Neurotransmitter vs. Neuropeptide vs. Hormone
Three overlapping signal classes that the brain and body use to communicate — distinguished by their chemistry, release site, range, and time course.
Comparison Table
| Feature | Neurotransmitter | Neuropeptide | Hormone |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chemical nature | Small molecules (amino acids, monoamines, gases) | Short chains of amino acids (peptides) | Varied: steroids, peptides, amines |
| Produced by | Presynaptic neurons | Neurons (soma, then transported) | Endocrine glands (adrenal, pituitary, gonads…) |
| Released into | Synaptic cleft | Extracellular space (diffusion) | Bloodstream |
| Speed of effect | Milliseconds | Seconds to minutes | Minutes to hours/days |
| Duration of effect | Brief (ms–s) | Prolonged (minutes–hours) | Long-lasting (hours–days) |
| Spatial range | Local: one synapse | Local to paracrine (wider than synapse) | Systemic: whole body via circulation |
| Receptor selectivity | Typically one specific receptor type | Acts on multiple receptor types | Target-cell specific (receptor must be present) |
| Cleared by | Reuptake / enzymatic degradation | Enzymatic cleavage | Metabolic breakdown (liver, kidney) |
Details
Neurotransmitters
Released from synaptic vesicles at the axon terminal in response to an action potential. They cross the narrow synaptic cleft (~20 nm) and bind to postsynaptic receptors. Their effect is rapid and localized — the canonical fast signal of neural communication.
Examples from the vault: Dopamin und Belohnung (dopamine), Epinephrine, 5HTT (serotonin transporter), L-DOPA (dopamine precursor)
Neuropeptides
Chains of 3–40+ amino acids synthesized in the neuron cell body and packaged into dense-core vesicles. They are co-released with classical neurotransmitters but diffuse more widely, acting on nearby cells beyond the immediate synapse (volume transmission). Their effects are prolonged and they bind multiple receptor subtypes, enabling broad modulation of neural circuits.
Examples from the vault: Vasopressin, Endorphins, CRH, LHRH
Key contrast: 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. (→ Neuropeptide)
Hormones
Released by endocrine glands directly into the bloodstream, reaching distant target organs. Their effect is systemic — the same molecule can simultaneously affect the brain, liver, immune system, and gonads. steroid hormones (e.g., Testosterone, Progesterone) are lipid-soluble and cross cell membranes to bind nuclear receptors, directly altering gene expression — a much slower but more lasting mechanism than membrane receptor signaling.
Important nuance: Hormones don’t determine or command behavior. They make us more sensitive to social triggers and exaggerate preexisting tendencies. (→ 052 🫧Hormone und Neurotransmitter)
The Overlap: Dual-Function Molecules
Many molecules don’t fit neatly into one category — this is one of the most important insights here:
- Oxytocin and Vasopressin are both neuropeptides (released from hypothalamic neurons modulating social behavior) and hormones (released from the posterior pituitary into the bloodstream for uterine contraction, water retention, etc.)
- Epinephrine (adrenaline) is both a neurotransmitter in the CNS and a hormone released by the adrenal medulla
- Growth Hormone is a peptide hormone but structurally similar to neuropeptides
- Prolactin similarly crosses the peptide hormone / neuropeptide boundary
The category depends on context: where it’s released, from what cell type, and what receptor it reaches.
Why This Distinction Matters
- Pharmacology: drugs targeting neurotransmitters (SSRIs, dopamine agonists) work at the synapse; hormone therapy works systemically
- Time scale of behavior: neurotransmitters explain split-second responses; hormones explain seasonal or developmental shifts in behavior
- Evolution: neuropeptides are evolutionarily ancient — Vasopressin/oxytocin systems are conserved across vertebrates; monoamine neurotransmitters arose later
- Mental health: many psychiatric conditions involve dysregulation across all three levels simultaneously (e.g., stress response involves CRH neuropeptide → ACTH hormone → cortisol hormone, all in one cascade)
See also
Tags: HormoneNeurotransmitter neuroscience science
Superlink: 052 🫧Hormone und Neurotransmitter 051 ☣Neurobiology 050 🧠Neuroscience
Linked notes in vault:
Neurotransmitter · Neuropeptide · steroid hormone · Vasopressin · Oxytocin · Endorphins · Epinephrine · CRH · LHRH · Dopamin und Belohnung · Testosterone · Progesterone · Prolactin · Growth Hormone
Quellen / Sources
Created: 14/06/26