Ionotropic receptors are associated with ligand-activated ion channels, whereas metabotropic receptors are associated with signal proteins and g proteins.
<h3>What is the difference between metabotropic and ionotropic receptors?</h3>
Ionotropic and metabotropic receptors are two types of receptors that function in membrane transport and signal transduction.
Ionotropic receptors bind to ionic ligands such as K+, Na+, Cl–, and Ca2+.
Metabotropic receptors bind with non-ionic ligands such as chemical receptors or G protein-coupled receptors.
<h3>What are metabotropic receptors associated with?</h3>
Metabotropic receptors act either directly or indirectly as signal transduction enzymes, or are linked to enzymes that have an extracellular domain recognizing a drug and an intracellular domain that catalyzes a biochemical response.
Learn more about receptors here:
<h3>
brainly.com/question/26122239</h3>
<h3>#SPJ4</h3>