Fundamentals of the Nervous System and Nervous Tissue Marieb Chapter 11 PART 1
Ganglia
lie along nerves in PNS
Neurons can be classified structurally by the number of processes extending from their cell bodies. What is the most common neuron type in humans?
multipolar
Long axons are also called
nerve fibers
Nodes of Ranvier
- Myelin sheath gaps b/w adjacent schwann cells - Sites where axon collaterals can emerge
Interneurons
-Association neurons -Lie b/w motor and sensory neurons -Shuttle signals through CNS pathways -Most are entirely within the CNS -found in 99% of the body's neurons
Motor Neurons
-Carry impulses from the CNS to effectors -multipolar -found in most cell bodies in the CNS
Meylin Sheath
-Composed of whitish, protein-lipid substance. Segmented covering around most long or large-diameter axons. -Protects and electrically insulates axon/neuron fibers. Increases speed of nerve impulse transmission.
Other functions of axons:
-Conducting region of neuron -Generates nerve impulses -Transmits nerve impulses along the axolemma to the axon terminal -Carries on many conversations with different neurons at the same time
Differences in Ionic Composition of resting membrane potential:
-ECF has a higher concentration of Na+ than ICF (balanced by Cl-) -ICF has higher concentration of K+ than ECF (balanced by negative proteins) -K+ plays most important role in membrane potential
When gated channels are open:
-Ions diffuse quickly across membrane along electrochemical gradients, from higher to lower concentrations -Ion flow creates an electrical current and voltage changes across membrane
Membrane Potentials
-Neurons are highly irritable -Respond to adequate stimulus by generating an action potential -Impulse is always the same regardless of stimulus
Basic Principles of Electricity
-Opposite charges attract each other -Energy is required to separate opposite charges across a membrane -Energy is liberated when the charges move toward one another -If opposite charges are separated, the system has potential energy
Neuron Cell Body
-Spherical nucleus with large nucleolus -has free ribosomes & large rough ER called nissl bodies -has mitochondria, microtubles. neurofibrils
Sensory Neurons
-Transmit impulses from sensory receptors toward CNS. -Almost all are unipolar -cell bodies are in ganglia in the PNS
when the sodium-potassium pump stabilizes resting membrane potential...
...concentration gradients for Na+ and K+ (more Na+ pumped out of cell and less K+ is pumped in)
Unipolar Neurons
1 short process, divides T-like - both branches are now considered axons. Distal process is associated with sensory receptor. Proximal process enters CNS.
Membrane potential changes when:
1. Concentrations of ions across membrane change 2. Membrane permeability to ions changes. (Only changes when ions start moving across the cell, which only happens if the channel allows them to)
Axon Hillock
Cone-shaped area of cell body
Central Nervous System (CNS)
Contains brain and spinal cord of dorsal body cavity; is the integration and control center. Interprets sensory input and dictates motor output.
the two types of neuron processes
Dendrites and axon
Resting membrane potential is generated by
Differences in ionic makeup of ICF and ECF & the differential permeability of the plasma membrane.
Dendrites
Found in motor neurons; 100s of sort branched processes (same organelles as in the body) -Receives signals from other neurons -Convey incoming messages toward cell body as graded potentials -always unmyelinated
Sensory Input
Information gathered by sensory receptors about internal and external environments
What are the two principal cell types of nervous tissue?
Neuroglia & neurons; highly cellular with little extracellular space
Voltage Gated Channels
Open and close in response to changes in membrane potential
Mechanically Gated Channels
Open and close in response to physical deformation of receptors, as in sensor receptors
Chemically Gated Channels (ligand channels)
Open with binding of a specific neurotransmitter
Schwann Cells
PNS; Surround all peripheral nerve fibers and form myelin sheaths in thicker nerve fibers (similar to oligodendrocytes). They are vital to the regeneration of damaged peripheral nerve fibers.
Satellite Cells
PNS; Surround neuron cells bodies in PNS & function similar to the astrocytes of CNS
Resting membrane potential
Potential difference across membrane of resting cell. ~-70mV in neurons & the membrane is polarized.
