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Nervous Tissue Chapter 12 12-1 Nervous Tissue • Overview of the nervous system • Nerve cells (neurons) • Supportive cells (neuroglia) • Electrophysiology of neurons • Synapses • Neural integration 12-2 Overview of Nervous System • Master Control of the Body – Endocrine and nervous system maintain internal coordination • endocrine = _____________________________ • nervous – _______________________ receive information – brain and spinal cord determine responses – brain and spinal cord __________________________ _____________________________________________ 12-3 Subdivisions of Nervous System Two major subdivisions • _________________________ – brain and spinal cord enclosed in bony coverings • _________________________ – nerve = _________________ _______________________ – _____________ = swelling of ____________ in a nerve 12-4 Functional Divisions of PNS • Sensory (____________) divisions (receptors to CNS) – visceral sensory and somatic sensory division • Motor (_______________) division (CNS to effectors) – visceral motor division (ANS) effectors: cardiac, smooth muscle, glands • sympathetic division (action) • parasympathetic division (digestion) – somatic motor division effectors: skeletal muscle 12-5 Fundamental Types of Neurons • Sensory (afferent) neurons – _________________________ _________________________ – Transmit info to brain/spinal cord • ___________________________ – In between sensory and motor pathways in CNS – 90% of neurons are interneurons – _________________________ _________________________ • ___________________________ – send signals to muscles and glands – organs respond called effectors 12-6 Properties of Neurons • ____________________________ – ability to respond to changes (stimuli) in/out of body • Conductivity – _______________________________ • ____________________________ – ____________________________________ 12-7 Structure of a Neuron • _________________________ _________________________ – single, central nucleus – cytoskeleton • microtubules and neurofibrils (bundles of actin filaments) • RER Nissl bodies • _________________________ – ______________________ • Singe axon (nerve fiber) arising from axon hillock for rapid conduction – _______________________ _______________________ 12-8 Variation in Neural Structure • ____________________ – most common – many dendrites/one axon • Bipolar neuron – ______________________ – ______________________ • ____________________ – sensory from skin and organs to spinal cord • Anaxonic neuron – many dendrites/no axon – help in visual processes 12-9 Types of Neuroglial Cells • ___________________________________________ – wraps around nerve fibers • ___________________________________________ • ___________________________________________ – in areas of infection, trauma or stroke 12-10 Types of Neuroglial Cells • ________________________________ – – – – – – _________________________________________________ regulate composition of brain tissue fluid convert glucose to lactate to feed neurons secrete nerve growth factor promoting synapse formation electrical influence on synaptic signaling sclerosis – damaged neurons replace by hardened mass of astrocytes • ________________________________________ 12-11 Myelin • ________________________________________ – formed from wrappings of plasma membrane • 20% protein and 80 % lipid (looks white) – all myelination completed by late adolescence • In PNS, hundreds of layers wrap axon – ____________________________________________ – covered by basal lamina and endoneurium 12-12 • Gaps between myelin segments = _________________ Speed of Nerve Signal • Diameter of fiber and presence of myelin • ______________________________________________ • Speeds – small, unmyelinated fibers = 0.5 - 2.0 m/sec – small, myelinated fibers = 3 - 15.0 m/sec – large, myelinated fibers = up to 120 m/sec • Functions – slow signals supply the stomach and dilate pupil – fast signals supply skeletal muscles and transport sensory signals for vision and balance 12-13 Regeneration of Peripheral Nerves • Soma and neurilemmal tube intact • Stranded end of axon and myelin sheath degenerate – cell soma swells, ER breaks up and some cells die • Axon stump puts out several sprouts • _____________________________ _____________________________ – schwann cells produce nerve growth factors 12-14 Local Potentials • Local disturbances in membrane potential – ___________________ ___________________ – depolarization (opens gated Na+ channels) decreases potential across cell membrane • Na+ rushes in • Na+ diffuses for short distance inside membrane producing a change in voltage called a local potential 12-15 Local Potentials 2 • ___________________________ – vary in magnitude with stimulus strength – get weaker the farther they spread – are reversible as K+ diffuses out of cell – ____________________________________ ____________________________________ 12-16 Action Potentials • __________________________________________ __________________________________________ • If threshold potential (-55mV) is reached voltagegated Na+ channels open (Na+ enters causing depolarization) • Slow K+ gates fully open • K+ exits repolarizing the cell • __________________________________________ 12-17 – excessive exiting of K+ The Refractory Period • Resists stimulation • ________________________ – as long as Na+ gates are open – _________________________ • ________________________ – as long as K+ gates are open – __________________________ __________________________ • Refractory period occurs to a small patch of membrane at one time (quickly recovers) 12-19 Impulse Conduction - Unmyelinated Fibers 12-20 _______________________________ • Voltage-gated channels needed for APs – fewer than 25 per m2 in myelin-covered regions – up to 12,000 per m2 in nodes of Ranvier • Fast Na+ diffusion occurs between nodes 12-21 Saltatory Conduction • Notice how the action potentials jump from node of Ranvier to node of Ranvier. 12-22 Chemical Synapse Structure • ______________________ have synaptic vesicles with neurotransmitter and ____________________ have receptors 12-26 Types of Neurotransmitters • _______________________________ – • • Amino acid neurotransmitters _______________________________ – – – • formed from acetic acid and choline replace –COOH in amino acids with another functional group ______________________ (epi, NE and dopamine) indolamines (serotonin and histamine) ________________ 12-27 Synaptic Transmission 3 kinds of synapses with different actions • _______________________________ = ACh • Inhibitory GABA-ergic synapse = GABA • ________________________________ = NE Synaptic delay (.5 msec) – time from arrival of nerve signal at synapse to start of AP in postsynaptic cell 12-29 Neural Integration • More synapses a neuron has the greater its information-processing capability – cerebral cortex 40,000 synapses • estimated to contain 100 trillion synapses • Chemical synapses are decision-making components – ______________________________________ 12-30 Postsynaptic Potentials- EPSP • __________________________________ _____________________ – a positive voltage change causing postsynaptic cell _____________________ • result from Na+ flowing into the cell – glutamate and aspartate are excitatory neurotransmitters • ACh and norepinephrine may excite or inhibit depending on cell 12-31 Postsynaptic Potentials- IPSP • ___________________________________ postsynaptic cell to be less likely to fire (hyperpolarize) • result of Cl- flowing into the cell or K+ leaving the cell – glycine and GABA are inhibitory neurotransmitters • ACh and norepinephrine may excite or inhibit depending upon cell 12-32