Neurotransmitters & Receptors
Drugs & Their Mechanisms
Addiction & Reward Pathways
Psychiatric Disorders
Learning & Memory
100

This neurotransmitter is the most widespread inhibitory transmitter in the brain.

GABA

100

This stimulant blocks dopamine reuptake, causing dopamine levels to rise in the synapse.

What is cocaine?

100

This dopamine-rich midbrain area is a major source of drug reward.

What is the ventral tegmental area (VTA)?

100

This disorder includes symptoms like hallucinations and delusions, known as "positive symptoms."

What is schizophrenia? 


100

This type of memory involves recalling personal life events.

episodic memory

200

This type of receptor is ionotropic, fast-acting, and used by ACh at the neuromuscular junction.

What is the nicotinic receptor?

200

These drugs mimic endogenous opioids and bind to receptors in the periaqueductal gray to reduce pain.

What are opiates (e.g., morphine, heroin)

200

This pathway carries dopamine from the VTA to the nucleus accumbens.

What is the mesolimbic dopamine pathway? 


200

These antipsychotic drugs act as D₂ receptor antagonists

What are typical neuroleptics (e.g., haloperidol)?

200

H.M. suffered from this type of amnesia after hippocampal removal

What is anterograde amnesia?

300

These receptors work through G-proteins and second messengers and are targeted by most drugs.

What are metabotropic receptors?

300

This ADHD medication class increases dopamine/norepinephrine availability, improving prefrontal function

What are amphetamine-like stimulants (Adderall, Ritalin)?

300

This molecular change in cocaine addicts accumulates slowly and drives craving and relapse.

What is ΔFosB upregulation?

300

This hypothesis suggests schizophrenia results from excess dopamine signaling

What is the dopamine hypothesis?

300

This structure is essential for forming new declarative memories but does NOT store them long-term.

What is the hippocampus?

400

This neuromodulator builds up during wakefulness to make you sleepy; caffeine blocks its receptor.

What is adenosine?

400

This psychedelic drug is a serotonin agonist that alters sensory perception.

What is LSD

400

Addiction and withdrawal are mediated by different brain structures. Name one for each

  • Addiction → VTA

  • Withdrawal → periaqueductal gray

400

This birth-related environmental factor increases the risk for schizophrenia.

What is the winter birth effect / prenatal influenza exposure? 


400

This process strengthens synapses after high-frequency stimulation (“neurons that fire together wire together”).

What is long-term potentiation (LTP)? 


500

These two endocannabinoids act as retrograde messengers and activate CB1 receptors.

What are anandamide and 2-AG?

500

Name one of the three main ways drugs can alter synaptic transmission presynaptically.

Answer:

  • Alter transmitter synthesis

  • Block or stimulate release

  • Block reuptake

500

This treatment strategy mimics a drug’s effects but in a milder form (methadone).

What is an agonistic treatment?

500

This type of antidepressant blocks serotonin reuptake and has fewer side effects than tricyclics.

What are SSRIs?

500

These two glutamate receptors are essential for LTP, with one requiring Mg²⁺ removal to open.

What are AMPA and NMDA receptors? 


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