Integration
Processing and interpretation of sensory input
non-gated channels(leakage channels)
Refers to channels that are always open
White Matter
Regions of brain and spinal cord with dense collections of myelinated fibers - usually fiber tracts
Which part of the action potential occurs when the Na+ channels are inactivating and K+ channels open?
Repolarization
What are the 3 functional classifications of neurons?
Sensory (afferent), motor (efferent), interneurons
name 3 functions of the nervous system?
Sensory Input Integration Motor output
Somatic Nervous System
Somatic motor nerve fibers conduct impulses from the CNS to skeletal muscle; part of the voluntary nervous system (conscious control of skeletal muscles)
What are the 2 divisions of the Motor Division?
Somatic nervous system and autonomic nervous system
Neurons
Structural units of the nervous system; large, highly specialized cells that conduct impulses. They have extreme longevity (100 years or more). Amitotic, high metabolic rate, and have a cell body with one or more processes. -Excitable cells; transmit electrical signals
What are the 2 functional subdivisions of the autonomic nervous system?
Sympathetic & parasympathetic - work in opposition to each other
Peripheral Nervous System
The portion of the nervous system outside the CNS. Consists mainly of brain nerves and spinal cord. nerves
Nuclei
clusters of neuron cell bodies in CNS
unmyelinated fibers
conduct impulses slowly
Bipolar Neurons
have 2 processes, 1 axon, 1 dendrite. These are rare, found in the retina and olfactory mucosa.
Multipolar Neurons
have 3 or more processes, 1 axon, other processes are dendrites. These are the most common and are the major neuron in the CNS. -99% of all neurons in body
Which type of ion channel opens when a chemical binds to it?
leakage channels
The movement of which ion through leakage channels establishes the negative membrane potential?
potassium
The interior of a nerve cell has a slight excess of negative charge because (__________.)
potassium diffuses out of the cell
Voltage
potential energy generated by separated charge *the charge difference across membranes: great charge difference b/w points = higher voltage
axon
region of the neuron and generates nerve impulses and transmits them. does not contain Nissl bodies and golgi apparatus.
Action Potential
the local voltage change across the cell wall as a nerve impulse is transmitted
Role of Membrane Ion Channels
-Large proteins serve as selective channels
Permeability of Plasma Membrane
1. Impermeable to large anionic proteins 2. Slightly permeable to Na+ 3. Much more permeable to K+ than Na+ 4. Very permeable to Cl-
3 types of Gated Channels
Chemically gated Voltage-gated Mechanically gated
Gray Matter
Mostly neuron cell bodies and nonmyelinated fibers.
What are the 3 types of structural classifications of neurons?
Multipolar, bipolar, unipolar
Axolemma
Neuron cell membrane
Neuroglia (glia cells)
Small cells that surround and wrap delicate neurons
Axon Collaterals
an axon that has divided into several branches allowing a single nerve cell to influence a wide array of other cells
Motor (efferent) Division
Transmits impulses from the CNS to effector organs (muscles and glands)
Autonomic Nervous System
Visceral motor nerve fibers that regulate smooth muscle, cardiac muscle, and glands. Part of the involuntary nervous system
Motor Output
Activation of effector organs (muscles and glands) produces a response
Oligodendrocytes
CNS; Branched cells; processes wrap CNS nerve fibers, forming insulating myelin sheaths thicker nerve fibers
Astrocytes
CNS; most abundant & versatile glial cells; cling to neurons, synaptic endings, and capillaries. support and brace neurons, guide migration of young neurons, control chemical environment around neurons, respond to nerve impuses and neurotransmitters, play role in exchanges between capillaries and neurons.
Ependymal Cells
CNS; range from squamous to columnar and may be ciliated. Line the central cavities of the brain and spinal column and form permeable barrier b/w cerebrospinal fluid in cavities and tissue fluid bathing CNS cells
Microglial Cells
CNS; small, ovoid cells with thorny processes that touch and monitor neurons. They migrate toward injured neurons & can transform to phagocytize microorganisms and neuronal debris
What happens when more K+ diffuses out than Na+ diffuses in?
The cell becomes more negative inside, and it establishes resting membrane potential.
What best describes the concept of integration?
The nervous system processes and interprets sensory input and decides what should be done at each moment.
Nonmyelinated Fibers
Thin fibers not wrapped in myelin; surrounded by schwann cells but no coilin