Title: Nervous system I
1Chapter 10
2Function of neurons
- Excitability (irritability)-ability to respond to
a stimulus - conductivity-electrical signals quickly reach
other cells at distant locations - Secretion-electrical signal reaches end of neuron
and stimulates the release of neurotransmitter
that stimulates the next cell
3Types of neurons
- Sensory (afferent) neurons-detect changes in
environment (stimuli) and transmit this
information INTO the central nervous system - Cells that respond to stimuli are called
receptors - Interneurons (association) neurons-found in the
CNS and connect the sensory and motor (90 of
all neurons are this type) - Motor (efferent) neurons-send signals to muscle
and glands which carry out the response to
stimuli (cells or organs that carry out the
response are called effectors)
4Structural Classification of Neurons
- http//www.utsa.edu/tsi/2000tsi/people/Jordan/Anat
omy20Pages/Classification20of20neurons.html - Unipolar-a single process leading away from the
cells body (sensory neurons from skin) - Bipolar-one axon and one dendrite (olfactory
cells of nasal cavity) - Multipolar-one axon and many dendrites, most
common - http//www.getbodysmart.com
5Subdivision of the Nervous System
- Central Nervous System-Brain and Spinal Cord
- Contains gray matter and white matter
- Peripheral Nervous System-everything not in the
CNS - Contains nerves and ganglia
- Nerves are bundles of nerve fibers wrapped in
fibrous connective tissue (more in a minute!) - Ganglia are swellings where the nerve cell bodies
are located
6Subdivisions of the PNS
- Functionally divided into sensory and motor
subdivisions - Each of these is divided into somatic and
visceral subdivisions - Put it all together you have
- Somatic sensory-signals from skin, muscle, bone
- Visceral sensory-signals from viscera
- Somatic motor-signals to skeletal muscle
- Visceral motor (autonomic)-signals to glands,
cardiac and smooth muscle - Have sympathetic and parasympathetic divisions
7More on nerves
- A nerve is a bundle of thousands of axons, plus
blood vessels, and connective tissue that lie
outside the brain and spinal cord - Nerves coming from the brain are called cranial
nerves - Nerves coming from the spinal cord are called
spinal nerves - Each of these is protected by 3 layers
endoneurium, perineurium, epineurium
8(No Transcript)
9Cells of Nervous system
- http//psych.hanover.edu/Krantz/neural/struct3.htm
l for a quiz over structure - 3 main parts dendrites, cell body, axon
10Structure of cells of the nervous system
- Neurons-control center is cell body and contains
the nucleus - The soma or cell body has mitochondria,
cytoplasm, lysosomes, golgi bodies, ER, and
cytoskeleton - The rough ER is called Nissl bodies and are
unique to neurons - No mitosis after adolescence, but unspecialized
stem cells can divide in CNS and become neurons - Lipofuscin pigment collects with age and pushes
nucleus to side (no apparent problems associated
with this)
11Dendrites
- -branches that receive signals from other neurons
and send them into the cell body - Neurons can have one or many (receive more
information with many)
12Axons
- Axon hillock is a mound coming off the cell body
where the axon arises - Neurons have a single axon that is specialized
for receiving signals from the cell body - May branch (axon collateral)
- Cytoplasm of axon is axoplasm, cell membrane is
axolemma - Synaptic knob is found at the terminal end of the
axon contain synaptic vesicles with
neurotransmitter - forms a synapse with the muscle, gland, or other
nerve
13Axonal transport
- All the proteins needed by neuron are made in
soma and travel by axonal transport - Travel down the axon is by anterograde transport
- Return used synaptic vesicles, etc and
information up axon by retrograde transport - Also have axoplasmic flow which is only
antergrade and slow, and governs regeneration
speed of damaged nerve fibers
14Neurogliahttp//www.cliffsnotes.com/WileyCDA/Clif
fsReviewTopic/Neuroglia.topicArticleId-22032,artic
leId-21933.html
- Outnumber neurons 50 to 1
- Bind neurons together and support them
- 6 types
- Oligodendrocytes-forms myelin sheath around nerve
fiber and insulates it, speeds up the impulse
conduction - Astrocytes-star shaped, most abundant type in
CNS, help form Blood Brain Barrier, contact blood
vessels
15Neuroglia continued
- Ependymal cells -produce CSF in CNS
- Microglia-small macrophages that phagocytize dead
cells in CNS - Schwann cells -envelop nerve fibers in PNS and
produce myelin sheath, assist in regeneration of
damaged nerve fibers - Satellite cells -surround neuron cell bodies in
