Neurons and Action Potentials
Functions of Glial Cells
1. support neurons 2. insulate the electrical activity moving down the axon and at the synapse 3. maintain fluid balance around neuron 4. transports nutrients 5. repair damaged axons
Saltatory Conduction
AP jumps along the axon due to myelination *only depolarizes the parts of the axon at the Nodes of Ranvier
Continuous Conduction
AP moves along entire length of axon (unmyelinated neurons)
Deploarization occurs twice. When?
Allows Na+ in, reducing the resting potential. After an Action Potential is triggered, the cell causes voltage-gated sodium channels to open on that part of the membrane, making the cell less and less negative
Depolarization begins at the ______?
Axon hillock
What are Neurons?
Building blocks of the nervous system. Information processing and signaling elements
Oligodendrocytes: PNS or CNS?
CNS
When is an action potential triggered?
Depolarization causes the cell to be less negative and resting potential drops below threshold (about -50 mV)
Neural Connective Tissue, layers of the PNS
Endoneurium, perineurium, and epineurium
Resting Potential of Neuron: Extracellular and Intracellular
Extracellular: more Na+ and Cl- Intracellular: more K+ and negatively charged molecules **This results in a negative charge
Action potentials
Information is carried as electrical signals
Diffusion of Ions at Rest
K+ ions diffuse in and out of the cell (potassium channels) In: due to attraction to protein Out: due to concentration gradient Na+ ions also move in to some extent due to concentration gradient
Neurotransmitters
Made in the neuron, released from the terminal boutons and interact with the structure on which the axon is synapsing.
What are Glial Cells?
Majority of brain cells**All neurons will have this cell whether they are myelinated or unmyelinated
What can disturb resting potential?
Mechanical stimuli (open mechanically-gated sodium channels) and Neurotransmitters (open ligand-gated sodium channels)
Depolarization
Membrane potential becomes more positive (from -70 mV to +40 mV)
Basic elements of the nervous system
Neurons and Glia
Vesicles/terminal boutons contain... what?
Neurotransmitters
Types of Glial Cells
Oligodendrocytes and Schwann Cells
Action potential is an "all-or-none" phenomenon. What does this mean?
Once depolarization reaches threshold the AP occurs.
Schwann Cells: PNS or CNS?
PNS
Resting potential
Period where neuron is reestablishing the resting potential. Means that APs are unidirectional
Which form of conduction is faster? Why?
Saltatory, jumps along the axon
How is resting membrane potential maintained?
Sodium-Potassium Pump-->pumps 2 K+ ions into cell for every 3 Na+ ions it pumps out Leaky Potassium Channel-->facilitates diffusion of K+ out of cell (Due to cell permeability)
After an action potential is triggered?
The reduced potential (at threshold) causes hundreds of voltage-gated sodium channels to open on that part of the cell membrane
What is the function of Neurons?
Transmits information
Relative Refractory Period
When neuron potential is between -50 and -70 mV. AP can be triggered by a stronger stimulus. (after start of hyperpolarization)
Myelin
White, fatty wrapping. Formed by glia. Insulate the axon and increase the speed of conduction of nerve impulses alone the axon.
Soma
cell body, has cell membrane around it. cell membrane has small pores which allow certain ions to move through the membrane.
Resting Membrane Potential
charge difference across the cell membrane when the cell is at rest. The electrical potential is -70 mV.
If diffusion at rest was allowed to continue, what would happen?
concentration would equalize across the membrane and resting potential would be 0
Synapse
connection between neurons or between a neuron and a muscle
Size (strength) of AP remains ________.
constant (like a toll booth)
Strength of stimulus is reflected in ______ of APs triggered.
frequency
Concentration gradient
ions move from areas of high concentration to areas of low concentration
Axon hillock
junction between axon and soma
Absolute Refractory Period
no AP can be triggered during this time (happens after repolarization)
Axons
projections carrying messages from the cell body
Dendrites
projections carrying messages to the cell body
Hyperpolarization
seen in the overshooting region of the action potential, when the resting potential dips even more negative than the resting potential. (more negative than -70 mV)
Electrochemical gradient
similarly charged ions repel one another, oppositely charged ions attract one another
Nodes of Ranvier
spaces between myelin
Endoneurium
surrounds Schwann cells which are wrapped around 1 or more axons
Epineurium
surrounds several neural bundles to form nerve trunks
Perineurium
surrounds several sets of neurons each covered by endoneurium to form neural bundles (fasicle)
Repolarization
the return of the membrane potential to resting potential (+40 back to -70 mV)