HMB200H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor, Basal Ganglia, Locus Coeruleus

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14 Mar 2016
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In order to determine whether a neuron is inhibitory look for the presence of gad which will convert glutamate to gaba: acetylcholine is a neurotransmitter that is both excitatory and inhibitory depending on the receptor. In the heart acetylcholine (ach) is inhibitory. In the muscles ach is excitatory: the receptors are what decides if the reaction is inhibitory or excitatory, and how fast the reaction is. It was also discovered that these hormones and transmitters are synthesized in a biochemical pathway starting from tyrosine and going in a continuous path to the next derivative until epinephrine. Path from tryptophan to melatonin: tryptophan 5-hydroxytryptophan serotonin n-acetylserotonin melatonin, again, specific enzymes convert each product to the next product. Norepinephrine and serotonin: norepinephrine is the transmitter for the sympathetic system it excites the heart. Atp and purines (adenosine: can influence many cells as transmitters released in atp, adenosine released along with its transmitters can have transmitter based release effects.

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