Neuropeptide

Neuropeptides produce a prolonged action. Neurotransmitters trigger short-term responses.

Neuropeptides act on a number of receptor proteins. Most neurotransmitters only act on a specific receptor.

🤖 AI addition (14/06/26):

What is a Neuropeptide?

A neuropeptide is a short chain of amino acids (3–40+) synthesized by neurons that acts as a signaling molecule. Unlike classical neurotransmitters, neuropeptides are released into the extracellular space and diffuse broadly — a mechanism called volume transmission — modulating entire networks rather than single synapses.


Synaptic vesicle types — neuropeptides in large dense-core vesicles (LDCVs) vs small clear vesicles for classical NTs (Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA)


Neuropeptide synthesis: prepropeptide → cleavage in ER → Golgi processing → dense-core vesicle → release (based on Nestler et al., Molecular Pharmacology 2009; Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0)


Synthesis & Release

  1. Gene expression in cell soma → prepropeptide (large precursor protein)
  2. Cleavage in the endoplasmic reticulum → propeptide
  3. Post-translational processing in Golgi apparatus (cleaving, glycosylation, amidation)
  4. Packaged into large dense-core vesicles (LDCVs) — bigger and darker than regular synaptic vesicles
  5. Transported along axons to terminals, but also released at cell bodies and along axons (not just at synapses)
  6. Released by high-frequency firing or burst activity (higher Ca²⁺ threshold than classical NTs)

Key Properties

PropertyNeuropeptideClassical Neurotransmitter
Size3–40+ amino acidsSmall molecule
Vesicle typeLarge dense-core vesicleSmall clear vesicle
Release siteSynapses, soma, axon en passantSynaptic terminal only
Diffusion rangeWide (volume transmission)Narrow (synaptic cleft)
Effect durationMinutes to hoursMilliseconds to seconds
Receptor typesMultiple (often GPCRs)Often more specific
DegradationEnzymatic cleavage (peptidases)Reuptake or enzymatic

Subtypes

Neuropeptides can also act as hormones when released into the bloodstream — this dual function is one of the most important features of this class:

  • Hypothalamic releasing hormones — CRH (CRH), LHRH (LHRH) — control the pituitary
  • Pituitary hormonesGrowth Hormone, Prolactin — released into blood
  • Social neuropeptidesOxytocin, Vasopressin — act locally in brain and as hormones in blood
  • Opioid neuropeptidesEndorphins, enkephalins, dynorphin — pain modulation, reward
  • Gut-brain peptides — Ghrelin (hunger), CCK (satiety), Substance P (pain)

Examples from the Vault

NeuropeptidePrimary FunctionVault Note
OxytocinBonding, trust, prosocialityOxytocin
VasopressinMonogamy, paternal behavior, social memoryVasopressin
EndorphinsPain inhibition, runner’s highEndorphins
CRHStress response initiation (→ ACTH)CRH
LHRHReproductive hormone releaseLHRH

Why Neuropeptides Are Evolutionarily Ancient

Neuropeptide signaling predates classical neurotransmitter systems. Peptide signaling is found in almost all animals, including simple invertebrates without a full nervous system. This suggests peptide-based communication was the original intercellular signaling mode, with small-molecule NTs evolving later for faster, more localized signaling.


Clinical Relevance

  • Pain — opioid neuropeptides (Endorphins) are the targets of morphine and all opioid drugs
  • Stress disorders — CRH antagonists are being studied for depression/PTSD
  • Autism/social behavior — oxytocin nasal spray research for social deficits
  • Appetite regulation — GLP-1 (a gut neuropeptide) is the basis of Ozempic/semaglutide

see also

Tags: neuroscience HormoneNeurotransmitter science
Superlink: 052 🫧Hormone und Neurotransmitter 051 ☣Neurobiology 050 🧠Neuroscience

Linked notes: Neurotransmitter · Neurotransmitter vs Neuropeptide vs Hormone · Oxytocin · Vasopressin · Endorphins · CRH · LHRH · Growth Hormone · Prolactin

Source

Neuropeptide – Wikipedia
Large Dense Core Vesicles – Wikipedia

Created: 01-02-24 16:24
Erweitert: 14/06/26