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Chapter 10b Sensory Physiology Chemoreception: Smell and Taste • Olfaction is one of the oldest senses • Taste is a combination of five basic sensations • Taste transduction Olfaction • Link between smell, memory, and emotion • Vomeronasal organ (VNO) in rodents • Response to sex pheromones • Olfactory cells • Olfactory epithelium in nasal cavity • Odorants bind to odorant receptors, Gprotein-cAMP-linked membrane receptors Anatomy Summary: The Olfactory System Olfactory bulb Olfactory tract Olfactory epithelium (a) The olfactory epithelium lies high within the nasal cavity, and its olfactory cells project to the olfactory bulb. Figure 10-14a Anatomy Summary: The Olfactory System Olfactory bulb Bone Secondary sensory neurons Primary sensory neurons (olfactory cells) Olfactory epithelium (b) The olfactory cells synapse with secondary sensory neurons in the olfactory bulb. Figure 10-14b Anatomy Summary: The Olfactory System Olfactory receptor cell axons (cranial nerve I) carry information to olfactory bulb. Lamina propria Basal cell layer includes stem cells that replace olfactory receptor cells. Developing olfactory cell Olfactory cell (sensory neuron) Supporting cell Olfactory cilia (dendrites) contain odorant receptors. Mucus layer: Odorant molecules must dissolve in this layer. (c) Olfactory cells in the olfactory epithelium live only about two months. They are replaced by new cells whose axons must find their way to the olfactory bulb. Figure 10-14c Olfactory Pathways Figure 10-15 Taste Buds Figure 10-16a–b Taste Buds Sweet Umami Bitter Salty or sour Tight junction Support cell Presynaptic cell ATP Serotonin Receptor cells Primary gustatory neurons (c) Taste ligands create Ca2+ signals that release serotonin or ATP. Figure 10-16c Summary of Taste Transduction 1 Gustducin Sweet, umami, or bitter ligand Salt Sour Na+ H+ 1 GPCR 2 1 Ligands activate the taste cell. 1 Na+ 2 H+ 2 Signal transduction Cell depolarizes Ca2+ Ca2+ 3 3 2 Various intracellular pathways are activated. ? ? Ca2+ Ca2+ 3 Ca2+ 3 Ca2+ signal in the cytoplasm triggers exocytosis or ATP formation. Ca2+ ? ATP Serotonin 4 4 4 Primary gustatory neurons 5 5 5 4 Neurotransmitter or ATP is released. 5 Primary sensory neuron fires and action potentials are sent to the brain. Figure 10-17 Summary of Taste Transduction 1 Gustducin Sweet, umami, or bitter ligand Salt Sour Na+ H+ 1 GPCR 2 1 Ligands activate the taste cell. 1 Na+ 2 H+ 2 Signal transduction Cell depolarizes Ca2+ Ca2+ 3 3 2 Various intracellular pathways are activated. ? ? Ca2+ Ca2+ 3 Ca2+ 3 Ca2+ signal in the cytoplasm triggers exocytosis or ATP formation. Ca2+ ? ATP Serotonin 4 4 4 Primary gustatory neurons 5 5 5 4 Neurotransmitter or ATP is released. 5 Primary sensory neuron fires and action potentials are sent to the brain. Figure 10-17, steps 1–5 Summary of Taste Transduction • Humans and animals may develop specific hunger such as salt appetite Salt Sweet, umami, or bitter ligand 1 Gustducin Sour H+ Na+ 1 GPCR 2 1 Ligands activate the taste cell. 1 Na+ 2 H+ 2 Signal transduction Cell depolarizes Ca2+ Ca2+ 3 ? 2 Various intracellular pathways are activated. ? Ca2+ 3 Ca2+ 3 Ca2+ 3 Ca2+ signal in the cytoplasm triggers exocytosis or ATP formation. Ca2+ ? ATP Serotonin 4 4 4 Primary gustatory neurons 5 5 5 4 Neurotransmitter or ATP is released. 5 Primary sensory neuron fires and action potentials are sent to the brain. Figure 10-17 The Ear: Hearing • • • • • Perception of sound Sound transduction The cochlea Auditory pathways Hearing loss Anatomy Summary: The Ear EXTERNAL EAR MIDDLE EAR The pinna directs sound waves into the ear INNER EAR The oval window and the round window separate the fluid-filled inner ear from the air-filled middle ear. Malleus Incus Semicircular Oval canals window Nerves Stapes Vestibular appartus Ear canal Tympanic membrane Cochlea Round window To pharynx Internal jugular vein Eustachian tube Figure 10-18 Sound Waves • Hearing is our perception of energy carried by sound waves Figure 10-19a Sound Waves Figure 10-19b Sound Transmission Through the Ear 1 Sound waves strike the tympanic membrane and become vibrations. 