NRS 301 Exam 1, Exam 2, Exam 3, EXAM 4 combined

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Nerve agents such as *Sarin, VX, Novichok,* chemically modifies ___________ __________ on AChE. Thus the __________ is no longer cleaved and muscles no longer controllable.

ACh-binding site; ACh

Ach in AD

AD leads to death of cholinergic neurons in brain treatment: AchE inhibitors - boost existing Ach levels by preventing degradation -improve symptoms declines with damage

glutamate receptors

AMPA and NMDA - glutamate bind AMPA to inc NA conductance - Mg block displaced once postsynaptic membrane depolarized - Ca enters thru NMDA

The _______ ______ is a subtype of glutamate receptor; a glutamate-gated ion channel that is permeable to Na+ and K+. It has __________ (tetramer), and the extracellular domain has a "clamshell" that binds glutamate. The receptor binds _______ glutamates to open.

AMPA receptor; 4 subunits; two

ACh cleaved by ___________.

Acetylcholinesterase (AChE)

Opsin are

Activated by different wavelengths of light

Advanced therapeutics for PD

Add genes that induce pluripotency (stem cell phenotype) Factors and genes to push them to DA neurons Skip iPSC step and directly make neurons then look for markers of DA phenotype

The selectivity in KcsA is essentially K+ ions in solution surrounded by water. The K+ ions must shed ________ to pass through channel. After passing through the filter, K+ re-associates with ________.

H2O

degree of Ca influx determine LTP v. LTD

HFS-> LTP LFS->LTD

How can you test the role of an ion?

Change [X]out and measure changes in membrane potential

The loss-of-function mutation in sodium channels causes _____________.

Chronic Indifference to Pain

GABA and glycine receptors are similar to AChRs. The conduct ______; and they _________ likelihood of firing a spike

Cl-; reduce

peptide neurotransmitters

Enkephalins (opiods)

_________-_________ are an example of rapidly adapting fibers that fire in bursts at the beginning & end of stimulation. These are sensitive to the ___________ in stimulus. ~Think *vibration* (time-varying pressure changes)

Pacinian corpuscles, changes

The delayed rectifier channels of the action potential open later than voltage-gated sodium channels because delayed rectifiers:

Have intrinsically slower kinetics

Endogenous

Produced within the body

Opsin

Proteins that are light sensitive Allow for targeted expression, so effect can be restricted to a defined set of cells

_________-_________ is the adding together of EPSPs generated simultaneously at many different synapses on a dendrite.

Spatial summation

selectivity filter

The narrowest part of a ion channel; it determines the rate of ion passage across a membrane

What happens to a neuron if the external concentration of potassium increases?

The neuron depolarizes

Visceral PNS

The part of the peripheral nervous system that innervates the internal organs, blood vessels, and glands; also called autonomic nervous system.

Somatic PNS

The part of the peripheral nervous system that innervates the skin, joints, and skeletal muscles.

___________ are composed of all the following features: a) Active zone in the presynaptic cell b) Cleft between the cells c) Neurotransmitter in vesicles

Synapses

__________ channels are activated by menthol, and it's generally activated by non-painful temperature decreases. It tends to produce the feeling of cold.

TRPM8 (channels)

________ channels are activated by capsaicin, and is activated by noxious temperature increases. It tends to produce the feeling of heat.

TRPV1 (channels)

Tau hypothesis of AD

Tau protein abnormalities (hyperphosphorylation) initiate the disease cascade. AD tau is found throughout neuron, dendrites, and soma when it shouldn't be there associated with paired helix filaments in degenerating neurons

__________-__________ is the adding together of EPSPs generated at the same synapse if they occur in rapid succession, within about 1-15 msec of one another

Temporal summation

somatic sensation

The senses of touch, temperature, body position, and pain.

True or False: Once a concentration gradient is established, the electrical gradient requires the movement of few ions

True

Transorbital lobotomy

Type of frontal lobotomy Results: decreased anxiety, blunting of emotional responses, loss of emotional components of thoughts, inappropriate behaviors, lower moral standards, trouble concentrating But no loss of memory or IQ Ended in US

Oligodendrocytes

Type of glial cell in the CNS that wrap axons in a myelin sheath.

Schwann cells

Type of glial cell in the PNS that myelinates axons

The 4 different types of gating in ion channels are...

Voltage (depolarized, hyperpolarized); Ligand (Ca2+); Inactivation; Open all the time

Probe cause v. effect

What optogenetics allows us to do Prior studies allowed observation of firing patterns with behavior/phenomena but didn't know if that firing "caused" behavior

Provides electrical insulation

Glia

_________ convert glutamate to glutamine (secrete glutamine, which is taken up by neurons)

Glia

When glutamate is cleared from the cleft by transporter proteins on glia and neurons; it is called __________ _________.

Glutamate recycling

__________ is dominant in spinal cord and lower brainstem

Glycine

______________ describes membrane potential becomes more negative

Hyperpolarization

The _____-_______ calcium channel is responsible for the release of Ca2+ from the __________- ___________ which is very important in ___________-___________.

IP3 receptor; endoplasmic reticulum; intracellular signalling

Ionic concentration differ between the inside and outside of a cell because of...

Ion transporters

GABAA and glycine receptor are ___________ _________

Ionotropic receptors

Inactivation particle (Na channel)

Loop between domains III and IV

learning

acquisition of new knowledge or skills

bottom-up processing

analysis that begins with the sensory receptors and works up to the brain's integration of sensory information

Some of the first recordings of nerve potentials were made by:

Lord Adrian

This person made some of the first recordings from individual neurons

Lord Adrian

Cable theory was established by...

Lord Kelvin

The advantages of signaling with ____________-__________ include: - Very few ions move to establish resting membrane potential (<0.02%), so total ionic concentrations change little - Efficient form of signalling - Cell can change potential simply by changing permeability

Membrane potential

Learned fear

Memories associated with fear forms quickly and are long lasting Much harder to forget fear memories than positive memories

Mesocorticolimbic DA

Meso= mid, VTA Midbrqain contains DA neurons DA projections from ventral tegmental area (VTA), nucleus accumbens, prefrontal cortex

GABAb is a ____ receptor.

Metabotropic

NMDA receptor has a structure that is very similar to AMPA receptors. At rest, a ______ ion blocks its pore; which is usually dislodged by _____________. It is permeable to K+, Na+, and Ca2+.

Mg2+; depolarization

____________ in the axons provide for transport to and from synapse

Microtubules

radial glial cell- proliferation

(early)symmetrical cell division result in more radial glial cells (later) asymmetrical cell division 2 fates: keep dividing in ventricular zone + migrate to cortex and never divide again

synaptic competition

- if both input from both eyes are equal: activity at neuron is equal, inputs from both eyes are maintained - if balance is disrupted: input from one eye is decreased

Neocortex

6 complex layers. only found in mammals

____________ in the axons provide for structural stability

Neurofilaments

Efferent

carry info away

afferent

carry info into

memory

retention of learned information declarative and non-declarative

amnesia

serious loss of memory and/or ability to learn

raphe nuclei contain most of the:

serotonergic neurons of the brain

Abeta afferents

carry tactile information about touch, pressure, stretch and vibration

human fetal ventral mesencephalon (VM) tissue grafts

cell based therapy to restore DA in PD

gray matter

cell bodies of neurons

Glial Cells

cells in the nervous system that support, nourish, and protect neurons. NOT excitable

migration

cells move throughout body to take up positions that influence their function

telencephalon differentiates into (2)

cerebral cortex basal telencephalon-> basal ganglia

Thermoreceptors are able to adapt, and detect:

changes in temperature

Choline taken up by presynaptic cell; choline is reassembled into ACh by _________ _____________. And ACh loaded into vesicles.

choline acetyltransferase (ChAT)

dopamine

common final pathways of drugs of abuse circuits controlling "wanting" go into overdrive

neurofibrillary tangles

composed of: paired helical filaments (modified cytoskeleton elements, tau, tubulin) b-amyloid

Axons are responsible for...

conducting impulses away from cell body (soma)

Corpus Callosum

connects the hemispheres of the cortex

Internal Capsule

connects the thalamus to the cortex

Dopaminergic Nuclei of Midbrain

consists of 2 parts; substantia nigra (movement initiation) and the ventral tegmental area (emotion/reward)

brainstem

consists of the medulla and pons. sensory info and motor function. autonomic regulation

Diencephalon

contains the thalamus and hypothalamus. responsible for primitive behavior (feeding, drinking, sex) and endocrine activity (pituitary)

ocular dominance histograms (cat)

contralateral eye= group 1, activated by either eye ipsilateral eye= group 5, activated by either eye groups 2-4 activated by both eye

Amygdala

controls emotions and fear. receives sensory input from the thalamus.

