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					Nervous system I
Wei yuanyuan
Nervous system
 Organization : over
100 billion neuron
 Central nervous system
 Brain + spinal cord
 Peripheral nervous system:
somatic nervous system+vegetal nervous system
 The rest of the nervous system(12 cranial nerve and 31
spinal nerve)
 Carry information between the CNS and other parts
of the body
Nervous system
31
Enteric nerve
Nervous system- glial cells
 The nervous tissue is
composed of two main cells
 Neuron: 1011
 Glial cell (in CNS): 1012
 Astrocytes
 Oligodendrocytes
 Microglia
 Ependymal cells
Nervous system- glial cells
 Function of the glial cells in CNS
 Astrocytes
 Physically support neurons
 Scaffold during fetal brain development
 constitute BBB
 Help maintaining the proper brain ion concentration and normal
neural excitability by taking up excess K+ from ECF ( epileptic
seizures)
Starlike shape of astrocytes
Nervous system- glial cells
 Function of the glial cells in CNS
 Oligodendrocytes :
 form myelin sheaths
 Microglia :
 serve as phagocyte
 Ependymal cells :
 the thin epithelial membrane lining the ventricular system of
the brain and the spinal cord. It is involved in the production
of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).
 Glial cell (in CNS): Astrocytes ;Oligodendrocytes;
Microglia Ependymal cell
Nervous system- glial cells
 Function and type of the glial cells in PNS
 Schwann cell
 Serve as myelin sheaths
 Satellite cell
 Serve as phagocyte
Nervous system- neuron
 Basic function unit
 Definition : individual nerve cell carrying the impulse
throughout the body
Nervous system- neuron
 Soma
 Axon
 Dendrite
 Presynaptic terminals
Structure of neuron
Nervous system- neuron
Function of neuron
 Processing of information
 Soma : integrate the message
 Axon : carry the impulse away from the cell body,
transportation of nutrient to the effector
 Axon hillock: the place of AP occur
 Dendrite : receive the neuron impulse
 Presynaptic terminals : associate with another
neurons
Nervous system- neuron
Classification of neuron
 Sensory neuron : from receptor
 Interneuron: CNS
 Motor neuron: to effectors
Neuron
Nervous system- neuron
Nerve fiber (axon and dendrites)
 Function
 Conducting AP
 Nerve impulse
Nervous system- neuron
Characters of AP conduction on a nerve fiber
 The anatomic and physiological integrity
 Not easy to fatigue
 Conduct in a non-decremental fashion
Conduction velocity
 Influential factors
 Diameter
 Myelinate or not
 temperature
Classification of nerve fibers
Classification of nerve fibers
Classification of Sensory fiber
Classification of nerve fibers
 The former classification method used for
efferent fiber
 The latter classification method used for
afferent fiber
Axoplasmic transportation
 Anterograde axoplasmic transportation
 Retrograde axoplasmic transportation
Organelle:
Mitochondrial
synaptic vesicle
secretory granules
Axoplasmic transportation
 Anterograde axoplasmic transportation
 Retrograde axoplasmic transportation
growth factors
certain harmful substances:
tetanus toxin
Herpes
rabies virus
synapse
Greek "syn-" ("together")
"haptein" ("to clasp").
Transmission of the information
between the neuron
 Chemical transmission
 Classic synapse
 Non- synapse chemical transmission
 Electrical transmission
 Gap junction (Astrocytes)
Chemical Synapse
 Definition of synapse:
 the special site between the two neuron where
the information transmit
 Structure
 pre-synaptic membrane:
 Calcium channel , synaptic vesicle (neurotransmitter
storage)
 Synaptic cleft
 Transmitter diffusion
 Post- synaptic membrane
 K+ , Na+ Channel , receptor
Pre-synaptic
membrane
Synaptic
cleft
Pre-synaptic
membrane
Non- synapse chemical transmission
One neuron innervate
many effector cells
by means of varicosity
 Heart
 the terminal of
sympathetic nerve
Electrical transmission
 Gap junction (channel): electric current
movement (quickly and not easy to fatigue)
Electrical synapse
Chemical synapse
Which one is best for transmission ?
one-way conduction
Synaptic transmission
Synaptic transmission
 The process of synaptic transmission
1. Action potential propagation in presynaptic
neuron
2. Ca 2+ entry into synaptic knob
3. Release of neurotransmitter by exocytosis
4. Binding of neurotransmitter to postsynaptic
receptor
5. Opening of specific ion channels in post synaptic membrane
Neurotransmitter
 Definition: a chemical substance secreted by
presynaptic neuron
 Excitatory transmitter :
 Inhibitory transmitter:
 Binding with receptor protein
 Agonists and antagonists
Postsynaptic potential
(graded potential)
 Type :
 Excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP)
 Inhibitory postsynaptic potential (IPSP)
EPSP
 Postsynaptic membrane
 Mainly permeability to sodium
 EPSP: depolarization
 Characters (EPSP) :
 No threshold: local potential or gradient potential
 Decreases resting membrane potential.
 Closer to threshold.
 Graded in magnitude.
 No refractory period.
 Summation ( temporal summation and spatial summation )
Na in>Kout ,why?
IPSP
 Postsynaptic membrane
 Cl- influx and K+ efflux
 IPSP : hyperpolarization
 Characters
No threshold.
Hyperpolarize postsynaptic membrane.
Increase membrane potential( far from TP)
No refractory period
Summation
Summation of EPSP or IPSP
Integrative
function of
neuron
(0.5-1 mSec)
Nervous system- neuron
Characters of AP conduction on a nerve fiber
 The anatomic and physiological integrity
 Not easy to fatigue
 Conduct in a non-decremental fashion
Synaptic inhibition
Postsynaptic inhibition
Afferent collateral inhibiton
(reciprocal inhibition)
Afferent collateral inhibiton
(reciprocal inhibition)
 Significance:coordination activity of
different nerve centre.
Recurrent inhibition
 Neurons may also inhibit themselves in a negative
feedback fashion.
 Interneuron:
Renshaw cells
 Neurotransmitter :.
glycine
Recurrent inhibition
 significance:terminate activity of motor neuron
in time.
Presynaptic inhibition
Neuron A : inhibitory neuron
Neuron B: excitatory neuron
Neuron C : postsynaptic neuron
A
(+) Neuron B only → Neuron C
depolarization 10 mV
B
(+) Neuron A firstly then
(+) Neuron B → Neuron C depolarization
5 mV
Reason: Neuron A release inhibitory
transmitter which reduce the Neuron B
release excitatory transmitter, so ,on
Neuron C the EPSP↓
GABA(gammalon)
C
summary
 Axoplasmic transportation
 Synaptic transmission
 post-synaptic potential
 IPSP
 EPSP
 Central inhibition
 Post-synaptic inhibition
 Pre-synaptic inhibition