Title: Sensory Systems
1Sensory Systems
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2Sensory Systems
- Sensory Cells Transduction of Stimuli into
signals for nervous system. Modified neurons - 1. Chemoreceptors Responding to Specific
Molecules - 2. Mechanoreceptors Detecting Stimuli that
Distort Membranes - 3. Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding
to Light
3Figure 45.1 Sensory Cell Membrane Receptor
Proteins Respond to Stimuli
1. Mechanoreceptor
2. Chemoreceptor
3. Photoreceptor
4Sensory Cells and Transduction of Stimuli
- Sensory cells have
- membrane receptor proteins that detect a stimulus
and respond by altering the flow of ions across
the plasma membrane. - The resulting change in membrane potential causes
the sensory cell to fire action potentials or to
change its secretion of a neurotransmitter onto
an associated neuron that fires action
potentials. - The intensity of the stimulus is encoded in the
frequency of the action potentials produced.
- Simply depolarization events in sensory cell,
interpreted in different ways according to the
different places in the CNS.
5Sensory Cells and Transduction of Stimuli
- Some information is sensed without our being
conscious of it. - levels of CO2, blood sugar, and O2. important
for the maintenance of homeostasis. - Sensory cells and other types of cells form
sensory organs, such as eyes, ears, and noses. - Sensory systems
- the sensory cells the associated structures
neuronal networks that process the
information.
6Sensory Cells and Transduction of Stimuli
- In ionotropic sensory detection, the receptor
protein itself is part of the ion channel and, by
changing its conformation, opens or closes the
channel pore. - In metabotropic sensory detection, the receptor
protein is linked to a G protein that activates a
cascade of intracellular events that eventually
open or close ion channels.
- The affected receptor ? action potential ?
nervous system. - stimulus ? change in the resting membrane
potential of a sensory cell receptor potential
7Figure 45.2 Stimulating a Sensory Cell Produces
a Receptor Potential
8Sensory Cells and Transduction of Stimuli
- Primary sensory cells generate action potentials
directly. An example is the crayfish stretch
receptor. - Secondary sensory cells generate action
potentials indirectly by inducing the release of
neurotransmitter.
- Adaptation
- respond less when stimulation is repeated
9ChemoreceptorsResponding to Specific Molecules
- Chemoreceptors
- detect chemical stimuli.
- Chemoreceptors are responsible for smell and
taste, and for monitoring internal environmental
factors such as CO2 and O2 in the blood. - Corals, for example, can detect protein or even a
single type of amino acid, causing them to extend
tentacles in search of food.
10Figure 45.3 Some Scents Travel Great Distances
(Part 1)
- Pheromones - chemical signals to attract mates.
- Female silkworm moths pheromone (bombykol) from
glands at the tip of the abdomen, and males have
its receptors on their antennae. - A single molecule can stimulate a perceivable
action potential!! Activated 200 hairs or more /
second ? looking for female.
11ChemoreceptorsResponding to Specific Molecules
- Chemoreceptor Olfaction.
- In vertebrates, olfactory sensors in epithelial
cells at the top of the nasal cavity. - The axons of these sensors project to the
olfactory bulb of the brain. - The dendrites end in olfactory hairs at the
surface of the nasal epithelium.
12Figure 45.4 Olfactory Receptors Communicate
Directly with the Brain (Part 1)
13Figure 45.4 Olfactory Receptors Communicate
Directly with the Brain (Part 2)
14ChemoreceptorsResponding to Specific Molecules
- Odorants?
- Each olfactory receptor protein particular
odorant molecules activates a G protein. - The G protein ? activates an enzyme ? a second
messenger, such as cAMP. - The second messenger ? sodium channels open ?
influx of Na ? depolarizes the membrane ? action
potential
15ChemoreceptorsResponding to Specific Molecules
- How to distinguish the odorants?
- The number of odorant molecules vs. the number of
different receptor proteins. - Specific receptor protein? Combination?
- Odor, strong ? more odorant molecules
16ChemoreceptorsResponding to Specific Molecules
- Vomeronasal organ (VNO) is
- a small, paired tubular structure embedded in the
nasal epithelium. - Chemoreceptors of the VNO.
