1 / 27

B ioc he mi st ry Chemical Communication: Neurotransmitters and Hormones

B ioc he mi st ry Chemical Communication: Neurotransmitters and Hormones. Chapter 24. Chem Communication. Chemical Communication : molecules that send a message in living systems Communications parts: Chemical Messengers - small molecules released to carry message

odette
Download Presentation

B ioc he mi st ry Chemical Communication: Neurotransmitters and Hormones

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BiochemistryChemical Communication:Neurotransmitters and Hormones Chapter 24

  2. Chem Communication • Chemical Communication: molecules that send a message in living systems • Communications parts: • Chemical Messengers - small molecules released to carry message • Receptors - protein molecules on surface of cell membranes • Secondary messengers – molecule that carries the molecule from the receptor and amplifies it.

  3. Signal Transmission • Neurons: specialized nerve cells • Signals travel along nerve axons usually as an electrical impulse • Signal “jumps” gaps with chemicals called neurotransmitters

  4. Parts of a Neurotransmitters • Cell body • neurons • Axon • covered by myelin sheath • Dendrites • hair like structuresprotruding from cell

  5. Hormones and NeurotransmittersWhat is the Difference??? • Neurotransmitters act over a short distance (across a synaps .000002 cm) • Hormones are created in one location and have an effect at a greater distance – head to toe From Yahoo images

  6. Neurotransmitters Five Classes of Chemical Messengers: • Cholinergic -e.g. Acetylcholine • Amino Acid • Adrenergic -e.g. Epinephrine • Steroid • Peptidergic -e.g. Enkephalins All five can be neurotransmitters The last three can be hormones

  7. Cholinergic Neurotransmitter 1st type of chemical message: • Acetylcholine neurotransmitter • Electric impulses cause release of acetylcholine • Acetylcholine travels to next nerve cell • Electric impulsecarried thru eachneuron

  8. PATHWAY: • electric impulse releases acetylcholine frompresynaptic endings • acetylcholine travels across synapse • receptors on postsynaptic endings cause chem changes in cell and an electricalimpulse is released • after the impulse, acetylcholine at the postsynaptic ends is hydrolyzed with acetylcholinesterase • the receptor is ready withinmilliseconds to fire again

  9. Cholinergic Neurotransmitter 2nd type of chemical message: Acetylcholine is hydrolyzed with acetylcholinesterase Which closes the channel

  10. Neurotransmitters • Acetylcholine • hydrolyzed by acetylcholinesterase

  11. Acetylcholinesterase • The inhibition of Acetylcholinesterase is one way to control neurotransmission • Look at nerve gas page 615 • Nicotine – low doses prolongs the effect of acetylcholine – it’s a stimulant – in high doses it can cause convulsions • Snake venom and poison dart frogs – see handout

  12. Amino Acid - Messengers • Amino Acids are distributed thorught the neurons • They exist individually or as peptides • Some are Excitatory Neurotransmitters (glutamic acid, aspartic acid, cysteine) • Some are Inhibitory neurotransmitters (glycine, b-alanine, taurine, aminobutyric acid)

  13. Amino Acid - Messengers • Amino acid messengers have receptors. • They behave in a similar fashion to Cholinergic messengers • The removal is not accomplished by a enzime, but by a process called reuptake. • Reuptake is when a transporter molecule brings the amino acid back through the presynaptic membrane

  14. Adrenergic - Messengers • Monoamines and Amino Acids • Epinephrine • Serotonin • Dopamine • Histomine • These messengers work in a similar fashion to acetylcholine by being absorbed on a receptor, but this reception causes a big change on the inside of the cell

  15. Adrenergic - Messengers • Once the receptor on the outside of the cell absorbs the messenger then there is an Activation of cyclic AMP (cAMP)within the cell • Rx at outer surface • Amplification of signal (thousands of times on the inside!)

  16. cAMP

  17. Norepinephrine • cAMP is formed when a monoamine neurotransmitter (like epinephrine) is adsorbed on the surface

  18. Norepinephrine • cAMP separates regulatory unit (R) from catalytic unit (C) • Catalytic unit will next phosphorylate the ion-translocating protein

  19. Norepinephrine • Ion-translocating protein opens the channel for ion flow

  20. MAO s • The signal is amplified thousands of times • Because the cAMP is a secondary messenger, this process is SLOW: • from 0.1 seconds to several minutes • To inactivate the adrenergic neurotransmitters, the body oxidizes them to aldehydes • These enzymes are called MAO’s • monoamine oxidases • antidepressant drugs inhibit MAO’s

  21. Cholera • Cholera – is severe dehydration as a result of diarrhea • Occurs when over activated G proteins produce excess cAMP • This excess opens the ion channels • This leads to the outflow of ions and water from epithelial cells to the intestine. • See Handout

  22. Adrenergic Neurotransmitters • Histamine is a neurotransmitter • synthesized in the brain from histidine • Absorbed by H1 and H2 receptors in body • Receptors can be blocked by Benadryl, Zantac, Tagamet (allergy medication) • By blocking the receptor – symptoms of hayfever and asthma are reduced

  23. Peptidergic Neurotransmitters • Includes homones such as: • Insulin • Glucagons • Pancreatic hormones • Vasopressin • Oxytocin • And many others • All peptidergic hormones act through secondary messengers

  24. Peptidergic Neurotransmitters • Enkephalins (brain peptides) were the first isolated • present in certain neurons • bind to pain receptors, inhibit sensation of pain • synthetic antagonists: • morphine • heroin • Demerol • These are problematic due to side effects of addiction, respritory depression, and constipation

  25. Hormones • Secreted by specific tissues • Released into blood stream • Adsorbed onto specific receptor sites • Pituitary glad is responsible for release of many hormones • luteinizing hormone, interstitial cell-stimulating hormone, prolactin, mammotropin, vasopressin, oxytocin • Other glands include: • thyroid, pancreatic islets, adrenal, kidney, ovaries, testes

  26. Hormones • Location of major endocrine organs:

  27. Hormones • Target organs for hormones secreted by the pituitary gland:

More Related