Title: Chapter 2 Nerve Cells and Nerve Impulses
1Chapter 2Nerve Cells and Nerve Impulses
2Animal Cells
- Membrane
- separates the inside of the cell from the
outside environment - comprised of two layers of lipids with proteins
embedded
3Animal Cells
- Nucleus refers to the structure that contains the
chromosomes - Mitochondria perform metabolic activities and
provide energy that the cell requires. - Ribosomes Sites at which the cell synthesizes
new protein molecules - Endoplasmic reticulum Transports newly
synthesized proteins
4The Human Nervous System2 Kinds of Cells
- Neurons
- Approx. 100 billion in brain
- Receive and transmit info
- Behavior depends upon their communication
- Glia
- 10X the number of neurons
- Support neural communication
5Neuroanatomy Handout 1 The Motor Neuron
- A motor neuron
- has its soma in the spinal cord
- receives excitation from other neurons
- conducts impulses along its axon to a muscle or
gland - is the largest of the nerve cells
6Neuroanatomy Handout 1 The Motor Neuron
- Neurons are similar to other cells of the body
- All neurons have a cell body (soma, A)
- responsible for the metabolic work of the neuron
- surrounded by cell membrane (A1)
- Containing a nucleus (A2), mitochondria (A3),
ribosomes (A4), endoplasmic reticulum (A5)
7Neuroanatomy Handout 1 The Motor Neuron
- Neurons are different from other cells of the
body because they have distinctive shape and
function
8Neuroanatomy Handout 1 The Motor Neuron
- The 4 major components of a motor neuron
- Soma/Cell body
- Dendrites
- Axon
- Presynaptic terminals
9Neuroanatomy Handout 1 The Motor Neuron
- Dendrites (B)- branching fibers responsible for
receiving information from other neurons - Dendritic spines (B1) further branch out and
increase the surface area of the dendrite
10Neuroanatomy Handout 1 The Motor Neuron
- Axon (C) - thin fiber responsible for sending
impulses to other neurons, glands, or muscles - Some neurons are covered with an insulating
material called the myelin sheath (D) with
interruptions in the sheath known as nodes of
Ranvier (C2). - Axon hillock (C1) bulge in the cell body where
axon begins
11Neuroanatomy Handout 1 The Motor Neuron
- Presynaptic terminals (E) refer to the end points
of an axon responsible for releasing chemicals
(neurotransmitters) to communicate with other
neurons
12Neuroanatomy Handout 1 The Motor Neuron
- Axons from other neurons (F) converge on
receiving neuron - Synapse gap between neurons
- Postsynaptic neuron (G) and dendrite (G1)
13Sensory and Motor Neurons
- A motor neuron receives excitation from other
neurons and conducts impulses along its axon to a
muscle or gland - It carries information from the brain to the
perimeter of the body
14Sensory and Motor Neurons
- A sensory neuron is specialized at one end to be
highly sensitive to a particular type of
stimulation (touch, temperature, odor etc.) - It carries information from the perimeter of the
body to the brain
15Other Cells of the Nervous System
- Terms used to describe the neuron include the
following - Afferent axon - refers to bringing information
into a structure. - Efferent axon - refers to carrying information
away from a structure. - Interneurons or Intrinsic neurons are those whose
dendrites and axons are completely contained
within a structure.
16Other Cells of the Nervous System
- Glia are the other major component of the nervous
system and include the following - Astrocytes help synchronize the activity of the
axon by wrapping around the presynaptic terminal
and taking up chemicals released by the axon. - Microglia - remove waste material and other
microorganisms that could prove harmful to the
neuron.
17The Cells of the Nervous System
- Oligodendrocytes Schwann cells- build the
myelin sheath that surrounds the axon of some
neurons. - Radial glia- guide the migration of neurons and
the growth of their axons and dendrites during
embryonic development.
18The Cells of the Nervous System
- Spaniard Santiago Ramon y Cajal (1852-1934) was
the first to demonstrate that neurons do not
touch one another. - With this understanding came new ideas about how
neurons communicate.
19The Nerve Impulse
- A nerve impulse is the electrical message that is
transmitted down the axon of a neuron. - The impulse is regenerated at points along the
axon. - The speed of nerve impulses ranges from
approximately 1 m/s to 100 m/s.
