Neurotransmitter Receptor

A Neurotransmitter receptor (also known as a neuroreceptor) is a membrane receptor protein that is activated by a neurotransmitter. A membrane protein interacts with the phospholipid bilayer that encloses the cell and a membrane receptor protein interacts with a chemical in the cells external environment, which binds to the cell. Membrane receptor proteins, in neuronal and glial cells, allow cells to communicate with one another through chemical signals.

In postsynaptic cells, neurotransmitter receptors receive signals that trigger an electrical signal, by regulating the activity of ion channels. The binding of neurotransmitters to specific receptors can change the membrane potential of a neuron. This can result in a signal that runs along the axon and can be passed along a neural network (see action potential). On presynaptic cells the binding of a neurotransmitter to a specific receptor provides feedback and mediates excessive neurotransmitter release.

There are two types of Neurotransmitter receptors: ligand-gated receptors or ionotropic receptors and G protein-coupled receptors or metabotropic receptors. Ligand-gated receptors can be excited by neurotransmitters (ligands) like glutamate and aspartate. These receptors can also be inhibited by neurotransmitters like GABA and glycine. Conversely, G protein-coupled receptors are neither excitatory nor inhibitory. Rather, they modulate the actions of excititory and inhibitory neurotransmitters. Most neurotransmitters receptors are G-protein coupled.

Read more about Neurotransmitter Receptor:  Ionotropic Receptors: Neurotransmitter-Gated Ion Channels, Metabotropic Receptors: G-Protein Coupled Receptors, Desensitization and Neurotransmitter Concentration, Table of Neurotransmitters, Example Neurotransmitter Receptors

Famous quotes containing the word receptor:

    The disinterest [of my two great-aunts] in anything that had to do with high society was such that their sense of hearing ... put to rest its receptor organs and allowed them to suffer the true beginnings of atrophy.
    Marcel Proust (1871–1922)