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The Nerve Impulse

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The Nerve Impulse The nerve impulse is like electricity moving through a wire The production of nerve impulses depends on the movement of positively charged ions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Nerve Impulse


1
The Nerve Impulse
  • The nerve impulse is like electricity moving
    through a wire
  • The production of nerve impulses depends on the
    movement of positively charged ions across the
    cell membrane.
  • Sodium (Na) Potassium (K)

2
Resting Potential
3
Resting Potential
  • There is more potassium (K ) ions in the neuron
    than in the fluid outside
  • There are more sodium (Na ) ions in the fluid
    outside the neuron than inside the neuron.
  • The resting neuron has a positive charge outside
    the cell, and a negative charge inside the cell

4
Resting Potential
  • Because both sodium and potassium ions can move
    across the cell membrane, the unequal
    distribution of these ions must be maintained by
    active transport.
  • Proteins in the cell membrane actively pump
    sodium ions out of the neuron and actively pump
    potassium ions into the neuron.
  • Some K leaks back out of the cell through
    channelsthis maintains the negative charge
    inside the cell

5
Sodium Potassium Pump
6
Sodium Potassium Pump
  • Pumps more sodium out of the cell than potassium
    in
  • Compare the charge inside the neuron to outside
    the neuron?

7
Resting Potential
  • As a result of active transport (K in, Na out)
    and diffusion (K out, Na in), a negative charge
    builds up on the inside of the membrane and a
    positive charge builds up on the outside of the
    membrane.
  • The difference in electrical charge across the
    cell membrane of a resting neuron is called is
    resting potential.
  • A neuron has a resting potential of about -70
    millivolts (mV)

8
A Nerve Impulse
9
Nerve Impulses on the Move
Nerve impulses are like ripples caused by
throwing a pebble into water. The ripple is
caused by the up and down movement of water. The
nerve impulse is the movement of ions.
10
Moving Impulses
  • A nerve impulse begins when a neuron is
    stimulated by another neuron or its environment.
  • The cell membrane in axon contains thousands of
    protein channels. Generally the sodium channels
    are closed.

11
  • At the leading edge of an impulse, sodium
    channels open allowing sodium ions to flow into
    the cell.
  • This flow of positive ions causes a temporary
    change in the charges on the cell membrane.
  • The inside of the membrane gains a positive
    charge and the outside of the membrane gains a
    negative charge.
  • This reversal of charges across the membrane
    along the length of an axon is called an action
    potential.

12
  • As the impulse passes through the axon, potassium
    channels open allowing K ions to flow out of the
    cell.
  • The resting potential is now reestablished with
    the negative charge inside the membrane and the
    positive charge outside the membrane.
  • A neuron has an action potential of about 30 mV.

13
Action Potential
  • An action potential is caused by positive ions
    moving in and then out of the neuron at a certain
    spot on the neuron membrane.
  • An action potential is initiated by a stimulus
    above a certain intensity or threshold.

14
Action Potential
  • Not all stimuli initiate an action potential. The
    stimulus could be a pin prick, light, heat, sound
    or an electrical disturbance in another part of
    the neuron.
  • Action potential is an all or nothing mechanism,
    just like a mousetrap or stack of dominoes.

15
Action Potential Depolarization
  • A stimulus causes a gate in the Na Channel to
    open. Since there is a high concentration of Na
    outside, Na diffuses into the neuron. The
    electrical potential changes to 40 mV.

16
Action Potential Repolarization
  • Depolarization causes the K Channel gate to
    immediately open. K diffuses out of the neuron.
    This reestablishes the initial electrical
    potential of -60 mV.

17
Action Potential Refractory Period
  • During this time ( 1 msec), the Na and K
    Channels cannot be opened by a stimulus.
  • The Na/K Pump actively pumps Na out of the
    neuron and K into the neuron. This reestablishes
    the initial ion distribution of the resting
    neuron.

18
Summary of Action Potential
19
Action Potential
  • This single action potential acts as a stimulus
    to neighboring proteins and initiates an action
    potential in another part of the neuron.
  • Ultimately a wave of action potentials travels
    from the dendrites all the way to the axon
    terminals.
  • At the axon terminal, the electrical impulse is
    converted to a chemical signal that stimulates a
    neighboring neuron.
  • These chemical signals are called
    neurotransmitters.

20
The Synapse
  • Synapse Small space where a neuron can transfer
    an impulse to another cell.
  • It is a small gap that separates the axon
    terminal from the dendrites of the next neuron.
  • The axon terminals contain tiny sacs filled with
    neurotransmitters.
  • Neurotransmitters Chemicals used by a neuron to
    transmit an impulse to another cell.

21
How does everything work together.
22
The Neuromuscular Junction
  • Definition the junction between motor neurons
    and muscle fibers
  • Electrical impulses in a motor neuron travel
    along the axon to the synaptic knobs
  • At the synaptic knobs the chemical
    neurotransmitter acetylcholine is released and
    diffuses across the gap between the motor neuron
    and muscle fiber

23
  • Acetylcholine stimulates the sarcoplasmic
    reticulum in the muscle fibers (myofibrils) to
    release stored calcium
  • The stored calcium is released and bonds to
    troponin on the actin fibers

24
  • When the calcium bonds to troponin, this causes a
    shift in the tropomyosin protein strand
  • When the tropomyosin shifts, myosin bonding sites
    along the actin are exposed
  • The myosin heads can freely bond to the
    actinthey begin to slide along the actin like
    hands pulling on a rope

25
  • http//outreach.mcb.harvard.edu/animations/actionp
    otential.swf
  • Action Potentials
  • http//www.blackwellpublishing.com/matthews/channe
    l.html
  • (Action potentials)
  • http//www.blackwellpublishing.com/matthews/nmj.ht
    ml
  • (synapse and neurotransmitters)
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