Olfactory Complex

controls smell and is directly connected to the olfactory bulb via the olfactory nerve. 4 layers

Basal Ganglia

controls voluntary movement and motor behavior, reward/emotion

___________ describes the process during the action potential when sodium is rushing into the cell causing the interior to become more positive.

depolarization

_____________ refers to the area of the skin that is innervated by the dorsal roots of a single spinal cord segment.

dermatome

___________ are the segmental organization of spinal nerves. There are 30 segments are are divided into 4 group. These consist of ________ (dorsal roots) & _________ (ventral roots) nerves that carry information from different parts of the body which enter/exit the spinal cord at different segments.

dermatomes, sensory, motor

Primary somatosensory afferents vary widely in the ___________ and __________ level.

diameter, myelination (level)

asymmetrical division

different proteins to two daughters different fates

Similar depolarization yields ___________ __________ patterns in neuron activity graphs.

different spiking (patterns)

chemorepellants

diffusible molecule that chases axons away ex. slit- Robo (slit receptor)

chemoattractants

diffusible molecules that attract growth cones toward their targets ex. netrin- attract axons of dorsal horn neurons to midline

How does passive synaptic transmission occur?

diffusion (mainly for neuropeptides)

sensory adaptation is the __________ sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation.

diminished (sensitivity)

Mechanotransduction is the conversion of mechanical stimulus to an __________ or _________ signal. Different channels tend to respond to different forces.

electrical (or) chemical signal

What is an action potential?

electrical impulse that travels down the axon triggering the release of neurotransmitters

Wilder Penfield's research on the brain included brain mapping using ___________-__________ of S1 on awake neurosurgical patients. He recorded action potentials while touching different areas of the body testing receptive fields.

electrical stimulation

progressive ratio

each subsequent reward requires more presses, 1 press to obtain the 1st reward, but 32 presses needed for 10th reward amount of work to obtain a reward, motivation

neurite

early axonal and dendritic processes

embyronic stem cell (ESC)

early blastocyst from surplus human embyros reprogrammed into DA progenitor cells "foreign"

deep brain stimulation (DBS)

electrodes inserted into brain areas (GP, STN) widens window, allow meds to be effective longer and with less SE

blastula

embryo is a hollow ball of cells - the flat disk

The periaqueductal gray (PAG) receives input from brain areas involved in __________. An example of an area would be the amygdala.

emotion

action potential propagation is essentially the _________ and ________ of Na+ and K+ channels. Membrane potential is pushed to depolarize, and reach positive values to then repolarize, dropping to the final state of being more hyper-polarized than it was at rest.

opening & closing (of Na+ and K+ channels)

symmetrical division

equal partition of cell contents two of same cells

The gain-of-function mutation in sodium channels causes ______________ and _____________. NaV1.7 activates at more _____________ voltages.

erythromelalgia; paroxysmal extreme pain disorder; hyperpolarized

iPSC restoration of DA in PD

extraction of any cell expansion in vitro differentiation into progenitor neurons immature DA neurons

Chemical Nociceptors respond to

extreme pH levels, environmental irritants, endogenous chemical signals

Thermal nociceptors respond to

extreme temperatures

Abducens Nerve

eye movement

Oculomotor nerve

eye movement

Trochlear nerve

eye movement

strabismus

eyes are not aligned (cross-eyed) can result in permanent loss of stereoscopic vision

Trigeminal Nerver

facial sensation

wanting circuits are

fairly diffused

liking circuits are

fairly distinct

fixed ratio

reward deliver after a set number of responses (consummatory processes)

extracellular matrix

fibrous proteins deposited between cells that serve as a substrate; contains protein that attracts/repel

In sensory adaptation, stimulus intensity in encoded by the _______-_______ of the receptor.

firing rate

In sodium channels, there are ______ domains, where each domain similar to K channel monomer. There are _____ transmembrane domains, S____ in particular has multiple _________ residues that act as voltage sensors. And there is a _________-_______ between S5 and S6

four; six; (S)4; positive; pore loop

How does information flow?

from the periphery to the cortex

Anterior

front of the body

behavioral changes that occur as person transitions to addiction are

function of progressive neuroadaptations in the brain= synaptic changes, plasticity, learning

Group of somata (PNS)

ganglion

group of somata

ganglion

APP

gene related to type 1 early onset familial mutation increase B-secretase cleavage-> familial

PS-1

gene related to type 2 early-onset familial I

PS-2

gene related to type 3 early-onset familial

ApoE4

gene related to type 4 late-onset familian and sporadic

ectoderm

give rise of nervous system and skin

neural progenitors

give rise to all of neurons and glia are multipotent stem cells

mesoderm

give rise to bones and muscles

endoderm

give rise to lining of internal organs (viscera)

vestibulocochlear nerve

hearing and balance

HFS

high freq stim cause by large inc in Ca activates kineases= LTP

Neurons have _______ [K+] in and _______ [Na+]in

high; low

Feedback of the nervous system consists of _______-_______ areas projecting back to the earlier parts of the pathway. This is also referred to as top-down processing.

higher order (areas)

posterior parietal cortex

highest order of somatosensory cortex. reintegrates the parallel pathways (somatic, visual, movement, planning and attention)

The calcium-activated potassium channels are _________-________ neurons can build up Ca2+ inside. The activation of K+ channels reduces ___________.

highly-active; spiking

hippocampus

hippo=horse - 1st indication that hippo involved in long term memory

Mast cells release

histamine

adaptation rate describes:

how quickly a receptor ceases to fire with ongoing input

Bienenstock Cooper Monroe Plasticity

if fire together then wire together, then all synpases will be saturated which decreases max computation power. if out of sync, lose your link (prevent saturation of synpases)

conditioned stimulus (CS)

in classical conditioning, an originally irrelevant stimulus that, after association with an unconditioned stimulus (US), comes to trigger a conditioned response.

where is myelination found in the neuron?

in the axons

where are the spines found in the neuron?

in the dendrites

where in the nucleus found in the neuron?

in the soma

Asterognosia

inability to recognize common objects by touch due to damage in the Posterior parietal cortex

Neglect syndrome

inability to recognize parts of your body as your own due to damage in the posterior parietal cortex

striatum: indirect pathway

include subthalamic nucleus inhibits direct pathway for competing motor acts striatium->GP->subthalamic nuc-> stim GP

Prostaglandins ________ sensitivity of nociceptors, and are inhibited by drugs such as aspirin/NSAIDS.

increase (sensitivity)

all addictive substances ______

increase mesoaccumbal DA release

Stimulation experiments measure __________-__________ input. An example of this would be to train a primate to selectively use two digits (D2 & D3); so the resulting effect would be that the area of the cortex responding to D2 & D3 increases in size *at the expense* of D1 and D4.

increased sensory input

rat pursuing/ approaching

indicates positive experience

relapse

induced by stress, cues, drug use

The T-type ("transient") calcium channels is responsible for the __________ of the likelihood of spiking. This channel is activated by ________-_________.

influence; small depolarizations

top-down processing

information processing guided by higher-level mental processes, as when we construct perceptions drawing on our experience and expectations

familial

inherited with a clear genetic basis gave insight into pathophysiology of AD

GABA and glycine are major _________ neurotransmitters

inhibitory

Vagus nerve

innervates digestive organs, heart and other areas. visceral and autonomic

cortex forms

inside-out upper layers built on top of lower layers

_____-_______ is a property of ion channels that are selectively permeable to some ions and not to others

ion selectivity

acetylcholine is an ___________ receptor, which are also known as nicotinic acetylcholine receptor.

ionotropic

Ligand-gated receptors are called ___________ receptors. They tend to be _________ ________ channels, and influence _________ ________ of postsynaptic cell.

ionotropic; open intrinsic (channels); electrical state

In the primary afferents of the pain pathway that ascend contralaterally, the dorsal column ascends __________, and decussates later.

ipsilaterally

spina bifida severity ____

is proportional to levels of fluid meninges and spinal cord protrusion

trophic factors

life-sustaining substances that are limited in quantity; NGF, BDNF switches off apoptotic genes and promotes neuronal survival

internal capsule

links cortex to brain stem

types of declarative memory

long term short term working memory

Parkinson's disease (PD)

long term neurodegenerative disorder that affects primarily the motor system some early onset forms happen before 60 causes: familial and sporadic forms drug of abuse: MPTP

A-delta fibers have a _______ diameter, are myelinated, and is the ________ pain experienced. It tends to be fast, sharp and intense.

medium, first

AD risk factor of ApoE

risk factor not a genetic link ApoE4 conveys the highest risk apoE 2/2<apoE 2/3<apoE 3/3<apoE 3/4<apoE4/4

infants have more/less synapses than adults

more

K+ channels endow neurons with diversity of properties. They can be _________ or ________ easy to trigger _________ _________. They can also fire _________ ________ at different rates.

more or less; action potentials; action potentials

The delayed rectifier activates __________ ________. It stays open for a ________ duration, and it may flicker closed.