20The Nerve Impulse
- The resting potential state of the neuron prior
to the sending of a nerve impulse - Electrical gradient a difference in the
electrical charge inside and outside of the cell - At rest, the membrane is slightly negative with
respect to the outside (approximately -70
millivolts)
21Competing forces maintain a -70mV resting
potential
- Concentration gradient The difference in the
distribution of ions between the inside and the
outside of the membrane - Sodium (Na) more abundant outside cell than
inside (101) - Potassium (K) more abundant inside cell than
outside (201) - Negatively charged proteins inside cell
22Cellular mechanisms of the resting potential
- Selective permeability of the membrane allows
some molecules (e.g. water, oxygen) to pass more
freely than others. - Charged ions, like sodium (Na), potassium (K),
calcium (Ca) and chloride (Cl-) pass through
channels in the membrane. - When the membrane is at rest
- Na channels are closed
- K channels are partially closed allowing the
slow passage of sodium
23Cellular mechanisms of the resting potential
- The sodium-potassium pump puts three sodium ions
out of the cell while drawing in two potassium
ions. - helps to maintain the electrical gradient
- The electrical gradient and the concentration
gradient work to pull sodium ions into the cell. - The electrical gradient tends to pull potassium
ions into the cells.
24The resting potential allows a neuron to respond
quickly to a stimulus
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26The Action Potential
- The resting potential (-70mV) remains stable
until the neuron is stimulated. - Electrical polarization the difference in the
electrical charge between two places
27Two things can happen to a resting neuron
- Hyperpolarization increasing the difference
(polarization) between the electrical charge of
two places (less likely to fire) - Depolarization refers to decreasing the
polarization towards zero (more likely to fire) - The threshold of excitement refers any
stimulation beyond a certain level that results
in a massive depolarization (action potential).
28The Action Potential
- An action potential is a rapid depolarization of
the neuron. - Stimulation of the neuron past the threshold of
excitation triggers a nerve impulse, action
potential, or firing - -70mV can become 50mV
29The Nerve Impulse
- Voltage-activated channels are membrane channels
whose permeability depends upon the voltage
difference across the membrane. - Sodium channels are voltage activated channels.
- When sodium channels are opened, positively
charged sodium ions rush in and a subsequent
nerve impulse occurs.
30The Nerve Impulse
- Scorpion venom attacks the
- nervous system by keeping
- sodium channels open and
- closing potassium channels
- Local anesthetic drugs block sodium channels and
therefore prevent action potentials from
occurring. - Example Novocain
- General anesthetics open potassium channels wider
than usual
31The Nerve Impulse
- The all-or-none law states that the amplitude and
velocity of an action potential are independent
of the intensity of the stimulus that initiated
it. - Action potentials are equal in intensity and
speed within a given neuron.
32The Nerve Impulse
- A refractory period happens after an action
potential occurs, during which time the neuron
resists another action potential. - The absolute refractory period the first part,
when membrane cannot produce an action potential - The relative refractory period the second part,
when it takes a stronger than usual stimulus to
trigger an action potential.
33The Nerve Impulse
- In a motor neuron, the action potential begins at
the axon hillock (a swelling where the axon exits
the soma). - Propagation of the action potential is the term
used to describe the transmission of the action
potential down the axon.
34The Nerve Impulse
- The myelin sheath of axons are interrupted by
short unmyelinated sections called nodes of
Ranvier. - At each node of Ranvier, the action potential is
regenerated by a chain of positively charged ions
pushed along by the previous segment.
35The Nerve Impulse
- Saltatory conduction the jumping of the action
potential from node to node. - Provides rapid conduction of impulses
- Conserves energy for the cell
- Multiple sclerosis disease in which myelin
sheath is destroyed associated with poor muscle
coordination
36The Nerve Impulse
- Not all neurons have lengthy axons.
- Local neurons have short axons, exchange
information with only close neighbors, and do not
produce action potentials. - When stimulated, local neurons produce graded
potentials which are membrane potentials that
vary in magnitude and do not follow the
all-or-none law,. - A local neuron depolarizes or hyperpolarizes in
proportion to the stimulation.