BIOM 3200 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Monoamine Oxidase, Axon Terminal, Axon Hillock

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A neurotransmitter molecule is the ligand that binds to its specific receptor protein. For ion channels that are ligand-gated, the receptor protein is also an ion channel; these are two functions of the same protein. When the neurotransmitter ligand binds to its membrane receptor, a central ion channel opens through the same receptor/channel protein. The nicotinic ach receptor can serve as an example of ligand-gated channels, two of its five-polypeptide subunits contain ach-binding sites, and the channel opens when both sites bind to ach. The opening of this channel permits the simultaneous diffusion of na+ into and k+ out of the postsynaptic cell. The inward flow of na+ predominate which produces the depolarization of an excitatory postsynapticpotential while the simultaneous outward diffusion of k 1 prevents the depolarization from overshooting 0 mv ( membrane polarity does not reverse in an. Epsp as it does in an action potential. ) Action potentials occur in axons, where the voltagegated channels are located, whereas.

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