more slowly; longer

Highly-permeable ions have _________ influence on resting potential.

most (influence on resting potential)

anencephaly

most common NTD screen alpha-fetoprotein levels (leaks from CNS into mother's blood) roof of cranium missing-> undeveloped brain not compatible with life

tolerance

most drug needed to get same effect

viruses

most effective delivery vehicles for gene therapy

The L-type calcium channels are responsible for ___________-__________; and synaptic transmission in some sensory cells.

muscle contraction

acetylcholine are released by neurons that activate _________; also known as ______________. This neurotransmitter is a part of the CNS, important in attention and memory.

muscles; motorneurons;

________-________ covers the axon of some neurons and helps speed neural impulses

myelin sheath

multiple sclerosis

myelin sheath destruction. disruptions in nerve impulse conduction. symptoms: muscle spasms/weakness, lack of coordination, loss of autonomic motor function

The Nodes of Ranvier are the gaps in the __________-__________ of a nerve, between adjacent ___________ cells. It's also the location where voltage-gated sodium channels are confined.

myelin sheath, Schwann (cells)

In terms of myelination, the larger the diameter is indicates more ________, and thus ________ transmission.

myelin, faster (transmission)

In terms of myelination, the smaller the diameter is indicates less ________, and thus ________ transmission.

myelin, slower (transmission)

A-delta fibers are (myelinated/nonmyelinated).

myelinated

white matter

myelinated axons

white matter are the:

myelinated axons

the propagation of action potentials along myelinated axons from one node of Ranvier to the next node, increasing the conduction velocity of action potentials is referred to:

saltatory conduction

Reticular theory holds that:

nervous system is a continuous network of cells

PNS arise from

neural crest cells

steps of neurulation

neural groove -> neural fold (walls of groove)-> fuse dorsally to form neural tube -> give rise to entire CNS

brain (retina/eyes) arises from

neural tube

The following are the ways _________ are specialized. a) The branching patterns of their dendrites b) The branching patterns of their axons c) The types of ion channels they express

neuron (specialization)

proliferation

neuronal and glial precursors are born during development

The neuron doctrine holds that:

neurons are discrete cells

lateral inhibition

neurons that are stimulated inhibit nearby neurons to help discriminate areas where the stimulation is coming from

Hebb's postulate

neurons that fire together wire together

Hebbian Modification

neurons that fire together wire together

synaptic vesicles are the membrane-bounded compartments in which synthesized __________________ are kept.

neurotransmitters

Sir Bernard Katz Experiment

neurotransmitters are packaged in quanta (vesicles)

The chemical signals convey information between neurons are __________ and the __________ and _________ systems

neurotransmitters; synthesis; reuptake

___________ ____________ receptor are made up of 5 subunits (pentamer), has a large ___________ ligand-binding domain. It tends to bind to two ACh molecules to open, and causes ____________ change in channel pore. The bottom of channel pore contains __________-charged amino acids; it permits K+, Na+, Ca2+ to permeate. "Non-selective cation channel"

nicotinic acetylcholine; extracellular; conformational; negatively

striatum: direct pathway

no activity in striatum: - GP neurons fire spontaneously - inhibit motor thalamus - suppresses motor act activity in striatum: - inhibits GP - disinhibits motor thalamus - motor act striatum-> (-) GP-> (-) VL thalamus-> (+) movement

sporadic

no clear-cut genetic basis causes are from a combination of genetic, environmental, and infectious diseases

unconditioned stimulus (US)

no training needed to produce response

Melzack and Wall's Gate Theory explains that the __________ signals are gated by the inhibitory interneurons in the spinal cord.

nociceptive (signals)

ipsilateral

same side

wanting

satisfying a craving

The trigeminal touch pathway synapses on the _______ neurons in the *ipsilateral* trigeminal nucleus of the ______.

secondary (neurons), pons

reelin

secreted by neural precursor cells in marginal zone that tells migrating cells to stop

PD pathogensis

selective loss of pigmental neuron (DA) in midbrain substantia nigra

Meissner corpuscle

sense fluttering and texture (medium fast)

Merkel receptors

sense pressure (slow)

Ruffini cylinder

sense stretching from joint movement (fast)

Pacinian corpuscles

sense vibrations (very fast)

memory acquisition

sensory experience-> short term memory experience is encoded by synaptic modification

Homunculus represents the density of ________-________ to S1 from each body region.

sensory input

Where does chickenpox lay dormant?

sensory nerves

The _______-________ amongst the K+ channels are activated by _____________. They ____________ with prolonged depolarization. The neuron becomes easier to excite during this channel's activity. And different types have different _________ & _________ of inactivation

shaker channels; depolarization; inactivate; kinetics; extents

Mechanical Nociceptors respond to

sharp objects or intense pressure

critical period for plasticity of binocular connections

shifts can occur early but if deprivation occurs late, there is no shift: time limit on shift

memory consolidation

short term memory-> long term memory temporary synaptic changes are made permanent

activity dependent change in NMJ: silencing

silencing m. activity enhances polyneural innervation

The shingles rash follows the innervation pattern of nerves, and they tend to be restricted to a __________-__________.

single dermatome

area 2

size and shape

The _______ and _______ determine the speed of transmission in primary somatosensory afferents.

size, myelination

_______-______ fibers keep responding as long as the stimulus is present, meaning they are sensitive to the *duration* of a stimulus. ~think sustained touch, stretching mechanism

slowly adapting (fibers)

C fibers have a ________ diameter, are unmyelinated and the _______ pain experienced.

small, second

the ___________ contains nucleus and handle gene transcription and translation

soma (cell body)

Lesions at Brodmann's areas 3b impair:

somatic sensation

in _______ _______, different receptors are sensitive to distinct types of stimuli

somatic sensation

The receptive fields of S1 neurons produce an orderly map of the body on cortex, otherwise known as ____________.

somatotopy

Receptive fields

spatial domain in sense organs where stimulation excites or inhibits a pathway

small structure on dendrites

spine

synaptic changes with addiction

spine density increases more synaptic connections

where is actin found in the neuron?

spines of the dendrites

lewy bodies

stain for a-synucelin

Pacinian corpuscles are sensitive to the _________ and _________ of the stimulus.

start, stop

activity dependent change in NMJ: stimulation

stimulatin of m. accelerates elimination of extra inputs

withdrawal

stop drug use result in "overcompensation", opposite effects of drug itself ex. heroin produce constipation, withdrawal causes diarrhea

mechanosensitive ion channels open under the influence of:

stretch (distortion), pressure (any external force from linked extracellular proteins), shear, and displacement (internal force from linked cytoskeleton protein)

basal ganglia

striatum composed of: caudate and putamen globus pallidus subthalamic nucleus and SN

A glycine receptor antagonist is __________. It tends to disrupt breathing.

strychnine

associative learning: instrumental conditioning

subject learns to associate response, a motor act, with meaningful stimulus - behavior assoc with consequence

Peptides that act as inflammatory agents include __________, which is released by nociceptors causing ___________ and activated ________ cells.

substance P, vasodilation, mast

The synapses on neurons in dorsal horn is called the:

substantia gelatinosa

PD on SN DA

substantial loss of SN DA cell bodies

This location is where computation of the brain occurs, and is highly plastic due to being responsible for learning and memory, this part of the structure of a neuron is a major drug target. What is this structure?

synapses

_________ ________ describes the narrow gap that separates the presynaptic neuron from the postsynaptic cell, and where neurotransmitters are released from the ___________-________.

synaptic cleft, axon terminal

EPSP summation represents the simplest form of __________-_________ in the CNS

synaptic integration

The N- & P-type calcium channels are responsible for ___________ __________ in most neurons (presynaptic)

synaptic transmission

transfer of information at the synapse from one neuron to another is referred to as the:

synaptic transmission

V-SNARE

synaptobrevin. attached to the vesicle membrane

What is a calcium sensor that helps trigger vesicle fusion during zippering?

synaptotagmin

T-SNARE

syntaxin and SNAP-25. anchored to the presynaptic membrane

dependence

systems upregulate to compensate for drugs effects and maintain homeostasis

dorsal column-medial lemniscal pathway provides information on ________ sensation, and proprioception from the trunk and body via the _______-_______.

tactical (sensation), spinal cord

Trigeminal touch

tactile information from the head and neck related to the brain by the trigeminal nerve

Clossopharyngeal nerve

taste

Facial nerve

taste, facial expression

Thermoreceptors have the role of mediating the sensation of painful or non-painful __________ changes.

