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Neurons I bet your neurons are all fired up now! The Nervous System Neuron = • Example: Nerve = • Example: Types of Neurons • - carry outgoing messages from the brain and spinal cord to the muscles and glands – Example: • - neurons within the brain and spinal cord that communicate internally and between sensory inputs and motor outputs – Example: • - carry messages from tissues and sensory organs to the brain and spinal cord for processing – Example Think Pair Share • Explain which neuron’s are at work when you swat a mosquito • Which neurons are at work when you pick up a fork? Neurons How neurons communicate Electro-Chemical process 1. Electrical – within a neuron – – brief electrical charge that sends a message down the neuron • Information is pushed through the axon based on process of positive and negative charges of electrical atoms (ions) 2. Chemical – between neurons – travel across the : different ones send different messages on to the next neuron • Neurotransmitters can either excite (fire) or inhibit (prevent firing) Step 1 : 70mv) – – Step 2: How does a neuron fire membrane – neuron is charged and ready to fire (- – positive outside, negative inside – gates do not allow sodium ions to pass through the cell – the minimum energy needed to generate an action potential (-55mv) – - the process of making a neuron more likely to generate an action potential (excitatory neurotransmitters binding to receptors) must be greater than – – the process of making the neuron less likely to generate an action potential (inhibitory neurotransmitters binding to receptors) Step 3: – brief electrical charge that travels down the neuron – rushes in creating a positive charge on the inside of the cell membrane. – – neurons can only send message in one direction at the same speed and strength – flows out of the cell membrane, reversing the polarity Step 4: the recharging period that must occur to ready a neuron to generate another action potential – Sodium/Potassium pumps push back to resting potential out and in bringing axon Action Potential Electrical Transmission – The Action Potential http://www.outreach.mc b.harvard.edu/animatio ns/actionpotential_shor t.swf Between Neuron Communication • – the chemical messengers that carry information across the synapse between one neuron and then next are released from terminal buttons on the sending neuron Can be: – – make the neuron receiving neuron more likely to generate an action potential – – make the neuron receiving neurotransmitters less likely to generate an action potential – the small gap between neurons which neurotransmitters travel across to send a message to the receiving neuron’s dendrites • – the process of the sending neuron’s terminal buttons taking back excess neurotransmitters from the synaptic gap • How do neurons communicate with each other? The chemical process How Neurons Communicate Synaptic Transmission http://learn.genetics.utah.edu/ content/addiction/crossingdivi de/ Think Pair Share 1. Put the following terms in order as they occur. 2. Identify which are part of the “electro” (E) part and which are part of the “chemical part” (C) 3. Briefly describe the electro-chemical process of neural transmission: – Resting potential – Synapse – Action potential – Repolarization – Refractory period – All-or-None – Threshold – Excitation – Inhibition – Reuptake – Depolarization Drugs can be….. • Agonists• Antagonists• Reuptake Inhibitors- Acetylcholine (ACH) • Too much and you will______ • Too little and you will_______ • disease – lack of AcH • Black widow – AcH • Botox – AcH • Curare – AcH Dopamine Serotonin • • Endorphins Norepenephrine • GABA • Inhibition of Brain Activity – Major neurotransmitter - Glutamate • Excitation of Brain Activity – Major neurotransmitter - Agonists and Antagonists http://thebrain.mcgill.ca/flash/i/i_03/i_03_m/ i_03_m_par/i_03_m_par_cocaine.html#dro gues Agonist and Antagonists Examples: Agonists: Opiate Drugs (Heroin, Morphine) Black Widow Spider Venom – Alcohol Antagonists – Botulin, Curare The Nervous System Central Nervous System • Brain • Spinal chord Peripheral Nervous System • All nerves that are not encased in bone. • Everything but the brain and spinal cord. • • Somatic Nervous System • Controls • Uses neurons. • What are two examples of you using your Somatic Nervous System Autonomic Nervous System • Controls the – • • What are two examples of you using your Autonomic Nervous System Sympathetic Nervous System • – Arouses and expends energy • Causes: • What are two examples of you using your Sympathetic Nervous System Parasympathetic Nervous System • – Automatically slows the body down after a stressful event. • Causes: • What are two examples of you using your Parasympathetic Nervous system Reflexes • Reflex – A Simple Reflex Think Pair Share • Which part of your nervous system and which neurons would you rely on most heavily to cross the street? • Which part of your nervous system and which type of neuron’s would you use when Ms. Short arrives at your class and calls you out to the hall, then sends you back to class. A Simplified Neural Network Neural Network – Neurons learn to work together as a team. Neurons that fire together, wire together = learning The Endocrine System •A system of glands that secrete hormones. •Similar too Neurotransmitters Neurotransmitters Hormones Neurotransmitters Location Speed Hormones Pineal Gland – Master Gland:- Parathyroid hormone Figure 3A.11 The endocrine system © 2011 by Worth Publishers