Ch. 12: Fundamentals of the Nervous System and Nervous Tissue
Special somatic senses
"localized"; somatic senses whose receptors are confined to relatively small areas rather than spread widely throughout the body most are confined to the head, including hearing, equilibrium (receptors in inner ear), and vision (receptors in the eye) 1. Hearing 2. Balance 3. Vision
General somatic senses
"widespread"; senses whose receptors are spread widely throughout the outer tube of the body includes the many senses experienced on the skin and in the body wall, such as touch, pain, pressure, vibration, and temperature
Neuroglia in the CNS
1. Astrocytes 2. Microglial cells 3. Ependymal cells 4. Oligodendrocytes Neuroglial cells of the CNS have branching processes and a central cell body. Can be distinguished from neurons by their smaller size and their darker-stainign nuclei Outnumber neurons in the CNS by about 10 to 1 & make up 1/2 the mass of the brain Glial cells can divide throughout life
2 main types of synapses
1. Axodendritic 2. Axosomatic
Peripheral nervous system (PNS)
1. Cranial nerves 2. Spinal nerves 3. Ganglia Links all regions of the body to the CNS
How does a synapse function?
1. Impulse travels down axon of presynaptic neuron 2. The impulse stimulates the synaptic vesicles to fuse with the presynaptic membrane 3. Fused area ruptures, causing the vesicles to release their NT molecules 4. NT molecules diffuse across the synaptic cleft and bind to the postsynaptic membrane 5. This binding changes the membrane charge on the postsynaptic neuron, influencing the membrane's ability to generate a nerve impulse
2 types of cells in nervous tissue
1. Neurons - excitable nerve cells that transmit electrical signals 2. Neuroglia - non excitable support cells that surround and wrap the neurons both types develop from same embryonic tissues: neural tube and neural crest
Formation of myelin sheath in PNS
1. Schwann cell envelops an axon 2. Schwann cell rotates around and around the axon, wrapping its plasma membrane loosely around it in successive layers 3. Schwann cell cytoplasm is forced from between the membranes. The tight membrane wrapping surrounding the axon form the myelin sheath
3 overlapping functions of the nervous system
1. Sensory input - Uses millions of sensory receptors to monitor changes inside and outside the body. Each of these changes is called a stimulus 2. Integration - processes and interprets the sensory input and makes decisions about what should be one at each moment 3. Motor output - dictates a response by activating effector organs, our muscles, or glands
4 main subdivision of the PNS
1. Somatic sensory - sensory innervation of outer tube 2. Visceral sensory - sensory innervation of viscera 3. Somatic motor (Somatic nervous system) - motor innervation of skeletal muscles *voluntary* 4. Visceral motor (Autonomic nervous system) - motor innervation of cardiac muscles, smooth muscles, and glands) *involuntary*
Special visceral senses
1. Taste 2. Smell sensory receptors in the tongue and nasal cavity, respectively
Nerves of the PNS
Afferent PNS fibers respond to sensory stimuli Efferent PNS fibers transmit motor stimuli from CNS to muscles and gland
Neurons
Basic structural units of the nervous system Highly specialized cells that conduct electrical signals from one part of the body via nerve impulses/action potentials - extreme longevity (>100 years) - not able to divide (can't replace themselves if destroyed) - high metabolic rate (needs abundant oxygen and glucose)
Neurofibrils
Bundles of intermediate filaments (neurofilaments) Form a network between the chromatophilic substance); Keep the cell from being pulled apart when subjected to tensile forces
Nerves
Cable-like organs in the PNS Consist of numerous axons wrapped in connective tissue Most nerves contain myelinated and non-myelinated sensory and motor axons Axon is surrounded by Schwann cells
Functional classification of neurons
Classification according to the direction the nerve impulse travels relative to the CNS 1. Sensory (PNS --> CNS) 2. Motor (CNS --> PNS) 3. Interneurons (all located in CNS)
Nerves of the CNS
Composed of interneurons that 1. Receive sensory info 2. Direct/transport info to specific CNS regions 3. Initiate appropriate motor responses
5 Essential Components of Reflex Arcs
Each activates the next 1. Receptor 2. Sensory neuron 3. Integration center 4. Motor neuron 5. Effector
Ependymal cells
Form a simple epithelium that lines the central cavity of the spinal cord and brain They provide a fairly permeable layer between the cerebrospinal fluid that fills this cavity and the tissue fluid that bathes the cells of the CNS. They bear cilia that help circulate cerebrospinal fluid
Myelin Sheaths in the PNS
Formed by Schwann cells; develop during the fetal period and the first year or so of postnatal life Only thick, rapidly conducting axons are sheathed with myelin
Dendrites
Function: (1) receptive sites, providing an enlarged surface area for receiving signals from other neurons; (2) conduct electrical signals TOWARD the cell body Structure: processes that branch from the cell body like the limbs on a tree - most neurons have numerous dendrites - organelles in the cell body occur in dendrites, and chromatophilic substance extends into the basal part of each dendrite
Nerve impulse
Generated at the initial segment of the axon where it leaves the axon hillock Conducted along the axon to the terminal boutons NTs are released from vesicles @ terminal boutons
Oligodendrocytes
Have fewer branches than astrocytes Line up in small groups and wrap their cell processes around the thicker axons in the CNS Produce myelin sheaths in the CNS
What is the most common type of neuron in the body?