2 The sound wave 3 The stapes is attached to energy is transferred the membrane of the oval to the three bones window. Vibrations of the of the middle ear, oval window create fluid which vibrate. waves within the cochlea. Cochlear nerve Incus Ear canal Malleus Oval Stapes window 5 Vestibular duct (perilymph) 3 2 1 Tympanic membrane 6 Cochlear duct (endolymph) 4 Tympanic duct (perilymph) Round window 4 The fluid waves push on the 5 Neurotransmitter release onto sensory neurons flexible membranes of the creates action potentials cochlear duct. Hair cells bend that travel through the and ion channels open, cochlear nerve to creating an electrical signal that the brain. alters neurotransmitter release. 6 Energy from the waves transfers across the cochlear duct into the tympanic duct and is dissipated back into the middle ear at the round window. Figure 10-20, steps 1–6 Anatomy Summary: The Cochlea Oval window Saccule Vestibular duct Cochlear duct Organ of Corti Cochlea Uncoiled Helicotrema Round window Tympanic duct Basilar membrane Bony cochlear wall Vestibular duct Cochlear duct Tectorial membrane Organ of Corti The movement of the tectorial membrane moves the cilia on the hair cells. Basilar Tympanic membrane duct Cochlear nerve transmits action potentials from the hair cells to the auditory cortex. Fluid wave Cochlear duct Tectorial membrane Hair cell Tympanic duct Basilar membrane Nerve fibers of cochlear nerve Figure 10-21 Anatomy Summary: The Cochlea Oval window Saccule Vestibular duct Cochlear Organ of duct Corti Cochlea Uncoiled Helicotrema Round window Tympanic Basilar duct membrane Figure 10-21 (1 of 3) Anatomy Summary: The Cochlea • Perilymph in vestibular and tympanic duct • Similar to plasma • Endolymph in cochlear duct • Secreted by epithelial cells • Similar to intracellular fluid Anatomy Summary: The Cochlea Bony cochlear wall Vestibular duct Cochlear duct Tectorial membrane Organ of Corti Basilar membrane Tympanic duct Cochlear nerve transmits action potentials from the hair cells to the auditory cortex. Figure 10-21 (2 of 3) Anatomy Summary: The Cochlea The movement of the tectorial membrane moves the cilia on the hair cells. Fluid wave Cochlear duct Tectorial membrane Hair cell Tympanic duct Basilar membrane Nerve fibers of cochlear nerve Figure 10-21 (3 of 3) Signal Transduction in Hair Cells (a) At rest (b) Excitation (c) Inhibition Tip link Some channels open Stereocilium Channels closed. Less cation entry hyperpolarizes cell. More channels open. Cation entry depolarizes cell. Hair cell Primary sensory neuron Action potentials Action potentials increase No action potentials mV Action potentials in primary sensory neuron Time 0 mV –30 Release Membrane potential of hair cell Excitation opens ion channels Release Inhibition closes ion channels Figure 10-22 Sensory Coding for Pitch Figure 10-23a Sensory Coding for Pitch Figure 10-23b Auditory Pathways • Waves • Electrical signals in cochlea • Primary sensory neurons to brain in medulla oblongata • Sound projected to nuclei • Main pathway synapses in nuclei in midbrain and thalamus • Auditory cortex Anatomy Summary: The Cochlea Right auditory cortex Left auditory cortex Right thalamus Left thalamus Midbrain Pons Right cochlea Cochlear branch of right vestibulocochlear nerve (VIII) Left cochlea Medulla Cochlear branch of left vestibulocochlear nerve (VIII) Figure 10-24 Hearing Loss • Conductive • No transmission through either external or middle ear • Central • Damage to neural pathway between ear and cerebral cortex or to cortex itself • Sensorineural • Damage to structures of inner ear