ganglia of PNS, little known of function - http//www.jsmarcussen.com/gbs/uk/damage.htm for
article on Guillain-Barr Syndrome (GBS)
16Myelin
- Myelin sheath is insulating layer around a nerve
fiber, segmented by Nodes of Ranvier - Formed by oligodendrocytes in CNS and Schwann
cells in PNS - Little myelin in brain at birth, develops rapidly
in infancy and completed in adolescence (high
lipid diet important)
17Oligodendrocytes
- Arm like processes of oligodendrocytes reach out
to nerve fibers and spiral around them - Almost no cytoplasm between the membranes
- Takes many oligodendrocytes to cover a nerve fiber
18Schwann Cells
- Spiral around a single nerve fiber
- Puts down around 100 layers of membrane
- Surrounded by neurilemma which is the outermost
coil - Neurilemma contains the nucleus and most of the
cytoplasm (not in CNS) - Surrounding this is a basement membrane and
endoneurium that is not found in CNS
19Speed of impulses
- Depends on myelin and diameter of nerve fiber
- Large myelinated fibers are fastest-120 m/sec due
to saltatory conduction - Small myelinated fibers-3-15 m/sec
- Small unmyelinated fibers-0.5-2.0 m/sec
http//www.brainviews.com/abFiles/AniSalt.htm Anim
ation
20Regeneration of nerve fibers
- Damaged Peripheral nerve fiber can regenerate if
soma is intact and some neurilemma remains - First damaged myelin sheath and axon degenerate
and are removed - Next a regeneration tube forms by neurilemma and
endoneurium - Axon stump puts out sprouts and one will find
its way into the tube - Grows 3-5 mm per day, other sprouts are
reabsorbed - Must make sure connection is the same!
21Animations for nerve impulse
- http//www.biology4all.com/resources_library/sourc
e/63.swf - http//www.biologymad.com/NervousSystem/nerveimpul
ses.htm
22Resting Membrane Potential
- Living cells are polarized (has potential like a
charge in a battery) - The charge difference across the plasma membrane
is the resting membrane potential (RMP) - This is typically about -70 mV (millivolts)
- The negative value means there are more
negatively charged particles on the inside of the
membrane than on the outside
23How does this happen?
- Electrical currents in the body are created by
the flow of ions such as Na and K though
openings or channels in the membrane - Gated channels can be opened and closed by
various stimuli, enabling cells to turn currents
off and on - The RMP is due to the fact that electrolytes are
unevenly distributed between ECF outside the
plasma membrane and ICF inside
24RMP continued
- Depends on 3 things
- diffusion of ions
- Selective permeability of membrane allowing some
ions to move more easily - Electrical attraction of anions and cations to
each other - Potassium has the greatest influence because the
plasma membrane is more permeable to these ions
25Electrolytes and RMP
- Sodium ions are 12 times as concentrated in the
ECF as the ICF (more outside than inside) - Potassium is more concentrated in the ICF than
the ECF (about 40 times at equilibrium)-more
inside than outside - Both follow laws of diffusion and travel down
concentration gradients (greater to less
concentration) - Sodium leaks in and potassium leaks out, so a
sodium/potassium pump moves them back at a ratio
of 3 Na out for every 2 K in (this requires 1
ATP)
26Local Potentials (LP)
- When neuron is stimulated the response usually
begins at the dendrite, then the soma, and into
the axon and ends at synaptic bulb - A signal (pain, chemical, whatever) triggers
sodium channels to open and sodium will rush
inside the cell - This changes the charge on the inside so that it
becomes less negative - Once this begins it is depolarization
- These sodium ions diffuse for a short distance
and produce a current that travels from pt. of
stimulation toward trigger zone (short range
change is local potential)
27Four difference between local and action
potentials
- 1. local potentials are graded they vary in
strength depending on strength of stimulus - 2. they are decremental they get weaker as they
spread because K leaks out - 3. they are reversible when stimulation
ceases, K diffuses out quickly and cell returns
to resting potential - 4. local potentials can be inhibitory or
excitatory - http//faculty.washington.edu/chudler/ap.html
scan down page to find a puzzle
28Action Potentials
- This zone is a more dramatic change
- Occur only where there are lots of voltage
regulated gates - Most of the soma only has 50-75 gates per square
micrometer, no action potential possible - The trigger zone has 350-500 gates per square
micrometer - If the excitatory local potential reaches the
