4.2.3.1.1. Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors
Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChR)
[WG21:p101-103]
- Subdivided into two groups, depending on the locations
* Neuromuscular junctions
* Autonomic ganglia and CNS
* Adrenal medullar [???]
- Nicotinic ACh receptors are members of ligand-gated ion channels
* GABAa and glycine receptors are also ligand-gated ion channels
- Made up of 5 subunits
* 2 alpha units, beta, gamma, and epsilon
* ACh binds to each alpha subunit
* Delta and epsilon subunits stabilise the closed state of nAChR
- When both alpha subunits are bound
--> Configurational change
--> Channel opens
--> Increased conductance of Na+ and other cations (including Ca2+)
NB:
- Many of the nACh receptors in brain are located presynaptically on glutamine-secreting axon terminals
Foetal nAChR
- Delta subunit (instead of epsilon) is found in foetal nAChRs
- Longer period of opening than the adult type
- Lower conductance to Na+, K+, Ca2+ than the adult type
- A single ACh quanta can elicit action potential [SH4:p214]
- At birth, there is a mixture of nACh receptors with epsilon and those with delta subunits
- Majority of extrajunctional receptors are of foetal type
NB:
Regulation of the nAChRs
Up-regulation of nAChRs
- Spinal cord injury
- Cerebral vascular accident
- Thermal injury
- Prolonged immobility
- Prolonged exposure to NMBDs
- Multiple sclerosis
- Guillain-Barre syndrome
Down-regulation of nAChRs
- Myasthenia gravis
- Anticholinesterase overdose
- Organophosphate poisoning