- VNO chemoreceptors ? an accessory olfactory bulb
? brain region for sexual and other instinctive
behaviors. - Detect pheromone (mice)
17ChemoreceptorsResponding to Specific Molecules
- Gustation
- the sense of taste, depends on clusters of
sensory cells called taste buds. - Humans have 10,000 taste buds embedded in the
epithelium of the tongue. - Many are in raised papillae, the small bumps on
human tongues. - The sensory cells form synapses with dendrites of
sensory neurons.
18Figure 45.5 Taste Buds Are Clusters of Sensory
Cells
19ChemoreceptorsResponding to Specific Molecules
- Receptor proteins in the microvilli bind specific
molecules. This causes the release of
neurotransmitters to the dendrites of associated
sensory neurons. - Taste buds are replaced every few days, but the
associated neurons live on. - Taste buds can distinguish sweet, salty, sour,
and bitter tastes. - Recently the savory meaty taste umami has been
added to the list of distinguishable tastes.
20MechanoreceptorsDetecting Stimuli that Distort
Membranes
- Mechanoreceptors
- sensitive to mechanical forces
- skin sensations and sensing blood pressure.
- Physical distortion of a mechanoreceptors plasma
membrane causes ion channels to open. - The rate of the action potentials is related to
the strength of the stimulus.
- Fingertips sensitive finer spatial
discrimination, much more dense mechanoreceptors
21Figure 45.6 The Skin Feels Many Sensations
Skin - diverse mechanoreceptors
Non-hairy skin
Low frequency
Higher frequency
22MechanoreceptorsDetecting Stimuli that Distort
Membranes
- Stretch receptors
- Position of its limbs and stresses on its
muscles and joints. - 1. muscle spindles in muscle
- muscle tone.
2. Golgi tendon organ tendons and ligaments.
prevent excessive force
23Figure 45.7 Stretch Receptors Are Activated when
Limbs Are Stretched (Part 1)
24Figure 45.7 Stretch Receptors Are Activated when
Limbs Are Stretched (Part 2)
25MechanoreceptorsDetecting Stimuli that Distort
Membranes
- Hair cells - mechanoreceptors.
- Each hair cell has a set of stereocilia
(microvilli). - When the stereocilia are bent in one direction,
receptor potential becomes more negative when
they are bent in the other direction, it becomes
more positive. - When the membrane potential becomes more
positive, the hair cell releases a
neurotransmitter to the sensory neuron associated
with it, and the sensory neuron sends action
potentials to the CNS.
26MechanoreceptorsDetecting Stimuli that Distort
Membranes
- Hair cells are found in the lateral line system
of fishes, providing information about movement
through the water and moving objects that cause
pressure waves in water. - Semicircular canals and the vestibular apparatus
in the mammalian inner ear use hair cells to
detect position and orientation of the head, as
well as acceleration produced by movement.
27Figure 45.8 The Lateral Line System Contains
Mechanoreceptors
28Figure 45.9 Organs in the Inner Ear of Mammals
Provide the Sense of Equilibrium (Part 1)
29Figure 45.9 Organs in the Inner Ear of Mammals
Provide the Sense of Equilibrium (Part 2)
30MechanoreceptorsDetecting Stimuli that Distort
Membranes
- Auditory systems
- Use mechanoreceptors to convert pressure waves
into action potentials. - Pinnae collect sound waves and direct them into
the auditory canal, which leads to the middle
inner ear. - The eardrum (tympanic membrane) covers the end of
the auditory canal and vibrates in response to
pressure waves. - Pressure on both sides of the eardrum
equilibrates because the Eustachian tube allows
airflow.
31Figure 45.10 Structures of the Human Ear (Part 1)
32MechanoreceptorsDetecting Stimuli that Distort
Membranes
- Ossicles (the malleus, incus, and stapes) to oval
window. 20 times amp. - Behind the oval window is the fluid-filled inner
ear. Movements of the oval window result in
pressure changes in the inner ear. - The inner ear, cochlea
- three parallel canals
- two membranes, Reissners membrane and the
basilar membrane.