trigger zone with enough strength, you get an
action potential (rapid up/down shift in voltage)
29Events in Action Potential
- When sodium arrives at axon hillock, they
depolarize the membrane there (LP) - If LP rises to threshold level (-55 mV) voltage
regulated gates open - Neuron fires and produces an AP and Na and K
gates open - Na is fast, K is slower
- Acts like positive feedback so more and more Na
rushes in and voltage rises fast (depolarization)
30Continued
- Once voltage measures 0 mV the Na gates
inactivate and close, but it takes time for all
to close - Ending voltage is 35 mV (approximate)
- Membrane is now positive inside, negative outside
- By this time the K gates are fully open and K
rush out (repolarization) - Potassium gates stay open longer so amount of K
that leaves is greater than what was there
resulting in hyperpolarization (1 or 2 mV
difference) - Ion diffusion will eventually restore the balance
found in RMP
31AP vs LP
- Action potentials follow All OR None Law meaning
if the threshold is reached it responds
completely - APs are non-decremental and do not get weaker
with distance from trigger point - APs are irreversible, if threshold is reached it
cant be stopped (like firing a gun)
32Refractory Period
- Period of resistance to restimulation
- 2 phases
- Absolute refractory -no stimulus of any strength
can trigger a new action potential - Corresponds to opening of sodium channels (gates)
- Relative refractory- a strong stimulus can
trigger a new AP - Lasts until K gates close and hyperpolarization
is complete
33Myelinated vs unmyelinated
- In unmyelinated fibers Na gates line the entire
length - AP in trigger zone causes excitation and
depolarization immediately distal to spot - This repeats down the entire axon (like a wave in
a football stadium) - With myelinated fibers the only way a nerve
signal can travel is by jumping from Nodes of
Ranvier to Nodes of Ranvier (saltatory conduction)
34Synapse
- Impulses pass from neuron to neuron or other
cells at the synapse - The presynaptic neuron is before the synapse
- The postsynaptic neuron is after the synapse
- http//www.mind.ilstu.edu/flash/synapse_1.swf
play this clip!
35Synapses continued
- Presynaptic neuron can synapse with dendrite,
soma, or axon of another nerve - This is axodendritic, axosomatic, or axoaxonic
synapse - Axons can have a huge number of synapses (in
cerebellum of brain one neuron can have 100,000
synapses)
36Neurotransmitter
- Acetylcholine was first discovered
- There are over 100 neurotransmitters
- 3 main categories according to chemical
composition - 1. Acetylcholine
- 2. Amino acids-glycine, glutamine, aspartate,
GABA - 3. Monoamines or biogenic amines made from
amino acids - -include catecholamines like epinephrine and
- NE and indolamines like serotonin and
- histamine
37Neurotransmitters
- http//thebrain.mcgill.ca/flash/i/i_01/i_01_m/i_01
_m_ana/i_01_m_ana.html
- A fourth category is neuropeptides, differ
because they are stored in secretory granules - Substance P mediates pain transmission
- Beta endorphin-produces runners high
- Enkephalins-act as pain relievers by inhibiting
substance P - See tables 10.4-10.6
38Neural integration
- The ability of neurons to process ALL
information, store and recall, and make decisions - Post-synaptic potentials
- EPSP-excitatory postsynaptic potential-any change
that makes a neuron more likely to fire (usually
Na entering) glutamate and aspartate - IPSP-inhibitory postsynaptic potential-hyperpolari
zation will make the postsynaptic cell less
likely to fire (extra K leaving) glycine and
GABA)
39Summation, Facilitation, Inhibition
- Neuron may receive input from 1000s of
Pre-synaptic neurons at the same time - Some are EPSP and some are IPSP, net effect
determines what will happen - Summation is the process of adding the
post-synaptic potentials and responding to net
effects - Facilitation is when one neurons enhances the
effect of another - Presynaptic inhibition is opposite of
facilitation and is used to reduce unwanted
synaptic transmissions
40Neuronal pools and circuits
- Thousands to miIlions of interneurons that
control body function - Follow a neuronal pathway
- 1. diverging circuit-one nerve fiber branches
and synapses with several postsynaptic cells - 2. converging circuit-input from many nerve
fibers is funneled into one - 3. Reverberating circuit-linear sequence where C
sends collateral back to A. Every time C fires
it stimulates A and C - 4. Parallel after-discharge circuit-single input
diverges to stimulate several chains and
eventually re-converge to output neuron