Anatomy of a Synapse
Nerve interaction with muscle. Ach elicits the muscle to contract
Neuromuscular junction
2 places where synapses occurs
Neuron and a neuron (synaptic transmission) neuron and a muscle (Neuromuscular junction)
Chemical that an axon end secretes to stimulate a muscle fiber or a neuron to fire an action potential, stored in a synaptic vesicle. Synthesized in soma, sent down axon to axon terminal.
Neurotransmitter
Chemical used to communicate with the post synaptic neuron. 2 types. 1. One that makes an action potential. 2. Ones that do not make an action potential
Neurotransmitters, stimulate, non-stimulate
Second neuron, receives info from the first neuron
Postsynaptic neuron
First neuron, axon terminal, transfers information to next neuron.
Presynaptic neuron
The region of contact where a neuron transfers information, nerve impulse, to another neuron. *Remember: Neurons transfer info TO and FROM the brain. Dendrites receive info, axon sends info. Neurons connect axon to dendrite.*
Synapses
Space between the first and second neuron, filled with matrix, helps neurons adhere to each other.
Synaptic cleft
In the terminal axon, small membrane-enclosed spheres. Stores neurotransmitters
Synaptic vesicles
Synapse at dendrite
Axondendritic Synapse
Ions that you need to know
Calcium (Ca2+) (in extracellular fluid) Sodium (Na+) (Mainly in extracellular fluid) (which is the synaptic cleft) Potassium (K+) (Mainly inside cytoplasm) Chloride (Cl-) (In the extracellular fluid which is the synaptic cleft)
On sides of axon terminal
Channels