Interneurons --> reflects the vast amount of info processed in the human CNS
Chromatophilic substance (Nissi bodies)
Large clusters of rough ER and free ribosomes Renew the membranes of the neuron and the proteins of the cytosol Extend only into the basal part of dendrites and to the base of the axon hillock
Interneuorns
Lie between motor and sensory neurons. All are multipolar neurons confined entirely to the CNS. Link together into chains that form complex neuronal pathways. Make up 99.98% of the neurons in the body Show great diversity in size and in the branching patterns of their processes
Astrocytes
Most abundant glial cell in the CNS. Star shaped with many radiating processes that have bulbous ends Some of the bulbs cling to neurons (including the axon terminals) whereas others cling to capillaries Functions are numerous and not well understood 1. Regulate NT levels by increasing the rate of NT uptake in regions of high neuronal activity 2. Signal increased blood flow through capillaries in active regions of the brain 3. Control the ionic environment around neurons 4. Help synapses form in developing neural tissue 5. Produce molecules necessary for neural growth (BDTF) 6. Propagate calcium signals taht may be involved with memory Active role in neural activity
*CONFUSION ALERT* Neuron Nerve fiber Nerve
Neuron = nerve cell Nerve fiber = long axon Nerve = collection of axons in the PNS
Neuroglia/glial cells
Non-nervous supporting cells. 6 types - 4 in the CNS and 2 in the PNS CNS: astrocytes, microglial cells, ependymal cells, oligodendrocytes PNS: satellite cells, schwann cells Provide a supportive scaffolding for neurons Cover all nonsynaptic parts of the neurons, thereby insulating the neurons and keeping the electrical activities of adjacent neurons from interfering with each other
Structural link between the PNS and the CNS
Occurs in the gray matter of the CNS Simplest example of this neuronal integration is the reflex arc
Myelin Sheaths in the CNS
Oligodendrocytes form the myelin sheaths in the brain and spinal cord Each oligodendrocyte has multiple processes that coil around several different axons Gaps are present, but they are more widely spaced than those in the PNS
Neuroglia in the PNS
Satellite cells and Schwann cells - very similar cell types that differ mainly in location
Receptor of a reflex arc
Site where stimulus acts Located at the terminal end of the peripheral process of a sensory neuron
Microglial cells
Smallest and least abundant neuroglia of the CNS. Elongated cell bodies and cell processes with many projections Phagocytes (macrophages of the CNS) Migrate to and engulf invading microorganisms and injured or dead neurons Derived from blood cells called monocytes; the monocytes that become microglial cells migrate to the CNS during the embryonic and fetal periods
Non-myelinated axons in the PNS
Thin, slowly conducting axons lack a myelin sheath Found in portions of the autonomic nervous system and in some sensory fibers Schwann cells surround the axons but do not wrap around them in concentric layers of membrane A single Schwann cell can partly enclose >15 axons, each of which occupies a separate tubular recess in the surface of the Schwann cell
Non-myelinated
Thinnest axons in the CNS are non-myelinated They are covered by the many processes of glial cells (i.e. astrocytes) that are so abundant in the CNS
(T/F) Most neurons in the CNS function as both presynaptic and postsynaptic nueorns
True; they get info from some neurons and dispatch it to others
Visceral reflexes
activate smooth muscle, cardiac muscle, or glands
Nerve fiber
any long axon
Terminal arborization
area at the end of an axon where it branches profusely; end in knobs called terminal boutons
Tracts
bundles of axons within the white matter traveling to similar places
Cranial nerves
carry signals to and from the brain
Spinal nerves
carry signals to and from the spinal cord
Nervous tissue
cells are densely packed and tightly intertwined made up of (1) neurons and (2) neuroglia
Ganglia
clusters of neuronal cell bodies (outside of the CNS)
Neurons w/ larger diameters
conduct impulses faster than those with smaller diameters because of the basic law of physics: resistance to the passage of an electrical current decreases as the diameter of any "cable" increases
Motor neuron of a reflex arc
conducts efferent impulses from the integration center to an effector
Perineurium
connective tissue wrapping surrounding a nerve fascicle
Central nervous system (CNS)
consists of brain and spinal cord, which occupy the cranium and the vertebral canal, respectively integrating and command center of the nervous system - it receives incoming sensory signals, interprets them, and dictates motor responses based on past experiences, reflexes, and current conditions
Integration center of a reflex arc
