On Cotransmission & Neurotransmitter Phenotype Plasticity
Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 138-146.
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Dale postulated that a neuron functions as a metabolic unit, whereby a process occurring in the cell can influence all of the compartments of that given neuron. With the passage of time, this statement has concretized into the more general, if, perhaps, misleading statement that "a single cell releases only one neurotransmitter." In fact, many neurons in the nervous system appear to contain and release more than one chemical acting as a neurotransmitter or neuromodulator. Indeed, cotransmission of a classical neurotransmitter and a peptide is a ubiquitous phenomenon, but several neuron types can also contain more than one classical neurotransmitter. Although the expression of peptide cotransmitters is known to be highly regulated in response to various physiological, chemical, and pathological signals, new data now suggest that a similar situation prevails in neurons that co-release two classical transmitters.