Neurosteroids
From Proteopedia
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Neurosteroids, also known as neuroactive steroids, are endogenous or exogenous steroids that rapidly alter neuronal excitability through interaction with ligand-gated ion channels and other cell surface receptors. | Neurosteroids, also known as neuroactive steroids, are endogenous or exogenous steroids that rapidly alter neuronal excitability through interaction with ligand-gated ion channels and other cell surface receptors. | ||
- | <scene name='89/896619/Cv/4'>Pregnanolone binds beta3-alpha5 GABAA receptor</scene>. | + | '''Excitatory neurosteroids''' |
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+ | These neurosteroids have excitatory effects on neurotransmission. They act as potent negative allosteric modulators of the GABAA receptor, weak positive allosteric modulators of the NMDA receptor, and/or agonists of the σ1 receptor, and mostly have antidepressant, anxiogenic, cognitive and memory-enhancing, convulsant, neuroprotective, and neurogenic effects. Major examples include the pregnanes pregnenolone sulfate (PS), epipregnanolone, and isopregnanolone (sepranolone), the androstanes dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA; prasterone), and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S; prasterone sulfate), and the cholestane 24(S)-hydroxycholesterol (NMDA receptor-selective; very potent). | ||
+ | *<scene name='89/896619/Cv/4'>Pregnanolone binds beta3-alpha5 GABAA receptor</scene>. | ||
Neurosteroids such as DHEA and allopregnanolone. | Neurosteroids such as DHEA and allopregnanolone. |
Revision as of 11:06, 16 November 2021
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