e. g. regulates the awake/sleep states. Important: need to know all the classical neurotransmitters (but not all of the neuropeptides) Choline acetyltransferase (chat: enzyme used to make acetylcholine. Glycine plasma membrane transporter - enzyme that concentrates extracellular glycine at presynaptic terminals: atp is also a transmitter, fast and slow, in vesicles; a co-transmitter, has both ligand gated ion channels and g-protein-coupled receptors. Major fast neurotransmitter between neuron and muscle; in brain released from mid-brain nuclei.

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