Journal article

β-Alanine as a small molecule neurotransmitter

KE Tiedje, K Stevens, S Barnes, DF Weaver

Neurochemistry International | PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD | Published : 2010

Abstract

This review discusses the role of β-alanine as a neurotransmitter. β-Alanine is structurally intermediate between α-amino acid (glycine, glutamate) and γ-amino acid (GABA) neurotransmitters. In general, β-alanine satisfies a number of the prerequisite classical criteria for being a neurotransmitter: β-alanine occurs naturally in the CNS, is released by electrical stimulation through a Ca2+ dependent process, has binding sites, and inhibits neuronal excitability. β-Alanine has 5 recognized receptor sites: glycine co-agonist site on the NMDA complex (strychnine-insensitive); glycine receptor site (strychnine sensitive); GABA-A receptor; GABA-C receptor; and blockade of GAT protein-mediated gli..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers