Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor

Nicotinic Receptors form ion channels present in the plasma membrane of cells. Their opening is gated by the neurotransmitter acetylcholine (acetylcholine receptors), and by nicotine. Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors are present in many tissues in the body. The neuronal receptors are found in the central nervous system and the peripheral nervous system. The neuromuscular receptors are found in the neuromuscular junctions of somatic muscles, stimulation of these receptors causes muscular contraction.

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Recept3D.jpg
drawing of a nicotinic receptor

They may exist in different interconvertible conformational states. Binding of nicotine stabilises the open and desensitised state(s). Opening of the channel allows positively charged ions, in particular, sodium and calcium to enter the cell. This activation of receptors by nicotine then modifies the state of neurons via two main mechanisms. On one hand, the movements of cations cause a depolarisation of the plasma membrane, which results in an excitation, particularly of neurons, but also by the activation of other voltage-gated ion channels. On the other hand, the entry of calcium acts, either directly or indirectly, on different intracellular cascades leading, for example, to the regulation of the activity of some genes or the release of neurotransmitters.

Nicotinic receptors are made up of five subunits, arranged symmetrically around the ion channel. The subunits of the nicotinic receptors belong to a multigene family (16 members in human) and the assembly of combinations of subunits results in a large number of different receptors (For more information see the Ligand Gated Ion Channel database (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/compneur-srv/LGICdb)). These receptors, with highly variable kinetic, electrophysiological and pharmacological properties, respond differently to nicotine, at very different effective concentrations. This functional diversity allows them to take part in two major types of neurotransmission. Classical synaptic transmission (wiring transmission) involves the release of high concentrations of neurotransmitter, acting on immediately neighbouring receptors. In contrast, paracrine transmission (volume transmission) involves neurotransmitters released by buttons or varicosities, which then diffuse through the extra-cellular medium until they reach their receptors, which may be distant.

The two main receptor subtypes are the neuromuscular receptors and the neuronal (ganglionic) receptors. The neuronal receptors are found in the central nervous system and on all autonomic ganglia. The neuromuscular receptors are found in the neuromuscular junctions of somatic muscles, stimulation of these receptors causes muscular contraction.

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