Talk:Neurotransmitter: Difference between revisions

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So I suggest this article is better focussed on the conventional transmitters and peptides treated separately?[[User:Gareth Leng|Gareth Leng]] 08:34, 11 February 2007 (CST)
So I suggest this article is better focussed on the conventional transmitters and peptides treated separately?[[User:Gareth Leng|Gareth Leng]] 08:34, 11 February 2007 (CST)
==Organization==
I think the "types of neurotransmitters" section and the "Common neurotransmitters" sections should be merged. - [[User:Robert Badgett|Robert Badgett]] 09:20, 20 January 2008 (CST)

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 Definition A class of chemicals which relay, amplify or modulate electrical signals between a neuron and other cells in the nervous system. [d] [e]
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 Workgroup categories Health Sciences, Biology and Chemistry [Editors asked to check categories]
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I'd favour treating peptides separately for several reasons 1) there are so many of them - think more than 100 now recognised as neuronal messengers

2) they seem to be universal, been suggested that every neurone also makes one or more peptide messenger

3) peptides seem to be always co expressed with a conventional neurotransmitter

4) peptides are in large dense cored vesicles not in small synaptic vesicles, and these are not conspicuously targeted to nerve endings, so are probably not particularly released synaptically

I think therefore that what is generally true of conventional neurotransmitters is not generally true of peptide messengers. There are some possible exceptions of peptides that do look like conventional transmitters (Substance P) but I think these are exceptions.

So I suggest this article is better focussed on the conventional transmitters and peptides treated separately?Gareth Leng 08:34, 11 February 2007 (CST)

Organization

I think the "types of neurotransmitters" section and the "Common neurotransmitters" sections should be merged. - Robert Badgett 09:20, 20 January 2008 (CST)