temperature

When the extracellular potassium concentration increases, the resting membrane potential depolarizes because:

the electrochemical gradient for potassium changes

Acetylcholinesterase

the enzyme that breaks down acetylcholine in the synaptic cleft

basal lamina

the extracellular matrix factors in BL causes rise in Ca in presynaptic terminal

The ___________, also known as pain nerves have free nerve endings that are activated by either an *intense* or *noxious* stimuli. They are located in the ____________ throughout the body, including the tissue, blood vessels, and bones/

nociceptors, (in the) periphery

types of procedural memory

non-associative learning: habituation and sensitization associative learning: classical and instrumental conditioning

effect of strabismus on binocularity

normal: most cells activated by both eyes strabismus: activated by either eye but not both, group 1 and group 5 active

The somatotopic map is _______ scaled to ______-______.

not (scaled to) body size

Group of somata (CNS)

nucleus

synaptic capacity

number of synapses with a neuron

Contralateral

opposite side

central visual system

optic n-> optic chiasm->axon from nasal retinas partially decussate-> optic tract to LGN of thalamus-> primary visual cortex forms retinotopic maps

Neurons are called "_______________" because information flows through them in one direction

polarized

Most nociceptors are:

polymodal

Emx2

posterior attractant, removing it results in more anterior expansion

Nociception informs the brain of:

potentially damaging stimuli

levodopa

precursor of DA, 10% crosses BBB remaining 90% converted to DA outside BBB and causes SE

ACh is released from the ____________ terminal

presynaptic

GABA and glycine are recycled by specific transporters on the ____________ terminal and nearby _______

presynaptic; glia

The trigeminal touch pathway consists of the communication of tactile information from the head and neck relayed by _________ afferents through the __________ nerve, otherwise known as cranial nerve ___.

primary (afferents), trigemincal (nerve), V

The increased pain sensitivity to already damaged tissue is referred to as:

primary hyperalgesia

parkinsonism

primary motor symptoms, can be caused by other types of disorders or a SE of certain meds (anti-psych)

excitatory synaptic transmission

primary receptors driving synaptic activity in visual cortex: AMPA and NMDA

Brodmann's areas 3b correlates to the _______-________ cortex. There is a *dense input* from _______-_______ nucleus of the thalamus. *electrical stimulation* of this are evoked somatic sensory experience.

primary somatosensory (cortex), ventral posterior (nucleus)

What is Brodmann's area 3B?

primary somatosensory cortex

In the dorsal column-medical lemniscal pathway, most _______ afferents travel through the dorsal root ganglia, and terminate in ________-________ nuclei of _________.

primary, dorsal root column (nuclei of) medulla

Multiple steps (synapses) occur to encourage the flow of information from the periphery to the cortex. There are 3 types of synapses: a) b) c) And each of these steps is an opportunity to *transform information*

primary, second order, third order (synapses)

differentiation

process by which cells take on characteristics of neuron

two point discrimination is the ability to distinguish the:

separation of two simultaneous pinpricks on the skin

development of cortical layers is orchestrated by _______?

radial cells

Opioid analgesics affect pain by: a) altering the brain's perception of pain b) decreasing excitability of sensory neurons c)

raising the pain threshold at the spinal cord level

The periaqueductal gray (PAG) projects to the __________-_________ where it releases serotonin (part of the inflammatory soup).

raphe nuclei

________ ________ fibers respond to stimulation with a burst of firing at the beginning and end of stimulation.

rapidly adapting (fibers)

Superior Colliculus

receives multiple visual sensory input from the retina and IC. control eye movement and head orientation

Mechanoreceptors of the skin are of multiple types that vary by: a) b) c)

receptive field size, preferred stimulus frequency, stimulus sensitivity

The _________-________ of S1 neurons produce an orderly map of the body on cortex, otherwise known as somatotopy.

receptive fields

__________ _________ is a drug that binds to a receptor and activates it.

receptor agonist

Inhibitors of neurotransmitter receptors, called ____________ ___________ , bind to the receptors and block (antagonize) the normal action of the transmitter

receptor antagonists

There are different __________ for different temperature ranges.

receptors

Inflammation is characterized by

redness, heat, pain, swelling

In primary hyperalgesia, because there is an increased pain sensitivity to already damaged tissue, there tends to be a ________ pain threshold, and an __________ intensity of pain experienced.

reduced, increased

What is a rapidly adapting fiber?

refers to either Meissner or Pacinian corpuscles. these fibers respond to stimuli with a burst of firing at the beginning and end of stimulation

What is a slowly adapting fiber?

refers to either Merkel disks or Ruffini cylinders. these fibers will keep responding as long as there is a stimulus present

substances and situation that improve survival tend to be

reinforcing

the following describes the: __________-____________-______________ the period of time following an action potential, when it is possible, but difficult, for the neuron to fire a second action potential, due to the fact that the membrane is further from threshold potential (hyperpolarized)

relative refractory period

nerve growth factor (NGF)

released by target tissue, taken up by terminals and transported to nucleus

brain derived neurotropic factor (BDNF)

released from postsynaptic neurons, taken up by Trk receptors on presynaptic side

Priming

repeated brain injury can lead to sustained microglia activated

growth of spines following LTP

repetitively activated by glutamate to induce LTP spine grows to accommodate more AMPA receptors

Homonculus

represents the density of sensory inputs from somatosensory cortex from each body region

polymodal nociceptors can...

respond equally to all kinds of damaging stimuli

Optic Nerve

responsible for vision

neural tube defects (NTDs)

anencephaly and spina bifida exact location and nature of defects reflect where neural tube fails to close

Pax6

anterior attractant, removing it results in posterior expansion

AADC

aromatic l-amino acid decarboyxlase L-dopa-> DA declines in PD so L-dopa less effective virus was genetically engineered to deliver AADC gene to striatum "on" time increased "off" time decreased maintained effectiveness for years

Calcium Activated Kinase 2

associated with long term potentiation as a result of being activated.

___________ form the blood - brain barrier and act to provide structural support for nerve cells in the CNS. These cells fill most of the spaces between neurons.

astrocytes

tripartite synapse

astrocytes wrap around synapses and connect to both pre and post synaptic cells

The electrical and chemical gradients for potassium are equal and opposite:

at the Nernst potential for potassium

where are the vesicles found in the neuron?

at the synapse

structural chances in brain with AD

atrophied cerebral hemispheres shrinkage(hippocampus)/ enlarged ventricles

A metabotropic antagonist is ___________.

atropine

Semaphorin 3A

attracts dendrites and repels axons forms a gradient

lateral

away from the midline

distal

away from the point of attachment

fasciculation

axon growing together stick to each other using cell-adhesion molecules (CAMs)

_________ is the part of a neuron that carries impulses away from the cell body, and can be greater than 1 m long

axons

posterior

back of body

Non-nociceptive primary afferents can also activate Melzack and Wall's gate. Non-nociceptive signals are activated ________ signal reaches the tract. This is an _________, bottom-up process which _________ pain.

before, ascending, reduces

Opioids interrupt peripheral ______-_____ pain messages from reaching the central nervous system.

bottom-up

What neurotoxins target the core complex?

botulinum toxin and tetanus toxin (both are proteases)

PD symptoms

bradykinesia (slow and small movements) tremor rigidity cognitive dysfunctions parkinsonism

Peptides that act as inflammatory agents include ________, which directly depolarizes __________.

bradykinin, (depolarizes) nociceptors

trigeminal touch pathway enters and decussates in the _______-_______.

brain stem

Gyri

bumps and ridges of the brain

Nerve

bundle of axons in PNS

rapidly adapting fibers respond to stimulation with a _______ of _______ at the beginning and end of stimulation.

burst of firing

axonal propagation can be sped up by...

by increasing lambda (Decrease axial resistance or Increase membrane resistance)

What is short term plasticity?

transient changes that affect on-going processing of information

_______-_______ ________ channels are channels expressed by thermoreceptors. Each thermoreceptor expresses one.

transient receptor potential (TRP channels)

Na+ channel opens ___________, meaning that it starts at a random time, and stays open for randomly (short) duration. And the ___________ always the same (all-or-none).

transiently; conductance

Ionic gradients are established by ______________. These structures bind ion(s) on one side, allows change of conformation and releases to other side

transporters

True or False: Action potentials can be elicited during the relative refractory period, but not the absolute refractory period.

true

True or False: Sodium channel inactivation prevents action potentials propagating retrogradely.

true

True or False: The thinnest of axons have the slowest conduction velocity

true

True or False: Very few ions must move in order to establish resting membrane potential.

true

Receptive field sizes varies with ________ of ________.

type (of) mechanoreceptor

differentiation of optic vesicles

vesicle-> optic stalk and optic cup optic stalk-> optic n. optic cup-> retina optic n. is part of brain NOT PNS

The electrochemical gradient decides the _________.

voltage

the capacity to do work

voltage

A __________-_________ enables an investigator to hold the membrane potential constant while transmembrane currents are measured.

voltage clamp

The bacterial K channel KcsA lacks S1-S4, indicating the lack of a:

voltage sensor

Voltage clamp is a powerful technique because of - It allows the study of _______-________ processes - It provides information about the membrane ________.

voltage-sensitive; resistance

Hydrocephalus

water on the brain

"winner takes all"

waves generated independently between eyes, one input is retained, other is eliminated

self-administration

way to measure reward in animals operant conditioning, train an animal to manipulate a "switch" to obtain a reward

How can we prove vesicle fusion?

we believe that pits are fusing with the membrane

drug addiction

when reward system goes wrong

small receptive fields consist of the: a) b)

Meissner's corpuscle, Merkel's disk

Modulation and regulation of pain is explained by the:

Melzack and Wall's Gate Theory

To depolarize a cell in voltage clamp from a resting potential of -65 mV to -20 mV, one should pass:

Positive current

When current is injected at one position on an axon, voltage changes measured at some distance away along the axon are generally which of the following?