consists of one or more synapses in the gray matter of the CNS. in simple reflex arcs, the integration center is a single synapse between a sensory neuron and a motor neuron in more complex reflexes, it can involve multiple synapses that send signals through long chains of interneurons to other portions of the CNS (i.e. the brain)
Somatic body region
consists of the structures external to the ventral body cavity - the structures of the outer tube (skin, skeletal musculature, bones)
White matter
contains no neuron cell bodies but millions of axons and neuroglia white color comes from myelin sheaths around many of the axons; these axons either ascend from the spinal cord to the brain or descend from the brain to the spinal cord, allowing these 2 regions of the CNS to communicate with each other white matter consists of axons running between different parts of the CNS
Connective tissue in nerves
contains the blood vessels that nourish the axons and Schwann cells
Autonomic nervous system
controls function of visceral organs --> regulates the contraction of smooth and cardiac muscle and secretion by the body's many glands made up of general visceral motor neurons involuntary nervous system divided into sympathetic "fight or flight" and parasympathetic "rest and digest"
Axons
each neuron has only 1 axon; arises from a cone-shaped region of the cell called the axon hillock thin processes of uniform diameter throughout their length impulse generators and conductors that transmit nerve impulses AWAY from their cell body do not contain organelles length and diameter of axon varies among the different neurons of the body
Processes
extend from the cell bodies of all neurons 2 types: dendrites and axons
Nodes of Ranvier
gaps in the myelin sheath that occur at regular intervals; occur since adjacent Schwann cells along a myelinated axon do not touch each other Nerve impulses don't travel along the myelin-covered regions of the axonal membrane --> they jump from the membrane of one gap to the next in a way that greatly speeds impulse conduction
Gray matter
gray colored inner zone that surrounds the hollow central cavity of the CNS; it is a butterfly shaped-region dorsal half contains cell bodies of interneurons; ventral half contains cell bodies of motor neurons gray matter is the site where neuron cell bodies are clustered has a mixture of neuron cell bodies, dendrites, short non-myelinated neurons, and neuroglia synapse occur in the gray matter
Nerve Fascicles
groups of axons bound into bundles
Unipolar neurons (pseudounipolar neurons)
have a short, single process that emerges from the cell body and divides like an inverted T into 2 long branches most unipolar neurons start out as bipolar neurons whose 2 processes fuse together near the cell body during development found in sensory ganglia in the PNS, where they function as sensory neurons has central process (extends to CNS) and peripheral process (extends to receptors)
Multipolar neurons
have more than two processes. usually have numerous dendrites and a single axon. some small neurons have no axon and rely strictly on dendrites for conducting signals make up 99% of neurons
Terminal boutons
knobs at the end of the branches of an axon contain synaptic vesicles and abundant mitochondria because secretion of NTs require a great deal of energy
Endoneurium
layer of delicate loose connective tissue surrounding the axon (covering the Schwann cells)
Motor neurons (efferent neurons)
make up the motor division of the PNS. They transmit impulses AWAY from the CNS to effector organs (muscles and glands) Multipolar; cell bodies located in the CNS Form junctions with effector cells, stimulating muscles to contract or glands to secrete
Sensory neurons (afferent neurons)
make up the sensory division of the PNS. They transmit impulses TOWARD the CNS from sensory receptors in the PNS. Most sensory neurons are pseudounipolar, and their cell bodies are in ganglia outside the CNS Peripheral process extends from a sensory receptor; Central process terminates in the CNS Some sensory neurons are bipolar in structure (in special sense organs)
Nervous system
master control and communications system of the body; its cells communicate through electrical signals, which are rapid and specific and usually produce almost immediate responses
Synaptic vesicles
membrane-bound sacs filled with neurotransmitters; found in the terminal bouton
Knee-jerk reflex
monosynaptic reflex; impact of a hammer on the patellar ligament stretches the quadriceps muscles of the thigh. This stretching initiates an impulse in a sensory neuron that directly activates a motor neuron in the spinal cord, which signals the quad to contract the contraction of the quadriceps counteracts the original stretching caused by the hammer
Axodendritic synapses
most synapses occur between the terminal boutons of one neuron and the dendrites of another
Visceral body regions
mostly contains the viscera within the ventral body cavity - the structures of the body's inner tube (digestive tube, lungs, heart, bladder, etc.)
