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Nervous Tissue 9 Unit 1 Chapter 9 Structures of Nervous System 9 • Brain- Neurons enclosed in skull • Spinal cord– connects to brain & enclosed in spinal cavity • Nerves- bundles of neuronal axons • Ganglia- groups of cell bodies outside brain & spinal cord • Enteric plexuses- networks in digestive tract • Sensory receptors- monitor changes in internal or external environments Unit 1 Cranial emerge from brain; spinal nerves- emerge from spinal cord Figure 9.1 Function 9 • Sensory Receptors & afferent nerves Carry information into brain & spinal cord Perception = awareness of sensory input Carry by short interneurons • Motor activity- efferent nerves Signals to glands and muscles (effectors) Unit 1 • Integration- information processing • Central Nervous System (CNS) • Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) • Subdivided: Somatic (SNS) & Autonomic (ANS) nervous systems • Also • INPUT-Afferent or Sensory division • OUTPUT- Efferent or Motor division 9 Unit 1 Organization Figure 9.2 Nervous System 9 • Neuron= nerve cell Specialized for signal carrying & information processing Neuroglia critical for homeostasis of interstitial fluid around neurons Unit 1 • Neuroglia cells-support, nourish & protect neurons • Cell body- nucleus, cytoplasm with typical organelles • Dendrites- highly branched input structures emerging from cell body • Axon- conducts away from cell body toward another neuron or effector Emerges at cone-shaped axon hillock • Axon terminals -at end of axon with synaptic bulbs 9 Unit 1 Neuronal Structure Figure 9.3 9 Myelination • Axons covered with a myelin sheath Many layered lipid & protein creating insulations Increases speed of nerve conduction. • Nodes of Ravier= gaps in the myelin • Some diseases destroy myelinE.g. multiple sclerosis & Tay-Sachs Unit 1 Nodes are important for signal conduction Gray and White Matter 9 • White matter- primarily myelinated axons • Gray matter- cell bodies, dendrites, unmyelinated axons, axon terminals & neuroglia • spinal cord gray matter is centrally located Unit 1 • Gray matter in brain covers surface of cerebrum & cerebellum – cortex • deep cluster of neuronal cell bodies = nucleus • Bundle of white matter in CNS= Tract 9 Unit 1 Other terms • ~ half the volume of CNS • Cells smaller than neurons • Can multiply and divide and fill in brain areas • Do not conduct nerve impulses 9 Unit 1 Neuroglia • Astrocytes- blood brain barrier • Oligodendrocytes- myelin in CNS • microglia - defense • Ependymal cells- CSF production • Schwann- PNS cell support • Satellite cells- in PNS ganglia 9 Unit 1 Neuroglia-support Action Potentials 9 • Action potentials = nerve impulses • Require a membrane potential • Ion Channels- allow ions to move by diffusion = current • If no action potential then resting cell has resting membrane potential Unit 1 electrical charge difference across cell membrane – like a Battery Ion Channels 9 • Allow specific ions to diffuse across membrane • Leakage channels • Gated channels- require trigger to open • Voltage- Gated channels respond to a change in membrane potential Unit 1 Move from high concentration to low or toward area of opposite charge • Leakage channels • Cytosol high in K+ & interstitial fluid high in Na+ (sodium –potassium pumps) • Leakage lets K+ through easily and Na+ poorly • inside is negative relative to outside • actual value depends on the relative leakage channel numbers Unit 1 Resting Membrane Potential 9 Figure 9.4 Action Potential (AP) 9 • Series of active events • Channels actively open & close • Some initial event is required to reach a voltage threshold (~ = - 55 mv) • Stimulus = any event bringing membrane to threshold Unit 1 Action Potential 9 • Then • Depolarizing phasemembrane potential rises and becomes positive potential restored to resting value May overshoot =hyperpolarizing phase Then recovery to rest. Unit 1 • Repolarizing phase- • Stimulus to reach threshold • Na+ channel opens=> • Na+ ions enter=> • positive potential=> • Causes K+ channel opening => • repolarization 9 Unit 1 Active Events All- or -None 9 Unit 1 • This sequence is always the same • If threshold then the same size of changes occur no larger or smaller APs • Stimulus must reach threshold to start • After one AP there is a short period before next can be triggered= refractory period Figure 9.5 • Each section triggers next locally • Refractory period keeps it going the right direction • unmyelinated fiber- continuous conduction • With myelin- saltatory conduction Can only be triggered at Nodes of Ranvier • Myelinated fibers faster & larger neurons faster 9 Unit 1 Conduction of Nerve Impulses Figure 9.6a Figure 9.6b • Sequence of events at synapse • Triggered by voltage change of the Action Potential • Sending neuron = presynaptic • Receiving neuron = postsynaptic • Space between = synaptic cleft • Neurotransmitter carries signal across cleft 9 Unit 1 Synaptic Transmission 9 Events at Synapse • AP arrives at presynaptic end bulb=> • Opens voltage gated Ca2+ channels=> • increased Ca2+ concentration => • exocytosis of synaptic vesicles=> • Neurotransmitter released into cleft • Diffuse across and bind to receptors in postsynaptic cell membrane Unit 1 Ca2+ flows into cell • Binding at receptors • Chemical trigger of ion channels • May depolarize or hyperpolarize postsynaptic cell membrane • If threshold reached at axon hillock then postsynaptic cell action potential results 9 Unit 1 Synaptic Transmission • Finally the neurotransmitter must be removed from the cleft• Diffusion away • Destroyed by enzymes in cleft • Transport back into presynaptic cell • Neuroglia destruction 9 Unit 1 Synaptic Transmission Figure 9.7 Neurotransmitters 9 • AcetylCholine (Ach)- common in PNS May be stimulatory or inhibitory • Amino Acids• Modified amino acidsNorepinephrine (NE), Dopamine (DA), serotonin • Neuropeptides – endorphins • Nitric oxide (NO) Unit 1 Glutamate, Aspartate, gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA), glycine