Smaller, because of membrane leak

excitatory neurotransmitters

acetylcholine and glutamate

cortical white matter

carries all info to/from cortical neurons

Tectum

part of the midbrain responsible for sensory-motor processing and integration

3 phases to develop long-range projections

pathway selection: optic stalk-> chiasm: ipsi or contra? target selection: dorsal thalamus MGN or LGN? address selection: layer I-VI, retinoptic map

Shingles is a viral diseases that affects the ___________ nerves and causes blisters on the skin that ________ the course of the ________-________.

peripheral (nerves), follow (course), affected nerves

Long term potentiation

persistent increase in efficiency of synaptic transmission. can be induced by tetanus or pairing

dorsal

pertaining to the back

microglia

phagocytic cells that ingest and break down waste products and pathogens in the CNS

liking

pleasure and satisfaction

Where does cortical layer 4 receive input from?

the thalamus

Where does cortical layer 6 output to?

the thalamus

Two neurons have the same internal ionic concentrations and are bathed in the same external solution, yet differ in resting membrane potential. The two differ in ____________.

their permeability

Most nociceptors are polymodal, so they can therefore respond to:

thermal, chemical, and mechanical stimulis

filopodia

thin spikes that extend from lamellipodia - probe the environment -take hold of the substrate - pulls growth cone forward

Cerebellum

A large structure of the hindbrain that controls movement and coordination. error correction!!

differentiation of telencephalon

"endbrain" starts to grow posteriorly-> lies over and lateral to diencephalon-> become cerebral hemisphere-> white matter develop to connect hemispheres and telencephalon to diencephalon

The __________ channels are not voltage-dependent, and are responsible for resting membrane potential which allow ions to move along their gradient.

"leak" channels

hedonic value

"like" food because it feels good to eat

The voltage gating sensor are much more complex. The S__-S__ subunits are out to the side. The gating ring appears to be open. The depolarized S___ domain pushes on neighboring S5 and S6 to open.

(S)1-(S)4; (S)4

The S__ helical region of the K+ channel contains positively-charged amino acids, also known as a ____________-___________.

(S)4, voltage sensor

The approximate Nerst potential for Na+ is:

+60 mV

If the concentration of calcium is 1 mM outside the cell and 1 µM inside, then the Nernst potential for Ca2+ would be:

+92 mV

Conditioned place preference

- Way to measure reward in animals - Subj placed in one chamber paired with reward and not allowed to leave - Then paired with chamber with no rewawrd - After repeated pairing, subj is placed in middle to decide which chamber to go into

synaptic convergence

- binocular vision is result of convergence of R and L inputs from layer IV to layer III - exp driven synaptic rearrangements - arises from correlated patterns of activity from using vision - compared to segregation of domains which arises from spont activity - ocular dominance shift -rapid - reflect changes in synapses - binocular vision is highly susceptible to deprivation

differentiation of pyramidal neurons

- depends on intercellular signals - semaphorin 3A secrete by cells in marginal zone - result: dendritic end of cell points toward surface (marginal) while axons towards ventricles

working memory

- prefrontal cortex - differs from short term memory by: limited capacity, needed for repetition, very short duration

non-declarative memory

- procedural memory -skills, habits - no conscious recollection -solidifies with repetition and practice -not likely forgotten

segregation of retinal inputs of LGN

- starts with spont. discharge in utero - not driven by light -ganglion cells fire in quasi-synchronous "waves" in each eye

The approximate Nernst potential for Cl- is:

-60 mV

resting membrane potential is usually between _____ to _____ mV.

-60 mV & -70 mV

Suppose a cell has 15 mM chloride inside and 150 mM chloride outside, what is the Nernst potential for chloride?

-61 mV

The approximate Nernst potential for K+ is:

-80 mV

ocular dominance columns

-LGN neurons project to layer IV of striate cortex -Cortical columns consisting of neurons that receive signals from the left eye only or the right eye only -experiment use monocular deprivation

cortical neurons have very distinct morphology

-apical dendrites extend to pia -axon that extends in opposite direction

classical conditioning

-associative learning - associate stimulus that usually provokes specific response with 2nd stimulus that normally doesn't provoke response CS predicts US

differentiation

-cells are induced by environment to take certain "fates" -express particular channels/ receptors - extend axons/dendrites -cell and "regions" cane differentiate

H.M

-developed severe anterograde amnesia - working and procedural memory intact -could remember early life but couldn't form new declarative memories - bilateral removal of frontal temporal lobe including cortex and hippocampus

declarative memory

-memory of facts and events -conscious recollection -relatively easy to forget

migration of cortical layers

-migration sets up the layers -radial glial cells provide scaffold for migrating neurons -neuronal precursor cells move up this highway -cells in marginal zone secrete reelin -assembly of cortex completes and their arms retract -up to 1/3 of cells wander horizontally

segregation of input by eye

-nasal retina partially decussates -temporal stays ipsilateral

mechanisms of cortical synaptic plasticity

-neurons that fire together wire together -neurons that fire out of sink like their link - key is correlation

synaptic rearrangement

-occurs when pattern of connectivity changes - induced by neural activity and synaptic transmission -quality of visual environment postnatally determine quality of vision that develops

experience-dependent plasticity

-open eye columns expand in width while deprived eye columns shrink - can be reversed by opening eyelid and depriving the other eye

apoptosis

-programmed cell death leading to DNA fragmentation -regulated caspases -digested by macrophages

autism

-stereotyped behaviors, communication, and social interaction deficits - assoc with accelerated growth of brain-> reduced destruction of connections

long term potentiation (LTP)

-strengthening of synaptic transmission -NMDA may be Hebbian detectors where Ca entry triggers inc in syna strength

AMPAfication of synapse

-strong NMDA receptor activation floods postsyna dendrite with Ca - strengthens transmission -can split synapse in half, forming more synaptic contacts

Hippocampus

1 layer. control of learning, memory and spatial navigation

What is the pathway of the Dorsal Column-medial lemniscal?

1) A-beta primary afferents enter spinal cord at dorsal column 2) axons from 2nd order neurons from dorsal column nuclei continue via medial meniscus (axon cross) 3) connect with neurons of ventral posterior nucleus of thalamus 4)3rd order thalmaic neurons project to primary somatosenory cortex

How does active synaptic transmission occur?

1) Glutamate is reuptaken by transporters 2) ACh is degraded by enzymes

What is the trigeminal touch pathway?

1) Primary large diameter trigeminal axons 2) connect to 2nd order neurons in ipsilateral trigeminal nucleus of pons 3) cross to ventral posterior of thalamus 4) on to primary somatosensory cortex

causes of AD

1. abnormal low levels of Ach 2. accumulation of pathological protein, B-amyloid 3. hyperphosphorylation of MAP, tau 4. presenilin genes 5. alteration in cholesterol shuttling protein (ApoE4)

formation of NMJ

1. agrin deposited by growth cone 2. agrin bind to MuSK receptors (m. specific kinase) 3. clustering of Ach receptors in postsynaptic membrane

5 steps of cortical layers

1. cells in ventricular zone sends process up to pia 2. cell's nucleus migrates up to pia, DNA is replicated 3. nucleus settles back down to ventricular surface 4. cell retracts its arm 5. cell divides

formation of CNS synapse

1. dendritic filopodia contacts an axon 2. recruitment of synaptic vesicles and active zone proteins 3. recruitment of NT receptors on postsynaptic side -filopodia constantly formed and probing - adhesion molecules secreted by both sides to glue partners together

cycle of chronic relapse

1.drug use and abuse 2. tolerance and dependence 3. addiction 4. contemplating treatment 5. completing addiction treatment 6. relapse

horizontal migration

1/3 neural precursor cells know where to go due to Pax6 and Emx2

differentiation of forebrain

2 sets of secondary vesicles: telencephalic vesicles, optic vesicles remaining part of forebrain is diencephalon ("between brain")

retinotopic maps

2D surface of retina is mapped on 2D surface of LGN and striate cortex

There are approximately _____ genes in humans coding for the sodium channel.