Efferent division of the PNS
motor division; conducts impulses from the CNS to effectors (muscles and glands) consists of motor nerve fibers divided into somatic nervous system and autonomic nervous system
Effector of a reflex arc
muscle or gland cell that responds to efferent impulses by contracting or secreting
Axonal transport
neurofilaments, actin myofilaments, and microtubules provide structural strength and aid in transport of substance to and from the cell body as the axonal cytoplasm is continually recycled and renewed
Structural Classification of Neurons
neurons are grouped by the number of processes that extend from the cell body 1. Multipolar 2. Bipolar 3. Unipolar
Presynaptic neuron
neurons that conducts signals toward a synapse
Postsynaptic neuron
neurons that transmits signals away from the synapse
Axon collaterals
occasional branches of axons that extend from the axon at more or less right angles
Somatic nervous system
portion of the PNS that stimulates contraction of the skeletal muscles in the body; under voluntary control
Body sense
position and movement of body in space
Myelin sheaths
produced by oligodendrocytes in the CNS and by Schwann cells in the PNS segmented structures that are composed of the lipoprotein myelin surround the thicker, faster conducting axons of the body each segment of myelin consists of the plasma membrane of a glial cell rolled in concentric layers around the axon forms an insulating layer that (1) prevents the leakage of electrical current from the axon, (2) increases the speed of impulse conduction along the axon, and (3) makes impulse propagation more energy efficient
Reflexes
rapid, automatic motor responses to stimuli unlearned, unpremeditated, and involuntary
Somatic reflexes
result in contraction of skeletal muscle
Proprioception
sense that detects the amount of stretch in muscles, tendons, and joint capsules informs you of the position and movement of your body in space, giving you a "body sense"
Afferent division of the PNS
sensory division; conducts impulses from sensory receptors to the CNS somatic and visceral sensory nerve fibers
Reflex arcs
simple chains of neurons that cause our simplest, reflexive behaviros and reflect the basic strctural plan of the nervous system
Monosynaptic reflex
simplest of all reflexes just one synapse; there is no interneuron between the sensory neuron and the motor neurons i.e. "knee-jerk" reflex
Gliomas
since glial cells can divide, most tumors that originate in the brain (60%) are gliomas gliomas are tumors formed by uncontrolled proliferation of glial cells Difficult cancers to treat; 1-yr survival rate is <50%
Synapse
site at which neurons communicate; most synapses transmit info through chemical messengers some neurons in certain areas of the CNS transmit signals electrically through gap junctions signals pass across most synapses in one direction only --> synapses determine the direction of information flow through the nervous system
Synaptic cleft
space that separates the plasma membranes of two neurons
General visceral senses
stretch, pain, and temperature, widely felt in the digestive and urinary tracts, reproductive organs, and other viscera also includes hunger and nausea
Cortex
superficial layer of gray matter in the cerebrum and cerebellum of the brain
Schwann cells
surround all axons in the PNS and form myelin sheaths around many of these axons
Satellite cells
surround neuron cell bodies within ganglia function similar to astrocytes
Axosomatic synapses
synapses between axons and neuron cell bodies (rare)
Epineurium
tough fibrous sheath surrounding the whole nerve
Sensory neuron of a reflex arc
transmits the afferent impulses to the CNS
Bipolar neurons
two processes that extend from opposite sides of the cell body rare neurons that occur in some of the special sensory organs (inner ear, olfactory epithelium of nose, retina of eye), where they serve as sensory neurons
Cell body
vary widely in size; all consist of a single nucleus surrounded by cytoplasm and usual organelles focal point for the outgrowth of the of the neuron processes during embryonic development
Where are most neuron cell bodies located?
within the CNS *** Ganglia = neuronal cell bodies in the PNS