Title: NERVE CELLS AND NERVE IMPULSES STRUCTURE
 1NERVE CELLS AND NERVE IMPULSESSTRUCTURE  
FUNCTIONS OF THE CELLS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM 
 2- The most striking differences between humans and 
other animals are in the size and complexity of 
our brain  - The human brain possesses billions of neurons, 
each of which may communicate with thousands of 
other neurons in information-processing networks 
that make even the most elaborate computer look 
primitive 
- Photograph of Einsteins Brain
 
  3Color scanning electron micrograph of brain 
cells. Neurons large cells with long, thin 
branches Glial others (Photo Researchers, Inc.)
- We will try and understand how the brain 
accomplishes all of these tasks but understanding 
the physical structures that make up the system- 
the Cells  - There are two basic types of cells in the brain, 
Glial cells and Neurons  
  4Glial cells
- These make up 90 of the cells in the brain 
 - Support, nurture and protect neurons 
 - There are several types
 
  5Glial Cells Astrocyte
- Astrocytes 
 - Clean up waste in the brain-clean up dead neurons 
after TBI, stroke, etc-Once the dead tissue is 
removed, a framework of astrocytes fills in the 
area- scar tissue 
  6Glial CellsRadial Glia
- Radial glia 
 - type of astrocyte which guides the migration of 
neurons and growth of their axons and dendrites 
during embryonic development  
  7Glial CellsOligodendrocyte
- Oligodendrocytes 
 - principle function is to provide support to axons 
and produce the myelin sheath  surrounds and 
insulates certain neurons  - Schwann Cells produce myelin 
 
  8Glial Cells
- Traditionally, glial cells were not believed to 
play a role in function. However, newer research 
has suggested that they may play a critical role 
in memory formation!!!  
  9The Neuron
- Neurons will vary in shape depending upon the 
shape of their cell body and the dendritic 
branching that occurs- over 1000 basic shapes of 
neurons  glial cells have been identified in 
the brain  - Neurons vary greatly in size, shape and function. 
More recent studies have shown that their shape 
changes throughout life as a function of learning 
and experience- plasticity  
  10 Th
Neurons primarily use glucose, a simple sugar, 
for their nutrition (fuel) A typical neuron has 
1,000-10,000 synapses, thus, it is connected to 
this many other neurons This means there are 
over 1000 trillion connections in the brain- more 
than there are stars in the universe! 
 11- In many ways neurons are the same as typical 
cells of the body. We will be focusing on the way 
that they are different   - 1. They process information. This information 
processing is accomplished electrochemically.  - Electrical charge Action Potential (5 of AA 
battery)  - Chemical Neurotransmitter 
 - 2. They do not regenerate to the extent that 
other cells do  - The issue of Stem Cells 
 
  12Types of Neurons 
- Neurons can be classified based on their function 
as Motor, Sensory, or Interneurons  - Sensory  specialized at one end to be highly 
sensitive to a particular type of stimulation 
(i.e. visual, auditory, touch)- different kinds 
of sensory neurons have different 
structures(input)  
  13- Motor  receives excitation from other neurons 
and conducts impulses from its soma in the 
spinal cord to the muscles and glands (output)  - Interneuron  connects sensory and motor neurons 
 