9 genes

Mechanoreceptors of the skin have ______ fibers, with an approximate speed of 35-75 m/second.

A-beta (fibers)

The two classes of primary afferent fibers for nociception are:

A-delta & C (fibers)

_______________ describes a voltage minimum that is more negative than V(rest)

Afterhyperpolarization

Amygdala

Almond shaped structure thought to contribute to fear and aggression

Small molecule neurotransmitters are:

Amino acids; Catecholamines

If a voltage clamp apparatus reports an inward current, that could reflect...

An influx of positive ions

DA and reward related cues

Animals acquire operant behaviors much more quickly if cue is added DA release corresponds to cue presentation as strongly as to reinforce itself Transfer of DA firing to cue and behavior to get reward Cues are powerful motivators of behaviors

Which apoE combination has the highest risk for development of AD? Second highest risk?

ApoE 4/4, ApoE 3/4 ApoE 4/4 result in early onset AD

Negative reinforcement

Aversive component is removed when behavior is achieved

Axial resistance differs from membrane resistance in that:

Axial resistance is the resistance inside the axon, while membrane resistance is across the membrane

Conducts action potentials

Axon

3 basic groups of amygdala

Basolateral nuclei (BLA)- contains visual, auditory, gustatory, tactile Corticomedial nuclei- contains olfactory afferents Central nucleus

The sensory receptors for temperature, pain, and itch have ____ fibers, with an approximate speed of 0.5-2 m/second.

C (fibers)

The flow of current down an axon is best described using

Cable theory

What ion is necessary and sufficient for neurotransmitter release?

Calcium 2+

proximal

Closer to the point of attachment

Learned fear circuitry

Conditioning->sensory info-> BLA->converges to central nucleus->hypothalamus/PAG/cerebral cortex->response There are synaptic adaptations

corpus callosum

Connects the left & right hemispheres.

An example of an antagonist is...

Curare

The relative refractory period ends when delayed rectifiers:

Deactivate

When ion channels in the membrane open, the membrane resistance tends to __________.

Decrease

Receives inputs from other neurons

Dendrite

DREADDS

Designer receptors exclusively activated by designer drugs Mutated muscarininc receptors (1st ver out) No activity for Ach but activated by CNO CNO has no activity in animals that don't have DREADD Inject CNO to activate/inactivate neurons based on flavor of DREADD Long term activation, last hours, no tethering

Tetraethylammonium ion

Drug that blocks K channels should eliminate late component

plaques

EC deposits of amyloid beta in grey matter of brain remnants of degenerated axon terminals

somites

Formed in the mesoderm and appear as a bump on the surface of the embryo on either side of the notochord for 33 vertebrate and related skeletal m. it is what "somatic" motor nerves innervate

Preference

Formed when subject prefer chamber paired with reward

_______ dominant everywhere! Inhibition very important in shaping proper activity.

GABA

inhibitory neurotransmitters

GABA and glycine

_________ activity enhanced by: • Benzodiazepines (Valium, Xanax) • Reduce anxiety, sedative • Ethanol

GABAA

The ________________ equation predicts membrane potential more accurately

GHK (Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation)

Unusual neurotransmitters would be...

Gasses (NO) & Lipids (cannabinoids)

Spatial resolution

Genetic control restricts open to specific brain regions

Superior

Higher on the body, nearer to the head

The ________-______ ________ is a mathematical model that is used to describe the initiation and propagation of action potentials in neurons

Hodgkin-Huxley Model

The ___________ _________ in sodium channels is located in the loop between pore III and IV. This structure folds into pore of channel.

Inactivation gate

Reinforcement

Increases probability of behavior, measured by frequency,duration,magnitude,and latency of behavior Look at DA

Patient S.M- imaging studies

Indicate AMG role in processing fear: - Picture show fear expression active AMG - Neutal and happy expressions do not

Because the neuronal membrane at rest is mostly permeable to _____ , the membrane potential is close to E(____).

K+

The "delayed rectifier" channel is permeable to

K+

The gene sequence of _____ channels have 6 alpha-helical regions, S4 contains positively-charged amino acids (voltage sensor), and the region between S5 & S6 is referred to as a *pore loop*. In this channel 4 subunits assemble to form complete channel (tetramer).

K+ Channels

Why don't action potentials go backwards?

K+ channels open (hyperpolarized), as Na+ channels deactivate

AMPA receptors tend to activate rapidly, and permeable to _____ and to _____. It drives ________ electrical response.

K+; Na+; postsynaptic

a-synuclein misfolding

LB found in enteric NS start in lower brains tem (vagus), and olfactory bulb -> cortex a-synuclein can move between cells act like prion

Temporal resolution

Laser (ms control)

Lesions vs. stimulation of AMG

Lesions- flattened emotions and reduced fear and aggression Stimulation- increase attention/alertness, increase fear and anxiety

Amygdala lesions in primates result in

Less displays of fear and aggression Decrease in vocalizations and facial expressions

Inferior

Lower on the body, farther from the head

The discovery of "animal electricity" was made by

Luigi Galvani

Spinal Accessory nerve

Motor to neck and muscles

What kind of glutamate receptors are necessary for long term potentiation?

NMDA receptors. they mediate calcium entry!

Which ions set membrane potential in real cells?

Na+, K+, Ca++,Cl-

The resting membrane is permeable to _______ , _______ , and _______. At rest, these ions all have net flow across the membrane.

Na+, K+, Cl-

As the permeability of the membrane to an ion increases, the membrane potential approaches the __________ _________ for the ion.

Nernst potential

Optogenetics variation : light induced ____

Neuronal firing, inhibition of neural firing, recruitment of cell signaling molecules, sequestration, clustering to promote/strengthen signaling, gene expression

___________ convert glutamine back to glutamate (it reloads vesicles with glutamate)

Neurons

An example of an agonist is...

Nicotine

What neurotransmitter is used in the neuromuscular junction?

Nicotinic Acetylcholine. excitatory

the gaps between the myelin sheaths are called:

Nodes of Ranvier

large receptive fields consist of the: a) b)

Pacinian corpuscle, Ruffini's ending

Selectivity filter (K channel)

Oxygen-containing amino acids in pore

presenilins in AD

PSEN1/PSEN2 mutation increase y-secretase activity-> familial

natural reinforcers

Reinforcers that are naturally provided for a certain behavior; that is, they are a typical consequence of the behavior within that setting.

_______________ describes return of the cell to resting state, caused by reentry of potassium into the cell while sodium exits the cell.

Repolarization

The _____________ Theory states that nervous system is a *continuous cell network* physically connected to each other in a complex network of axons and dendrites

Reticular (theory)

The ___________ theory implied that nervous system is a ___________-_________ _______, was disproven by Golgi's silver technique.

Reticular (theory), continuous cell network

Positive reinforcement

Reward offered on expression of wanted behavior

The bacterial K channel (KcsA) channel has a similar pore loop in S__ & S__ , and has a constriction near to top on the extracellular side called a ____________- filter. It also has a constriction near the bottom called a ___________-_________.

S5 & S6, selectivity filter, gating ring

The congenital insensitivity to pain is a mutation in the ________ gene. This gene encodes Nav1.7, which is a voltage gated _____ ion channel.

SCN9A (gene); Na+ (sodium)

Emotional memory

Shown neutral, positive, and negative pictures Used PET to see that - Memory of emotional pictures was higher - Enhanced memory correlated with increased AMH activation

Hodgkin and Huxley's model revealed that the action potential reaches its peak when:

Sodium channels inactivate

Location of the nucleus in a neuron

Soma

Small, actin-filled structure

Spine

In a series of experiments, Curtis and Cole increased the extracellular potassium concentration and observed that the membrane potential of the squid giant axon depolarized. This happened because:

The Nernst potential for potassium depolarized

The ___________ __________ implied that the nervous system is made up of discrete cells, called neurons. It established that neurons may have complex structures and neurons are polarized.

