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What is an ionotropic receptor?
Receptor linked to an ion channel
What type of acetylcholine receptor is
- nicotinic (nAChR)
- muscarinic (mAChR)
ionotrophic
metabotrophic (G protein)
Which are always reversible: Agonist or antagonist reactions?
Agonist
antagonists can be both reversible and irreversible
How does the action of toxins work?
example of non-reversible reaction
a-bungarotoxin
Blocks nAChR at NMJ
Stops muscle contractions
Brief structure of a nAChR
5 subunits
4 Transmembrane domains
ACh binds to alpha subunits
How does Curare work?
Example of a reversible reaction
d-tubocurarine
Blocks nAChR (REVERSIBLE)
Stops muscle contractions
Then can be reversed
allosteric modulators (non-competitive inhibitor)
Substance that binds to cell receptor but binds on the other side
Still causes an effect
Inverse agonist
Binds to the same site as the agonist but causes the opposite effect to the agonist
The GABA receptor is a type of which receptor?
ionotropic
What type of hormones commonly activate intracellular receptors?
Steroid hormones
What is the action of an intracellular receptor? Is it a fast or slow acting receptor?
Alters transcription
Slow
Describe the structure of an intracellular receptor
ligand binding domain
DNA binding domain
Transcription activating domain