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Next theme: What’s going on at the postsynaptic membrane? Ligand-gated ion channels: - ACh receptors (excitatory) - glutamate receptors (excitatory) - GABA receptors (inhibitory) - glycine receptors (inhibitory) 1
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How does ACh depolarise the neuromuscular junction? Perhaps ACh opens Na + channels? How to test: Check the reversal potential of the current - in this case it should be near E Na Two microelectrodes in muscle fibre 2
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Real synaptic current Result: they are not Na + channels - current reverses near 0 mV, far from E Na So which ion conducts the current? 3
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Which ion conducts the current? - i.e. Which ion has equilibrium potential near 0 mV? - i.e. Which ion is at equal concentration outside and inside? None of them! - so the ACh receptor channel must conduct more than one ion In fact both Na + and K + are conducted equally well Substantial Ca 2+ permeability too: but little Ca 2+ available So Na + and K + carry most of the current 4
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Fluxes are equal here 5
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Synaptic current and synaptic potential Current flows during the rising phase of the EPP Inward current causes the depolarisation (“upstroke”) of the EPSP Repolarisation is passive return to resting potential 6
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Location of ACh receptors at the neuromuscular junction 7
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How does ACh trigger an AP? 8
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Recording single ACh receptors 9
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Effect of a “puff” of ACh How to apply ACh briefly? We need “outside-out” patches ACh can then be added/removed very fast 10
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How to apply a “puff” of ACh ACh No ACh 11
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Effect of a “puff” of ACh Channels stay open as long as ACh is bound Unbinding of ACh is random: so channel open time is random Add single channel currents: we get the macroscopic endplate current 12
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What does the ACh receptor look like? Very distant relative of Na + channel Hydropathy plot like this: 13
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What does the ACh receptor look like? Unlike the K + channel - it has 5 subunits and not 4 14
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How does the ACh receptor select cations? Conserved negative charges in most subunits in the M2 helix 15
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How does the ACh receptor select cations? The negative charges are all on one side of the M2 helix 16
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How does the ACh receptor select cations? The M2 helices face inwards around the pore 17
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How does the ACh receptor select cations? So we would have 3 negatively charged rings around the pore 18
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How does the ACh receptor select cations? Mutating the rings alters ion conductance: so they are important in selecting ions to go through the pore 19
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Central excitatory synaptic transmission Introducing a new neurotransmitter: glutamate Glutamate receptors: two types 20
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Introducing a new neurotransmitter: glutamate Glutamate receptors: two types Non-NMDA receptors: - don’t respond to the glutamate analogue NMDA Functionally like ACh receptor...but little sequence similarity Opened by glutamate Allow Na + and K + to pass Central excitatory synaptic transmission 21
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NMDA receptors: - DO respond to the glutamate analogue NMDA Opened by glutamate Allow Na + and K + to pass Similar sequence to non- NMDA receptors BUT very different functionally: - modulated by many substances - important in synaptic plasticity (maybe memory/learning: more later) Central excitatory synaptic transmission 22
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ACh receptor AChR and GluR: functionally similar Glutamate receptor 23
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Synaptic inhibition Inhibitory neurone Excitatory neurone 24
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Synaptic inhibition Inhibitory neurone Excitatory neurone What makes an excitatory neurone excitatory? (or an inhibitory neurone inhibitory)? - the kind of transmitter released from its terminal - the kind of receptor on the postsynaptic membrane Let’s look at inhibition 25
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Transmitters involved: GABA, glycine Time to look at the transmitters Central inhibitory synaptic transmission 26
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Transmitters involved: GABA, glycine Receptor sequences closely related to ACh receptor Central inhibitory synaptic transmission...but functionally they are the opposite of the AChR! 27
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Central inhibitory synaptic transmission Glutamate receptor GABA/glycine receptors - Cell inside more positive than E cl - Inward Cl - flux - Equivalent to outward flow of positive charge - Cell inside more negative than E cl - Outward Cl - flux - Equivalent to inward flow of positive charge 28
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Central inhibitory synaptic transmission GABA/glycine receptors Conclusion: GABA and glycine receptors conduct chloride ions E Cl is usually close to resting potential E r So inhibitory postsynaptic potential (IPSP) is small: often negative but sometimes zero Even if it’s zero it is still inhibitory (we will see why later) 29
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Reading for this lecture: Purves et al chapter 5 (page 96 - 107); chapter 6 (up to page 125) Nicholls et al chapters 3 & 9 - sections on ACh, glutamate, GABA and glycine receptor channels; chapter 13 - pages 244-247 Kandel et al chapter 11, chapter 12 (pages 212-214) Next lecture: Ion channel modulation by G proteins and second messengers: slow synaptic transmission Purves et al chapter 7 (up to page 153) Nicholls et al chapter 10 (especially pages 184-188) Kandel et al chapter 13 (Note: All these readings go into a lot of depth, so read selectively based on examples in the lecture)
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