The Neuron Doctrine

decussation

The anatomical crossing over of neurons from left to right

The Nernst potential is negative for potassium in a typical neuron because:

The concentration of potassium is greater inside than outside

growth cone

The growing tip of a neurite. Specialized to identify an appropriate path for neurite elongation.

gastrulation

The process by which a single-layered blastula becomes a three-layered gastrula. - forms a disk (embryo)

In voltage clamp experiments, the early inward current of the action potential ends because:

The sodium channels inactivate

The Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation differs from the Nernst equation in that GHK:

The two equations differ in none of the above respects

A negative current reported by voltage clamp is properly interpreted to mean:

There was an inward current

__________ are neurons that are sensitive to the changes in temperature.

Thermoreceptors

ventral

Toward the belly

Optogenetics

Use of light sensitive proteins to affect cellular function In NS takes form of firing or inhibiting neurons

Limbic system

Used to describe a set of structures though to contribute to emotion

Otto Loewi's experiment

Vagus nerve regulates heart rate by releasing a chemical substance

Contains and releases neurotransmitter

Vesicle

primary afferents enter at the dorsal roots, also known as the:

Zone of Lissauer

NMDA receptor

a glutamate receptor that also binds the glutamate agonist NMDA and that is both ligand-gated and voltage-sensitive

NMDA receptor

a glutamate receptor that is minorly involved in excitatory post-synaptic currents. permeable to calcium. modulatory. conductance is voltage dependent

AMPA receptor

a glutamate receptor that is the major component of excitatory post-synaptic currents

Blood Brain Barrier (BBB)

a highly selective mechanism that protects the brain

What is the calyx of held?

a large glutamatergic synapse in the CNS. very important for sound location. has a large presynaptic terminal. fast and reliable transmission

Brodmann's Cytoarchitectonic Map

a map that divides the brain into regions based on differences in layers. it concludes that similar structure leads to similar structure

periaqueductal gray (PAG) is:

a midbrain region involved in pain perception

Inferior Colliculus

a part of the midbrain that is involved in auditory processing

Tegmentum

a part of the midbrain that is involved in motor function and reward

a tetramer is:

a polymer comprising four monomer units.

inhibitory postsynaptic potential

a postsynaptic potential that hyperpolarizes the neuronal membrane, making a cell less likely to fire an action potential

amyloid hypothesis

abnormal cleavage of APP due to B,y-secretase activity, some familial mutations enhance B initiating event leads to plaques treatments: block B,y secretase but not a-secretase, enhance clearance of AB

cytoskeleton of a dendrite consists mostly of ___________.

actin

The primary job of sodium channels is the _________ ________

action potential

The voltage-dependence of sodium-channel activation contribute to

action potential threshold

Axons propagate __________ __________.

action potentials

congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP) tends to have a lack of nociceptor firing of _____ _____.

action potentials

firing rate describes the rate at which a neuron produces _______-________

action potentials (usually expressed in terms of spikes per second)

long-term depression (LTD)

active synapses are decreased in effectiveness eyelid close->loss of coord activity-> static/noise->weak NMDA activation->modest Ca->dec AMPA-> loss of influence over cortical neurons

correct alpha motor neuron innervation is dependent on

activity at NMJ

strong input to wrong layer "lose" because

activity doesn't correlate with the strongest postsynaptic response

induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)

adult cell taken from patient and reprogrammed into DA progenitor cells not foreign

__________ nerves bring to or lead towards an organ or a body part. An example would be a nerve carrying a message *towards* the CNS.

afferent

Transporters of ionic gradients work ____________ concentration gradients, making it so that ___________ is required and the process is relatively slow.

against (concentration gradients); energy (ATP is required)

Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation shows the membrane potential that results from the contribution of ______-______ that can cross the membrane

all ions

Opioid analgesics affect pain by: a) b) decreasing excitability of sensory neurons c) raising the pain threshold at the spinal cord level

altering the brain's perception of pain

addiction is often characterized as

an aberrant reward learning disease (plasticity)

neuronal patterning

biological process which cells in developing nervous system acquire distinct identities according to their specific spatial positions -controlled by signalling gradients throughout developing nervous system

cocaine

blocks reuptake of DA (DAT inhibitor) increase DA and produces feelings of pleasure increase approach and seeking behaviors

Somatic map is essentially a map of the:

body's surface

How is mechanoreceptor activation done?

by mechanosensitive ion channels in unmyleniated axon terminals that convert mechanical force to ion currents

__________ channels are composed of a single gene product

calcium

IP3 receptor

calcium channel in the ER

imprinting

classic example of critical period critical period= 24-48 hr

To terminate synaptic transmission, neurotransmitter must be removed from the ________. The _____________ (AChE) located in the cleft are responsible of the break down of acetylcholine

cleft; acetylcholinesterase

According to Melzack and Wall's Gate Theory, neural projections can _________ the gate. This is a __________, top-down process, which __________ pain.

close, descending, reduces

Ganglion

collection of nerve cell bodies in the peripheral nervous system

Synaptic integration is the process by which multiple synaptic potentials ___________ within ___________ __________.

combine; one postsynaptic neuron.

development of white matter tracts

cortical white matter corpus callosum internal capsule

two point discrimination depends on the _________ of mechanoreceptors in the skin, and the ________ of their receptive fields.

density, size

Inflammation is a response to __________-_________. There is nociceptor activation, and an __________ sensitivity with the release of inflammatory agents.

damaged tissue, increased (sensitivity)

nigra

dark

necrosis

death due to damage to cell cell swell and burst

deprivation experiments measure _________-________ input. An example of this would be the amputate finger (D3), and record the change that the area of the cortex that used to respond to D3, now would be redistributed to D__ and D__. Human limb amputations remap to face.

decreased sensory input

Opioid analgesics affect pain by: a) altering the brain's perception of pain b) c) raising the pain threshold at the spinal cord level

decreasing excitability of sensory neurons

Pacinian corpuscles respond to:

deep pressure and vibration

The ________ _______ in K+ channels are activated by __________. They do not inactivate. These help __________ action potential.

delayed rectifiers; depolarization; terminate

___________ are the branchlike parts of a neuron that are specialized to receive information.

dendrites

__________-__________ are small membranous protrusion from a neuron's dendrite that typically receives input from a single axon at the synapse

dendritic spine (or spine)

How can the smallest distance between 2 points be distinguished?

density of mechanoreceptors in the skin and the size of their receptive fields

Cortical maps are highly...

dynamic

effect of PD on striatum pathways

direct pathway less activated-> voluntary motor plan suppressed indirect pathway less suppressed-> inappropriate motor plans are less supressed

Guillian-Barre Syndrome (GBS)

disease due to demylination of PNS axons. acute. symptoms: muscle weakness, numbness, breathing difficulties, paralysis

neural circuits of liking and wanting

distinct and dissociable circuits for liking/wanting a reward

DDC inhibitors (carbidopa)

doesn't cross BBB increased L-dopa entry to brain dec peripheral SE of L-dopa dyskinesias

the periaqueductal gray (PAG) suppresses nociceptors in the ________ horn of the spinal cord.

dorsal (horn)

Axons of second order neurons from _______-_______ nuclei ascend via medial lemniscus, and also ________ here.

dorsal column (nuclei), decussate

dorsal column-medial lemniscal pathway enters the spinal cord through the ________-________ ganglia, and decussates within the ______ ______.

dorsal root (ganglia), spinal cord

The soma of the primary somatosensory afferents lie in the:

dorsal root ganglia

primary somatosensory afferents enter the spinal cord through the:

dorsal roots

spina bifida

due to folic acid supplement/ Vit B deficiency screen alpha-fetoprotein levels CSF can't flow normally hydroencephaly w/ shunt (possibly lifelong), braced legs, loss of bowel function, wheelchair confinement, frontal lobe/ executive function problems

synaptic remodeling

during learning LTP increases formation of new synapses while LTD leads to elimination of others

embryo is flat disk composted of 3 layers

endoderm mesoderm ectoderm

The descending regulation of pain can stimulate the release of ___________.

endorphins

What is long term plasticity?

enduring changes that can incorporate transient events into persistent alterations

Separating charges across the membrane requires ____________.

energy

Primary somatosensory afferents

enter the spinal cord through dorsal roots with cell bodies in the dorsal root ganglia

Flow of information from the mechanoreceptors of the skin to the cortex differs where they ________ and where they ________.

enter, decussate (cross to opposite side)

synaptic pruning

excess synapses made during development

The diversity of firing expression is very high in cortex, they can _________ _________ _________.

express different channels

integrin

expressed on cell surface; bind to laminin

ESC restoration of DA in PD steps

extraction from embyro expansion in vitro differentiation into progenitor neurons immature DA neurons

lamellipodia

flat sheets of membrane

cerebospinal fluid (CSF)

fluid that surrounds brain and spinal cord

neurulation

folding process in vertebrate embryos, which include transformation of neural plate into neural tube

Astrocytes

form blood brain barrier

Myelination is described as the:

formation of a fatty sheath around the axons

laminin

found in ECM

Myelination in the peripheral nervous system is done by ________.

glia

forms myelination

glia

Neurotransmitters that act as inflammatory agents include:

glutamate, serotonin, adenosine/ATP

NMDA receptors has calcium driving the intracellular signalling, and it needs both __________ (presynaptic) and __________ (postsynaptic) to activate. This receptor is known as the "coincidence detector," and is heavily involved in learning and memory.

glutamate; depolarization

___________ is a major excitatory neurotransmitter of the central nervous system. It is involved in just about everything! It is an __________ receptor. The subtypes of these ____________ receptors include: • AMPA receptors • NMDA receptors • Kainate receptors • Non-selective cation channels

glutamate; ionotropic; glutamate

hyperpolarization can be overcome by:

greater stimulus current

Sulci

grooves and folds of the brain (increase the surface area)

tract

group of axons in the CNS

nucleus

group of neurons in the CNS

In two-point discrimination, bigger receptive fields indicate that it is _________ to discriminate, and smaller being ________ to discriminate.

