CIE A Level: Control and Coordination
action potential
a brief change in the potential difference from -70mV to +30mV across the cell surface membrane of neurons and sarcolemma of muscle cells
troponin
a calcium-binding protein that is joined to the actin filaments and changes shape to move tropomyosin and expose myosin-binding sites on the actin filament
motor neuron
a cell that conducts impulses from the central nervous system to an effector such as a muscle or a gland
chemoreceptor
a cell that responds to chemical stimuli such as presence of food molecules near the tongue, odour-causing molecules in the nose, or oxygen and carbon dioxide concentrations in the blood
sensory neuron
a cell that transmits impulses from a receptor to the central nervous system
receptor potential
a change from the resting potential across the membrane of a receptor cell caused by a stimulus
neurotransmitter
a chemical released from the presynaptic terminal by exocytosis to transmit an impulse between neurons or from a motor neuron to a muscle
tropomyosin
a long fibrous protein that is joined to the thin actin filaments and blocks the attachment site for myosin heads, preventing cross-bridge formation
noradrenaline
a neurotransmitter found mainly in areas of the brain that are involved in governing autonomic nervous system activity. A hormone version is also released from the adrenal glands
gibberellin
a plant hormone that stimulates seed germination and general plant growth
synapse
a point at which two neurons meet but do not touch, made up of the presynaptic terminal, the synaptic cleft, and the postsynaptic neuron
receptor protein
a protein embedded in a membrane that changes shape in response to binding with a complementary ligand molecule, this can act as a ligand-gated ion channel or activate other proteins associated with the membrane
neuron
a specialised cell of the nervous system that conducts impulses
neuromuscular junction
a specialised type of synapse between a motor neuron's axon terminal and a muscle
aleurone layer
a tissue around the endosperm of seeds that synthesises amylase during germination
endosperm
a tissue in seeds, such as barley seeds, that stores starch
ligand-gated ion channel
a transmembrane protein containing a pore that opens or closes as it changes shape in response to a signaling molecule binding to it
voltage-gated ion channel protein
a transmembrane protein that opens or closes in response to changes in the electrical potential across a membrane
acetylcholine (ACh)
a type of neurotransmitter released by cholinergic synapses involved in reflex arcs and stimulation of skeletal muscle
node of Ranvier
a very short gap between Schwann cells where myelinated axons are not covered by myelin and are therefore permeable to ions in the surrounding tissue fluid
nerve impulse
a wave of electrical depolarisation that is transmitted along neurons
acetylcholinesterase
an enzyme embedded in the postsynaptic membrane and found in the synaptic cleft that hydrolyses ACh into acetate and choline which are taken back into the presynaptic terminal and reused
endocrine gland
an organ that secretes hormones directly into the blood
endocrine system
consists of all endocrine glands in the body together with the hormones they secrete
T-tubules
infoldings of the sarcolemma which go deep into the muscle fibre and conduct impulses to the sarcoplasmic reticulum
myelin
insulating material made of layers of cell membranes of Schwann cells that surrounds the axons of many neurons, making them impermeable to water and ions
saltatory conduction
movement of action potentials along a myelinated axon from one node of Ranvier to the next
all-or-none law
neurons and muscle cells only transmit impulses if the initial stimulus is sufficient to increase the membrane potential above the threshold potential
myofibril
one of many cylindrical bundles of actin and myosin filaments inside a muscle fibre
auxins
plant hormones (such as IAA) that stimulate cell elongation
expansins
proteins in the cell walls of plants that weaken hydrogen bonds between cellulose microfibrils allowing for cell elongation in response to IAA
sarcolemma
the cell surface membrane of a muscle fibre
threshold potential
the critical electrical potential across a cell surface membrane of a receptor or neuron which must be reached before positive feedback causes an action potential to be initiated
sarcoplasm
the cytoplasm of muscle fibres
potential difference
the difference in electrical potential between the inside and outside of a cell membrane
resting potential
the difference in electrical potential that is maintained across the cell membrane of a neuron at rest. It is about -70mV
sarcoplasmic reticulum
the endoplasmic reticulum in muscle fibres that release Ca2+ ions in response to an impulse arriving at the neuromuscular junction
sliding filament model
the mechanism via which thin actin filaments slide over thick myosin filaments causing sarcomeres to shorten. Hence, muscle fibres shorten and the muscle contracts
sarcomere
the part of a myofibril between two Z lines
myosin
the protein that makes up the thick filaments of sarcomeres in striated muscle
actin
the protein that makes up the thin filaments of sarcomeres in striated muscle
repolarisation
the return of the potential difference across the cell surface membrane of a neuron or muscle cell to normal (negative inside, positive outside) during an action potential
depolarisation
the reversal of the resting potential across the cell surface membrane of a neuron or muscle cell so that the inside becomes positive and outside becomes negative
presynaptic neuron
the specialised nerve cell ending at a synapse from which neurotransmitters are released when an action potential arrives at its axon terminal
postsynaptic neuron
the specialised nerve cell on the opposite side of the synapse from the neuron at which the action potential arrived
refractory period
the time during which a neuron is recovering from an action potential and another action potential cannot be generated
striated muscle
the type of muscle tissue in skeletal muscles with a striped pattern due to the arrangement of actin and myosin filaments within sarcomeres of the myofibrils
synaptic cleft
the very small gap between two neurons across which neurotransmitters diffuse