Everything about Muscarinic totally explained
Muscarinic receptors are those membrane-bound
acetylcholine receptors that are more sensitive to
muscarine than to
nicotine. Those for which the contrary is true are known as
nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. Muscarine and nicotine are both
alkaloids. Many drugs and other substances (for example
pilocarpine and
scopolamine) act as
agonists or
antagonists of only muscarinic or only nicotinic receptors, making this distinction useful.
Uses
Acetylcholine (ACh) is a
neurotransmitter found extensively in the
brain and autonomic nervous system. It is also the neurotransmitter used to cause voluntary muscle contraction. Muscarinic receptors are used in the following roles:
Sympathetic and parasympathetic postganglionic: recovery receptors
ACh is always used as the transmitter within the
autonomic ganglion. Nicotinic receptors on the postganglionic neuron are responsible for the initial fast depolarization (Fast
EPSP) of that neuron. As a consequence of this, nicotinic receptors are often cited as
the receptor on the postganglionic neurons at the ganglion. However, the subsequent hyperpolarization (
IPSP) and slow depolarization (Slow EPSP) which represent the recovery of the postganglionic neuron from stimulation are actually mediated by
muscarinic receptors, types M
2 and M
1 respectively (discussed later).
Presynaptically within the postganglionic neurons
Another role for these receptors is at the junction of the innervated tissue and the postganglionic neuron in the parasympathetic division of the autonomic nervous system. Here acetylcholine is again used as a neurotransmitter, and
muscarinic receptors form the principal receptors on the innervated tissue. In addition, muscarinic acetylcholine receptors pre-synaptically on the post-ganglionic neuron bind to the released acetylcholine and regulate the response of the postganglionic neuron.
Between the postganglionic neurons and the innervated tissue
By contrast, this junction in the sympathetic division doesn't tend to use acetylcholine as a neurotransmitter (instead, norepinephrine is used), and therefore neither muscarinic nor nicotinic receptors are involved, but rather
adrenergic α1 and
β1 receptors. A very few parts of the sympathetic system use cholinergic receptors (sweat glands being one of the few exceptions). In these cases, the receptors are of the
muscarinic type. The sympathetic nervous system also has single nerves terminating at the
chromaffin cells in the
adrenal medulla, which secrete
epinephrine and
norepinephrine into the bloodstream. Acetylcholine is used as a neurotransmitter, and the receptor is of the
nicotinic type. The somatic nervous system uses acetylcholine at the junction between its one peripheral nerve and the innervated tissue, also of the nicotinic type.
In the higher central nervous system
Muscarinic acetylcholine receptors are also present and distributed throughout the central nervous system, in post-synaptic and pre-synaptic positions. There is also some evidence for
postsynaptic receptors on sympathetic neurons allowing the parasympathetic nervous system to inhibit sympathetic effects.
On the presynaptic membrane of the neuromuscular junction
It's now known they also appear on the pre-synaptic membrane of somatic neurons in the neuro-muscular junction, where they're involved in the regulation of acetylcholine release.
The Form of Muscarinic Receptors
Muscarinic acetylcholine receptors belong to a class of
metabotropic receptors which use
G proteins as their signalling mechanism. There are known to be a large number of these
G-protein-coupled receptors for
neurotransmitters,
hormones, and other substances. G proteins are also present in taste, and odour detecting
cells, in the
retina, and in many other systems.
In such receptors, the signalling molecule (the
ligand) binds to a
receptor which has
seven transmembrane regions, in this case the ligand is ACh. This receptor is bound to intracellular proteins, known as G proteins, which begin the information cascade within the cell.
By contrast nicotinic receptors use an
ion-gated mechanism for signalling. Sufficient ligands cause an
ion channel to open, filling (or evacuating) a cell of a particular ion.
Receptor Isoforms
Classification
By the use of selective radioactively-labelled agonist and antagonist substances, four subtypes of muscarinic receptors have been determined, named M
1-M
4 (using an upper case M and subscript number). For example, the drug
pirenzepine is a muscarinic antagonist (decreases the effect of ACh) which is much more potent at M
1 receptors than it's at other subtypes. The acceptance of the various subtypes has proceeded in numerical order: therefore, sources exist which only recognise the M
1/M
2 distinction, more recent studies tend to recognise M
3, and the most recent M
4.
Genetic differences
Meanwhile,
geneticists and
molecular biologists have characterised five genes which appear to encode muscarinic receptors, named m1-m5 (lower case m; no subscript number). The first four code for pharmacologic types M
1-M
4. The fifth, m5, corresponds to a subtype of receptor which hasn't been detected pharmacologically. m1 and m2 were determined based upon partial sequencing of M
1 and M
2 receptor proteins, the others were found by searching for homology, using
bioinformatic techniques.
Difference in G proteins
G proteins contain an alpha-subunit which is critical to the functioning of receptors. These subunits can take a number of forms. There are four broad classes of form of G-protein, G
s, G
i, G
q and G
12/13. Muscarinic receptors vary in the G protein to which they're bound, with some correlation according to receptor type. G proteins are also classified according to their susceptibility to
cholera toxin (CTX) and
pertussis toxin (PTX, whooping cough). G
s and some subtypes of G
i (G
αt and G
αg) are succeptible to CTX. Only G
i is succeptible to PTX, with the exception of one subtype of G
i (G
αz) which is immune. Also, only when bound with an agonist, those G proteins normally sensitive to PTX also become susceptible to CTX.
The various G-protein subunits act differently upon secondary messengers, upregulating Phospholipases, downregulating cAMP, and so on.
Because of the strong correlations to muscarinic receptor type, CTX and PTX are useful experimental tools in investigating these receptors.
Comparison of types
Further Information
Get more info on 'Muscarinic'.
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