2-Minute Neuroscience: Glutamate
Glutamate is the primary excitatory neurotransmitter of the human nervous system. It is an amino acid neurotransmitter that interacts with both ionotropic and metabotropic receptors. There are 3 identified ionotropic glutamate receptors: NMDA, AMPA, and kainate receptors, and 3 identified metabotropic glutamate receptors. Glutamate is removed from the synaptic cleft by excitatory amino acid transporters, or EAATs. Glutamate that is transported into glial cells is converted to glutamine before being sent back to the neuron to be converted back to glutamate, a process referred to as the glutamate-glutamine cycle.
[Video and text source: Neuroscientifically Challenged You Tube channel]Related Videos
Can Brain Alone Explain Consciousness?
April 13, 2020
Annaka Harris: Interview – Challenge Everything
March 28, 2020
Michael Shermer with Brian Greene: Mind, Matter, and Our Search for Meaning in an Evolving Universe
March 18, 2020
The Biology of Addiction
August 05, 2019
Psychedelics: Mind-Enhancing Methods to Well-Being
June 22, 2019
Big Questions in Free Will
June 20, 2019