33Figure 45.10 Structures of the Human Ear (Part 2)
- The organ of Corti rests on the basilar membrane.
- The organ of Corti contains hair cells whose
stereocilia are in contact with the tectorial
membrane.
34Figure 45.10 Structures of the Human Ear (Part 3)
35MechanoreceptorsDetecting Stimuli that Distort
Membranes
- What causes the basilar membrane to flex?
- The cochlea is filled with fluid and the upper
and lower canals are connected at the distal end.
Pressure waves displace the fluid in the upper
canal of the cochlea. - Instead of traveling all the way around the
canals, the waves of fluid cross the basilar
membrane, causing it to flex. - High frequency causes the basilar membrane
nearest the oval window to flex. - Low frequency causes flexing farther down the
membrane.
36Figure 45.11 Sensing Pressure Waves in the Inner
Ear (Part 1)
22,000 Hz
3,000 Hz
37MechanoreceptorsDetecting Stimuli that Distort
Membranes
- Deafness has two general causes
- Conduction deafness is loss of function of the
tympanic membrane or ossicles of the middle ear.
The ossicles stiffen with age causing loss of
ability to hear high frequency sound. - Nerve deafness is caused by inner ear or auditory
pathway damage, including damage to hair cells. - Loud music or noises can cause damage to hair
cells. This damage is cumulative and permanent.
38Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
- Photosensensation
-
- the sensitivity to light.
- It ranges from the ability to orient to the sun
to the ability to see. - Rhodopsins photosensitivity molecules in all
animal species. a family of pigments
39Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
- Rhodopsin molecules can absorb photons of light
and undergo shape changes. - Rhodopsin molecules consist of a protein called
opsin and a light-absorbing group,
11-cis-retinal. - When 11-cis-retinal absorbs a photon, it changes
to all-trans-retinal, which changes the
conformation of the opsin. This change signals
detection of light.
- The all-trans back to cis- form of retinal.
photoexcited rhodopsin ? membrane potential.
40Figure 45.12 Rhodopsin A Photosensitive Molecule
41Figure 45.13 A Rod Cell Responds to Light
- A rod cell is a modified neuron.
rhodopsin
Dark depolarize
mitochondria
Light hyperpolarize
42Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
- When light is absorbed by rhodopsin, it becomes
photoexcited and activates a G protein called
transducin. - The activated transducin activates a
phosphodiesterase, which converts cGMP to GMP. - cGMP keeps sodium channels open in light, GMP
levels rise and channels close.
43Figure 45.14 Light Absorption Closes Sodium
Channels (Part 1)
At Dark
44Figure 45.14 Light Absorption Closes Sodium
Channels (Part 2)
By Light
45Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
- The advantage of this system is that it amplifies
the signal. - Each single photon can cause activation of
several hundred transducin molecules, which in
turn, activate many phosphodiesterase molecules. - A single photon can close a huge number of sodium
channels.
46Figure 45.15 Ommatidia The Functional Units of
Insect Eyes
- Arthropods have compound eyes consisting of many
optical units called ommatidia.
47Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
- Both vertebrates and cephalopod mollusks have
highly evolved eyes. - Vertebrate eyes are fluid-filled spheres bound by
tough connective tissue called sclera. - A transparent cornea in the front allows light
passage. - Inside the cornea is the pigmented iris, which
controls the amount of light that can enter. - The pupil is the region where light enters.
- The lens makes fine adjustments in the focus of
images on the photosensitive retina at the back
of the eye.
48Figure 45.16 Eyes Like Cameras
49Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
- The most sensitive area of the retina is the
fovea. - The lenses allow the eyes to focus light.
- Fishes, amphibians, and reptiles focus by moving
the lenses of their eyes closer to or farther
from their retinas. - Mammals and birds alter the shape of the lens to
focus.
