what are the 3 CNS systems that control behaviour?
Autonomic nervous system
Hypothalamic-pituitary neurohormones
Diffuse monoamine system
what is the diffuse monoamine system?
Four systems, which have common principles:
name the 4 systems that make up the diffuse monoamine system:
name the 4 neurotransmitters that make up the diffuse monoamine system:
NA, released from noradrenergic neurons
Serotonin, released from serotonergic neurons
Dopamine, released from dopaminergic neurons
Ach, released from cholinergic neurons
where do the neurotransmitters project from and where do they project to?
the 4 neurotransmitters project from the central core (where the cell bodies are) to different brain regions
eg. noradrenergic neurons project from the central core, the Locus Coeruleus - this projects to the cortex, hypothalamus, spinal cord, where noradrenaline is released
what is neurotransmission in the brain like?
where do neurotransmitters act?
when the neurotransmitters are released, they act on receptors
eg. dopamine will act on D1 and D2 receptors
All of these receptors are g-protein coupled receptors – some inhibit AC, some stimulate AC (Gi/Gs coupled), some are Gq coupled, stimulating Phospholipase C
They are NOT ion channels. Given they are not ion channel receptors, transmission is slow.
-dopamine, serotonin, NA
Noradrenergic monoamine system
noradrenergic monoamine system
NA post synaptic and pre synaptic receptors
NA in vesicles and released into synapse, binds to:
Post-synaptic receptors
-carry on the message
Pre-synaptic receptors
autoreceptors of the monoamine diffuse system
5-HT1A
D2/D3
alpha-2
names of reuptake transporters of the monoamine diffuse system
EAAT - glutamate
DAT - dopamine
SERT - serotonin
NET - noradrenaline
structure of reuptake transporters of the monoamine diffuse system
12 TMDs (TMD pore in neurone membrane)
Both ends intracellular
Pump monamines in neuron
DA, NA, 5HT transporters
actions of Reserpine and
Cocaine on noradrenaline release
Reserpine - depletes NA stores by inhibiting vesicular uptake
Cocaine - blocks NA re-uptake
different actions of adrenoceptors
Alpha 1 = Gq coupled, Phospholipase C, SM contraction
Alpha 2 = Gi coupled. These are autoreceptors. Decreased AC
Beta = Gi coupled AC, cAMP, contraction of cardiac muscle, SM relaxation
name an alpha 2 agonist
clonidine
actions of NA?
too much NA
too little NA
: hyper arousal, high BP (cardiovascular problems), gambling problems
too low: depression-like behaviour (opposite of excitement)
actions of amphetamine on noradrenaline release and effects in the body?
amphetamine enters vesicles displacing NA into cytoplasm, increase NA leakage out of neurone
- increases alertness and exploratory behaviour
when is there an NA surge?
big impulsive-like excitement before you start gambling
Dopaminergic monoamine system
Dopamine is released from dopaminergic neurones
4 main pathways
1. Nigrostriatal pathway
-neurons project from the Nigro to the Striatum, where dopamine gets released and acts on dopamine receptors to induce movement (Parkinson’s)
what do people develop Parkinson-like symptoms?
Nigrostriatal neurons degenerate - 80-90% of them start dying, so dopamine levels in the striatum decrease, and as a result you can suppressed/slow movement, and eventually you stop moving
drugs of abuse hijack which monoamine system?
dopaminergic mesolimbic pathway
dopamine and vomiting
Dopaminergic system and D2 receptors are important in vomiting – hyper activation of receptors in regions of the brain involved in vomiting eg. chemoreceptor trigger zone induces emesis.
-This is why dopaminergic drugs such as eldopa (great for treating some of the symptoms of Parkinson’s Disease) induces emesis as a side effect as it activates those dopamine receptors in the chemoreceptor trigger zone.
Where does dopamine come from?
precursor molecule for dopamine is tyrosine
Tyrosine gets metabolised by tyrosine hydroxylase to form DOPA
DOPA gets metabolised by DOPA decarboxylase to form dopamine
tyrosine —— (tyrosine hydroxylase) ——-> DOPA —— (DOPA decarboxylase)—–> DOPA