* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Neurons & Nervous Systems
Cytokinesis wikipedia , lookup
Organ-on-a-chip wikipedia , lookup
Cyclic nucleotide–gated ion channel wikipedia , lookup
SNARE (protein) wikipedia , lookup
List of types of proteins wikipedia , lookup
Signal transduction wikipedia , lookup
Endomembrane system wikipedia , lookup
Cell membrane wikipedia , lookup
Mechanosensitive channels wikipedia , lookup
Membrane potential wikipedia , lookup
Node of Ranvier wikipedia , lookup
Neurons & Nervous Systems nervous systems connect distant parts of organisms; vary in complexity Figure 44.1 Nervous System Components • neurons – obtain information – transform information into signals – transmit information – integrate (process) information – transmit responsive information Nervous System Components • glial cells (outnumber neurons) – provide nutrients to neurons – maintain ionic environment for neurons – remove debris – guide neuron development – insulate neurons Schwann cells insulate peripheral neurons Figure 44.3 Nervous System Components • glial cells (outnumber neurons) – provide nutrients to neurons – maintain ionic environment for neurons – remove debris – guide neuron development – insulate neurons – form blood-brain barrier brains vary in complexity Nervous System Components • ganglia – clusters of neurons – information processing centers • brain – large, dominant pair of ganglia • spinal cord – with brain, forms central nervous system (CNS) of vertebrates Nervous System Components • peripheral nervous system – connects sensory systems to CNS – connects CNS to effectors Neurons • • • • several functionally distinct parts vary in size, complexity, organization generate nerve impulses (action potentials) communicate with other cells through synapses – axon terminal plasma membrane releases neurotransmitters – target cell plasma membrane binds neurotransmitters – targets include neurons, muscle, gland cells dendrites Figure 44.2 cell body axon hillock axon axon terminals variation in # of connections, length of transmission Figure 44.2 Neuronal Networks • collect information, process information and respond to information • consist of at least – sensory neuron – motor neuron – muscle cell • most neurons form 1000’s of synapses, participate in multiple neuronal networks resting potential Figure 44.4 Nerve impulses • cytoplasm is more negative than environment • voltage difference is measured across the plasma membrane – membrane potential – resting potential in unstimulated neurons • -60 mV – action potential • a brief reversal of membrane polarity • can be transmitted along a neuronal axon membrane potential • electrical potential (voltage) is the tendency of charged particles to move between two locations • membrane potential represents the tendency of ions to cross the membrane – ions cannot freely cross the hydrophobic membrane – ion channels and pumps enable ion flow across the cell membrane – dominant ions are Na+, Cl-, K+ & Ca2+ Pumps and Channels • channels permit diffusion of ions across the membrane – channels are more or less selective – channels may be open or gated • open channels are unrestricted • voltage-gated channels respond to voltage changes • chemically-gated channels respond to specific chemical signals Na & K channels Figure 44.5 Pumps and Channels • pumps actively transport ions across the membrane – sodium-potassium (Na+-K+) pump • dominant neuronal plasma membrane pump • pumps Na+ out, K+ in • maintains cytoplasmic K+ higher and Na+ lower than external Na-K pump Figure 44.5 K+ channels maintain resting potential Figure 44.6 membrane depolarization by gated Na+ channels Figure 44.8 membrane hyperpolarization by gated Cl- channels Figure 44.8 Pumps and Channels • gated channels can alter membrane polarity – opening Na+ channels depolarizes the membrane – opening K+ or Cl- channels hyperpolarizes the membrane • transmission and processing of information occurs through changes in neuronal membrane potentials Nerve Impulses (Action Potentials) • opening gated channels results in ion flow – ion flow in a neuron dissipates over distance – ion flow cannot transmit a signal to a distant target • localized ion flow can stimulate nearby voltage-gated channels – if enough Na+ enters, neighboring channels will open – if each channel triggers its neighbor, a signal can travel the length of a neural axon action potential Figure 44.9 Nerve Impulses (Action Potentials) • an action potential – results from a 1-2 millisecond opening of Na+ channels – membrane potential rises rapidly (spike) then returns to resting potential – Na+ channels cannot open for 1-2 milliseconds following an action potential (refractory period) Nerve Impulses (Action Potentials) • an action potential – travels down an axon without loss of strength • depolarization opens Na+ gates • short range current flow depolarizes nearby membrane • neighboring Na+ gates open action potential propagation Figure 44.10 Nerve Impulses (Action Potentials) • action potentials travel rapidly along nerves – rate of transmission is related to diameter of axon • thicker axon propagates signal faster • propagation rate in vertebrates is enhanced by glial cells – Schwann cells form discontinuous sheath • gaps = nodes of Ranvier • action potentials fire at nodes nodes of Ranvier Figure 44.12 saltatory propagation Figure 44.12 Nerve Impulses (Action Potentials) • action potential at a node of Ranvier – propagates by current flow to next node – current flow is supported by myelin sheath – saltatory (jumping) propagation is more rapid than continuous propagation Synaptic Communication • synapse – presynaptic cell membrane – postsynaptic cell membrane – synaptic cleft • neuromuscular junction – motor neuron => muscle cell – one axon, many branches & axon terminals – axon terminals produce neurotransmitter a neuromuscular junction Figure 44.13 Synaptic Communication • neuromuscular junction – presynaptic membrane releases acetylcholine from vesicles by exocytosis – acetylcholine diffuses across synaptic cleft – postsynaptic membrane (motor end plate) receptors bind acetylcholine and open Na+/K+ channels – motor end plate depolarizes – acetylcholinesterase degrades acetylcholine in synaptic cleft acetylcholine function Figure 44.14 Synaptic Communication • presynaptic axon – transmits a signal in response to action potential arrival – action potential triggers voltage-gated calcium channel – calcium influx causes acetylcholine vesicles to fuse with presynaptic membrane Synaptic Communication • postsynaptic membrane – motor end plate receives signal, opens channels, depolarizes – motor end plate does not fire action potentials (too few voltage-gated channels) – motor end plate must transmit enough Na+ to spread depolarization to neighboring areas – depolarization of neighboring plasma membrane fires action potentials synaptic transmission at a neuromuscular junction Figure 44.13 Synaptic Communication • excitatory & inhibitory neuronal synapses – different presynaptic neurotransmitters – different postsynaptic receptors • excitatory synapses depolarize (EPSP) • inhibitory synapses hyperpolarize (IPSP) –e.g. GABA or glycine causes Clchannels to open Information Processing • Nerve Impulse (action potential) is all-or-none • firing action potential depends on sum of all incoming information – axon hillock receives EPSP/IPSP from all dendrites and cell body – IPSPs oppose depolarization by EPSPs – axon hillock fires action potential when membrane depolarizes to threshold Information Processing • axon hillock sums EPSPs & IPSPs – spatial summation adds effects of all synapses at one time – temporal summation adds effects of synapses firing rapidly over time spatial and temporal summation at the axon hillock Figure 44.15 Information Processing • presynaptic excitation and inhibition – synapse between axon terminal of one neuron and axon terminal of another – first neuron regulates amount of neurotransmitter released by axon terminal responding to action potential Information Processing • neurotransmitter receptors – ionotropic receptors are ion channels – metabotropic receptors influence ion channels indirectly ionotropic receptors Figure 44.17 a metabotropic receptor Figure 44.16 Information Processing • electrical synapses (gap junctions) – very rapid – bi-directional – excitatory only – unable to perform termporal summation – require large membrane surface area – uncommon in nervous systems that utilize integration and exhibit learning Information Processing • neurotransmitters – more than 25 known – each may bind more than one receptor – response is determined by the receptor Table 44.1