  14- Neurons have all the parts of a typical cell 
(Nucleus, Cell Membrane, Ribosomes, etc)- We will 
focus on the parts of the neuron that are 
different than the traditional cell  
  15- Soma (Cell Body) contains the nucleus and other 
structures vital for the life processes of the 
cell  - Dendrites receives the message for the 
postsynaptic neuron from the presynaptic neuron 
neurons can have any number of these (Antenna)  - Axon conducts the action potential (Wire) 
 - Neurons generally have no more than one axon, 
which may have branches- some can be amazingly 
long (i.e. from your spinal cord to your feet) 
or short  - Myelin sheath insulating material that covers 
some neurons, increasing their speed of 
conductivity-has periodic breaks called the Nodes 
of Ranvier  
  16Neurons
- Presynaptic terminal (Terminal buttons) hold 
and release the neurotransmitter into the synapse  - Diffusion movement of ions from an area of 
higher co  - Synapse the junction where the neurons meet and 
into which neurotransmitters are released 
  17The Nerve ImpulseThe action potential 
 18- The neuron works like an electric battery and 
thus, works by changes in its voltaage  - A neuron fires, when, due to stimulation from 
another neuron (presynaptic neuron), a 
postsynaptic neurons membrane potential passes 
the threshold of excitation, causing another 
action potential to form  - The membrane of the cell is specialized to 
control the exchange of molecules between the 
inside and outside of the cell-this exchange is 
what is responsible for the formation of the 
action-potential  - The best way to understand how this happens is to 
start with understanding the anatomy and 
physiology of the neuron at rest, when it is 
not active 
  19Ions (Na, K, Cl-) are what are responsible for 
the initiation and transmission of an action 
potential The Resting Potential (-70 mv) is the 
result of the Concentration Gradient of the ions 
that are inside and outside the cell membrane 
 Compared with its surroundings, the inside of 
a resting neuron has a lower concentration of 
Na neurons and a higher concentration of K 
neurons The outside has a higher concentration 
of Na neurons and a total number of positively 
charged ions 
 20- Thus, the -70mv represents a measurement of the 
inside charge relative to the outside  - Sodium-Potassium pump helps maintain this ionic 
imbalance by actively transporting three sodium 
ions out for every two potassium ions it pumps in  - (Cl-) chloride can pass through open leak 
channels at rest, thus entering the cell  - Ca2- acts as a powerful intracellular signaling 
molecule once it enters the cells through its 
ion channels  
  21Neuron at Resting Potential
- Ion channels, specialized proteins embedded in 
the membrane which control the rate of passage 
for certain ions  - These channels are often gated, opened or 
closed  - When open, the ions can enter and pass through 
their channels by diffusion  
  22The Action Potential 
- The resting potential remains stable until the 
neuron is stimulated, which takes place at the 
synapses by Neurotransmitters  - When the neurotransmitter binds with the 
receptor of the post-synaptic dendrite, it 
results in the opening of the Na channel, 
starting a cascade of events which lead to the 
action potential being propagated down the axon  
  23(No Transcript) 
 24Action Potential (Cont.)
- The sodium ion channel opens and Sodium ions 
rush in resulting in an active change in the 
charge, becoming more positive (Step 1) 
Depolarization  - Then, the K channels begin to open K begins 
to flow out (Step 2)  - When the action potential reaches its peak 
(1msec) 40mV, the sodium channels close. This 
stops the flow of positive ionsfrom outside to 
inside of the cell. However, the K channels are 
still open, thus, the K ions are still flowing 
out of the cell, leading to a plunge of the 
membrane potential (Step 3)  Hyperpolarization  - When the membrane potential reaches its resting 
state, the K channels close (Step 4)  - Now the Sodium-potassium pump transports Na out 
of the cell and K into the cell, so that it is 
ready for the next action potential (Step 5)  
  25- In many cases, the membrane potential becomes 
even more negative than the resting potential for 
a brief period, this state is called when the 
cell is hyperpolarized  - Refractory period after opening, the sodium 
channels become inactivated as the potential 
moves positive. They cannot open again until they 
are reset by the hyperpolarization period at 
the end of the action potential.  - Prevents back propagation of the action 
potential and thus, that it moves in one direction 
  26- In order for the neuron to function properly, 
these steps must occur exactly!!!  Any 
disruption of the process, disrupts the 
functioning of the neuron, and thus, experience 
(i.e. anesthetics)  - Local Anesthetics (i.e. Novocain)- attach to the 
Na channels of the membrane, preventing Na ions 
from entering- block action potentials in the 
affected areas!  - General anesthetics decrease brain activity by 
opening certain K channels more widely than 
normal- K exits as fast as Na enters, 
preventing most action potentials 
- The figure shows a biological membrane at its 
melting point. The green molecules are liquid, 
and the red are solid. Molecules of anesthetics 
reduce the number of red areas so that the sound 
pulse can no longer transport its signal. The 
nerve is anesthetised. (Credit Illustration by 
Heiko Seeger, PhD.) 
  27- Propagation of the action potential the 
transmission of it down the axon- travels at 
speeds up to 220 mph!  - Unmyelinated axons The action potential than 
travels down the length of the axon in a 
wave-like fashion As a section of the axon 
undergoes the above process, it increases the 
membrane potential of the neighboring section and 
causes it to spike. The action potential gives 
birth to a new action potential at each point 
along the axon. This is like a mini-chain 
reaction which continues down the length of the 
axon until it reaches the synapse. Dominoes  - Myelinated axons myelin is a fatty outer layer 
which insulates and protects the axon- made up of 
oligodendrocytes and schwann cells- A process 
called Saltatory Conduction results in faster 
transmission  
  28- Saltatory conduction the action potential is 
regenerated only at the nodes- the jumping of 
action potentials from node to node is 
considerably faster than the regeneration of an 
action potential at each point along the axon, 
hence neurons without myelin  - M.S. destroys the myelin sheath, slowing down 
action potential or stopping them completely  - A myelinated axon sodium channels almost 
exclusively at its nodes, thus, it lacks these 
in the areas in between the nodes. When the 
myelin is destroyed, the action potential dies 
between the nodes 
  29All or None Principle
- All or none principle  if a neuron fires, then 
the action potential is the same regardless of 
the amount of excitation received from the inputs  - Thus, neurons do not code information by the 
strength of the signal, but by the rate of firing 
of the neuron (e.g. muscular contraction higher 
rate means stronger response)- thus, a stronger 
stimulus means a higher rate of responding, not a 
stronger action potential  - Changes in the rate of firing are often studied 
(i.e.LTP)