Neurotransmitters
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Currently, treatment for the disease is aimed at DOPA decarboxylase inhibition. Since dopamine cannot cross the blood-brain barrier, it cannot be used to directly treat Parkinson's disease. Thus, exogenously administered L-DOPA is the primary treatment for patients suffering from this neurodegenerative disease. Unfortunately, DOPA decarboxylase rapidly converts L-DOPA to dopamine in the blood stream, with only a small percentage reaching the brain. By inhibiting the enzyme, greater amounts of exogenously administered L-DOPA can reach the brain, where it can then be converted to dopamine. <ref name="burkhard">PMID:11685243 </ref>. Unfortunately, with continued L-Dopa treatment, up to 80% of patients experience 'wearing-off' symptoms, dyskinesias and other motor complications (referred to as the "on-off phenomenon". <ref name="lees">PMID:1904055 </ref>. Clearly, a better understanding of the catalytic mechanism and enzymatic activity of DDC in both healthy and PD individuals is critical to drug design and treatment of the disease. | Currently, treatment for the disease is aimed at DOPA decarboxylase inhibition. Since dopamine cannot cross the blood-brain barrier, it cannot be used to directly treat Parkinson's disease. Thus, exogenously administered L-DOPA is the primary treatment for patients suffering from this neurodegenerative disease. Unfortunately, DOPA decarboxylase rapidly converts L-DOPA to dopamine in the blood stream, with only a small percentage reaching the brain. By inhibiting the enzyme, greater amounts of exogenously administered L-DOPA can reach the brain, where it can then be converted to dopamine. <ref name="burkhard">PMID:11685243 </ref>. Unfortunately, with continued L-Dopa treatment, up to 80% of patients experience 'wearing-off' symptoms, dyskinesias and other motor complications (referred to as the "on-off phenomenon". <ref name="lees">PMID:1904055 </ref>. Clearly, a better understanding of the catalytic mechanism and enzymatic activity of DDC in both healthy and PD individuals is critical to drug design and treatment of the disease. | ||
+ | |||
+ | =GABA= | ||
+ | ==GABA receptors== | ||
+ | '''GABA''' (i.e. gamma-aminobutyric acid) is the primary inhibitory neurotransmitter of the vertebrate central nervous system. GABA can bind one of two different receptor proteins, each using a discrete mechanism to elicit a cellular response. Upon binding with GABA, '''GABAB receptors''' utilize a second messenger amplification pathway that ultimately results in an inhibitory signal for neuronal transmission. This pathway for signal transmission differs from '''GABAA receptors''', which are considered ligand-gated ion channels as the binding of GABA results in the opening of ion channels leading to the inhibition of a neuronal signal. | ||
=Glutamate= | =Glutamate= |
Revision as of 09:32, 17 December 2019
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References
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Categories: Topic Page | Acetylcholine | Receptor | Nicotinic | Acetylcholine Receptor | Acetylcholinesterase | Alzheimer's disease | Inhibitor | Adrenaline | Epinephrine | Norepinephrine | Adrenergic | Adrenergic Receptors | Monoamine oxidase | Dopamine | Parkinson's disease | Serotonin | G protein-coupled receptor | G-protein coupled receptor | G-protein-coupled receptor | Gpcr | Membrane protein | Histamine