50Figure 45.17 Staying in Focus
51Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
- The shape of the lens changes due to the action
of two structures. - Connective tissue surrounding the lens keeps it
spherical, but suspensory ligaments pull it into
a flatter shape. - Ciliary muscles counteract the pull of the
ligaments and allow the lens to become round. - The flatter lens is able to focus distant images
but not nearer ones, which need the light-bending
properties of the round lens to bring close
images into focus. - Lenses become less elastic with age and we lose
the ability to focus on objects close at hand.
52Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
- The retina includes layers of cells that process
visual information from the photoreceptors and
produce an output signal that is transmitted via
the optic nerve. - Light must pass through all the layers of cells
before photons are captured by rhodopsin. - There are two types of vertebrate photoreceptors
cones and rods. - Rod cells are more sensitive to light. Cone cells
respond to different wavelengths of light for
color vision. - Cones also provide the sharpest vision. The fovea
has only cone cells.
53Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
- Humans have three kinds of cone cells One type
absorbs violet and blue wavelengths, one absorbs
green, and one absorbs yellow and red. - The human fovea has about 160,000 cone cells per
square millimeter a hawk has 1,000,000. - Hawks also have two foveas per eye and can see
both their flight path and the ground below. - There are no photoreceptors where blood vessels
and bundles of axons going to the brain pass
through the back of the eye. This creates a blind
spot on the retina.
54Figure 45.19 Absorption Spectra of Cone Cells
55Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
- The human retina is organized into five layers of
cells. - Cells at the front of the retina are ganglion
cells. They fire action potentials and their
axons form the optic nerves. - The photoreceptor cells are at the back of the
retina. Ganglion cells and photoreceptors are
connected by bipolar cells. - Photoreceptor cells ? bipolar cells ? ganglion
cells
56Figure 45.20 The Retina
57Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
- Horizontal cells connect neighboring pairs of
photoreceptors and bipolar cells. - This provides a means for the lateral flow of
information. - Amacrine cells connect neighboring pairs of
bipolar cells and ganglion cells. - These help make eyes more sensitive to small but
rapid changes.
58Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
- Each ganglion cell has a well-defined receptive
field, which consists of a specific group of
photoreceptor cells. - This integrates the light signal into one output.
- The receptive field of a ganglion cell can be
divided into two concentric areas, called the
center and the surround.
59Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
- There are two kinds of receptive fields
on-center and off-center. - Ganglia with on-center receptive fields are
maximally excited by light falling on the center. - Ganglia with off-center receptive fields are
maximally stimulated by light falling on the
surround. - Center effects are always stronger than surround
effects. - The photoreceptors in the center of the receptive
field of a ganglion cell are connected to that
ganglion via bipolar cells.
60Figure 45.21 What Does the Eye Tell the Brain?
(Part 1)
61Figure 45.21 What Does the Eye Tell the Brain?
(Part 2)
62Sensory Worlds Beyond Human Experience
Other animals?
- Some species can see infrared and ultraviolet
light. - One of the seven photoreceptors in each
ommatidium of a fruit fly is sensitive to
ultraviolet light. - Some flowers have patterns that are invisible to
humans but can be seen by flies. - Pit vipers have pit organs, one in front of each
eye, which can sense and locate infrared
radiation in total darkness.
63Sensory Worlds Beyond Human Experience
Other animals?
- Elephants can communicate with infrasound, sounds
below the range of human hearing. - The advantage of using low frequency sound to
communicate is that it carries over very long
distances.
64Sensory Worlds Beyond Human Experience
Other animals?
- Echolocation is sensing the world through
reflected sound. - Dolphins, bats, and whales can use noises to
echolocate. - They generate sounds at frequencies above human
hearing. - These animals use muscles in the middle ear to
dampen their sensitivity to sound while they are
emitting sounds in order to protect their
hearing. - To hear the returning echoes, they relax the
muscles.
65Sensory Worlds Beyond Human Experience
Other animals?
- Some fish can sense electric fields.
- Lateral lines of some species, such as catfish,
contain electroreceptors. - These enable the fish to detect weak electric
fields, which helps them locate prey. - Some fishes, such as electric fish, can use
electric fields to navigate. Rocks, plants, and
other structures disrupt their field and are
interpreted.