harder, easier

action potential current travels:

it varies for different axons, 1 to 100 m/s

slowly adapting fibers _______-_______ as long as stimulus is present.

keep responding

ventricular system

key to understanding the development of the brain structures

The information flow of the nervous system occurs in pathways, otherwise known as __________-_________.

labelled lines

Barrel cortex

large portion of the somatosensory cortex in rodents devoted to whiskers

LFS

low freq stim causes smaller elevation in Ca activates protein phosphatases= LTD

Somatotopic Map Plasticity

map changes based on loss or increased use

neurofibrillary tangles

masses of fibers in cell bodies protein malfunction leads to loss of ability to transport nutrients and enzymes along axon

Substance P activates _______ cells, which release histamine promoting swelling, and itch.

mast

___________ of the skin are of multiple types that vary by receptive field, size, preferred stimulus frequency , and stimulus sensitivity.

mechanoreceptors

Mechanotransduction occur with:

mechanosensitive ion channels

In the dorsal column-medial lemniscal pathway, axons of second order neurons from the dorsal-column nuclei ascend via __________-_________, and also decussate here.

medial lemniscus

MPTP

meperidine (MPPP) derivative, produces parkinsonism

__________ _________ are G-protein-coupled receptors whose primary action is to stimulate an intracellular biochemical response. These receptors are also known as ___________-______

metabotropic receptors; Muscarinic AChR

G-protein-coupled receptors are called _____________ receptors. These recetprs trigger ___________ __________ cascade, and tend to have complex effects in general.

metabotropic; intracellular signalling (cascade);

tau

microtubule associate protein (MAP) regulates MT in axons

Transport of materials within axons and dendrites occurs along:

microtubules

Dendrites contain __________. They receive input at the synapses, and these synapses are often formed into _________.

microtubules, spines

drug of abuse either

mimic NT or alter proteins that affect their levels

PD starts in gut

misfolded a-synuclein in guy leads to cascade of misfolding in endogenous protein in the brain symptoms better model human PD than MPTP loss of DA neurons runs up vagus nerve: vagotomy prevents spread PD patho req endogenous a-synuc

A metabotropic agonist is _____________.

muscarine

Endocannabinoids

natural, marijuana-like substances produced by the body

appetitive value

need to eat to satisfy hunger, consummatory

Group of axons

nerve

monocular deprivation

one eyelid is sealed closed ocular dominance columns

synaptic stabilization

only those retinal terminals that are active at same time as postsynaptic LGN target neuron are retained Hebbian modification synapse is strengthened when retinal activity drives a postsynaptic LGN

Nociception does not equal ________.

pain

Nav1.7 channel helps initiate action potential in __________ _________.

pain neurons

Nociceptors can be activated without _______, and people can experience pain without _________.

pain, nociception

olfactory bulb

pair of vesicles sprout off the ventral surface as telencephalon differentiates

neural plate

part of ectoderm that gives rise to nervous system

neuronal development basic steps

proliferation migration differentiation

addiction is

propelled by adaptations in "wanting" circuits

area 3a

proprioception

differentiation of neural tube

prosencephalon/ forebrain (rostral end) mesencephalon/ midbrain rhombencephalon/hindbrain (caudal end) rostral end of neural tube develops into brain which is derived from 3 vesicles caudal neural tube become SC

Lipids that act as inflammatory agents include __________ and _________.

prostaglandins, endocannabinoids

prion

protein that has ability to spread by inducing normal forms to misfold

stem cell derived neruons

provide renewable source of DA neurons

dorsal column-medial lemniscal pathway

provides information on tactile sensation and propriception from the trunk and body via spinal cord

synaptic refinement

pruning decreases unnecessary synapses

the periaqueductal gray (PAG) _________ nociceptors in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord.

suppresses

Pacinian corpuscles do not respond to _________ pressure due to the capsules *slipping* past each other dissipating the deformation of the nerve ending.

sustained (pressure)

__________ refers to the junction where information is transmitted from one neuron to the next.

synapse

connection between neurons

synapse

Area 1

texture

thalamic and cortical development

thalamic input is needed for proper cortical development

In the dorsal column-medial lemniscal pathway, the third order __________ neurons project to the __________ somatosensory cortex (S1)

thalamic, primary (somatosensory cortex)

the spinothalamic (anterolateral) pathway projects directly to the __________ after decussation.

thalamus

diencephalon differentiates into

thalamus and hypothalamus

The spinothalamic (anterolateral) pathway diffuses through projections in the _________ and __________.

thalamus, cortex

THe amount of cortical space dedicated to a body region depends on:

the amount of use

What is a dermatome?

the area of skin innervated by the dorsal roots of a single spinal cord segment (one to one relationship)

rapid adaption of pacinian corpuscles results from?

the capsule that makes the corpuscle sensitive to on/off activity & insensitive to sustained activity.

Forebrain

the cerebral cortex

Two synaptically connected neurons are separated by

the cleft

The Golgi silver stain used by Ramón y Cajal reveals:

the complete structure of single neurons

congenital insensitivity to pain

the condition of being born without the ability to perceive pain

How do the two hemispheres communicate?

the corpus callosum

Layered organization of neurons

the cortex

Ohm's law describes the relationship between

the current in a circuit = the voltage difference divided by resistance

The equilibrium potential for any ion (E-ion) is equal to

the electrical potential inside the cell that exactly counteracts the concentration gradient of that ion

The resting membrane potential usually differs from the Nernst potential for potassium because...

the membrane is permeable to multiple ions

Alzheimer's disease (AD)

the most common cause of major NCD, characterized by gradual deterioration of memory and personality and marked by the formation of plaques of beta-amyloid protein and tangles of tau in the brain

What will happen if you remove a capsule surrounding a Pacinian corpuscle?

the nerve becomes a slow adapting response

Ramón y Cajal discovered that

the nervous system is made up of discrete cells.

enteric nervous system

the nervous system of the digestive tract

Excitatory post-synaptic potential

the neuron is more likely to fire action potential. always depolarizing

Pyramidal cells

the primary cells of the cortex. they are excitatory

Sensation

the process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus energies from our environment

What is sensory adaptation?

the progressive loss of receptor response as exposure to a stimulus is prolonged

What is the somatsensory organ in the body?

the skin

radial glial cells

thought to be scaffolding cells are neural progenitors/ multipotent stem cells

Meninges

three layers of connective tissue in which the brain and spinal cord are wrapped (dura mater, arachnoid membrane, pia mater)

critical period

timeframe in which plasticity can happen

neural crest

tissue from cells that are pinched off the ectoderm and come to lie on either side of neural tube (laterally) -> give rise to all neurons with cell bodies in PNS

addicts seek drugs

to not feel bad; not because they want to feel good

drug addiction stats

tobacco and alcohol causes the most harm most people who try drugs do not become addicted

Hypoglossal nerve

tongue movement

ApoE4 in AD

too much AB is bad normal ApoE is needed to clear AB mutants lead to AB accumulation and AD

Descending regulation of pain is by the ______-______ influence of the periaqueductal gray (PAG).

top-down (influence)

Considering that the dorsal column-medial lemniscal pathway provides *feedback* from *primary somatosensory cortex (S1) back to thalamus & brainstem,* it can be said that this is a _____-_____ processing. So information is _________ at each step.

top-down (processing), transformed

Afferents remain segregated from the ________ pathway.

touch (pathway)

Mechanoreceptors respond to:

touch, pressure, vibration, stretch

medial

toward the midline

C fibers are (myelinated/nonmyelinated).

unmyelinated

mechanoreceptors are the ____________ nerve endings of primary sensory afferents.

unmyelinated (nerve ends)

What is a mechanoreceptor?

unmyelinated nerve endings of primary sensory afferent sensitive to physical distortion of the skin

grey matter are the:

unmyelinated neuron cell bodies and short, unmyelinated axons

spina bifida in utero interventions

uterus removed from body so that back is exposed close dura, muscle, and skin maternal health risk risk of premature birth now standard care

The dorsal column-medial lemnsical pathway synapses on the neurons of the _________-________ nucleus of the ___________, which is *contralateral* in aspect.

ventral posterior (nucleus of the) thalamus

The trigeminal touch pathway decussates and travels to the ________-_______ (VP) of the thalamus onto tertiary order neurons, where it goes on to _________-________ cortex (S1).

ventral posterior (of the thalamus); primary somatosensory cortex

development of ventricles

ventricles provide roadmap to structure telencephalon lies over and lateral to diencephalon result in lateral ventricles and 3rd ventricles

2 layers of the early cortex walls

ventricular zone (close to ventricle) marginal zone(close to pia)


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