True and False Questions Exams 1-3
Plaques develop when the second splice of APP is made by beta secretase, which creates longer splices that stick together thereby forming plaques.
True
Some people who have a limb amputated still vividly feel the presence of that limb.
True
Tan was a patient of Paul Broca who could only say a single word and upon his death Broca discovered that a part of his cortex was damaged. That part is now referred to as Broca's area.
True
The Ca++ that enters through NMDA receptor-channels in the dendritic spines of hippocampal and cortical cells can activate a Ca++/calmodulin dependent protein kinase.
True
The main purpose of an action potential is to transmit a signal rapidly over long distances, and with high fidelity.
True
The most recent development in prostheses for quadriplegics is the demonstration that monitoring activity from the motor cortex can be used to stimulate the muscles of a paralyzed person and allow him or her to make movements that he or she intended to make.
True
The quantal hypothesis holds that each end plate potential is the result of the simultaneous release from the nerve terminal of many quanta of ACh, where each quantum has the ACh content that produces one miniature end plate potential.
True
The quantal hypothesis was proposed by Bernard Katz who won the Nobel Prize for his studies of synaptic transmission
True
The quantal hypothesis was supported by the discovery of the presence of synaptic vesicles. Large numbers of synaptic vesicles were seen in electron micrographs of the neuromuscular junction and some were seen fused to the membrane of the axon terminal, suggesting that these vesicles were each releasing one quantum of transmitter into the synaptic cleft.
True
The representation of the body surface in the somatosensory pathway is a distorted representation since the most sensitive parts of the body receive the largest representation in the brain
True
The unit of contraction in all striated muscle is the sarcomere
True
layer 4 of the cortex is always well developed in sensory portions of the cortex
True
the cortex is a thin layer of cells that covers the telencephalon
True
the medulla is the most caudal (or posterior) portion of the hindbrain
True
One feature of some people who have neglect syndrome is that they deny that anything is wrong.
True
The representation of the body surface in the somatosensory pathway is distorted because the arms and legs receive a larger representation than do the hands and lips.
False
There are both ionotropic and metabotropic receptors for all neurotransmitters.
False
A synapse capable of generating Long Term Potentiation (LTP) is not capable of also producing (Long Term Depression) LTD.
False
Camilio Golgi is considered to be the father or modern neuroscience
False
Fibers in the corticospinal tract make their first synapse in the medulla and the axons of the cells in the medulla then cross to the opposite side before projecting to the spinal cord.
False
Phineas Gage was one of the patients whose epilepsy was relieved by surgically removing a small part of the brain.
False
Shibire flies carry mutant forms of synaptotagmin, a protein that is thought to be important for the recycling of synaptic vesicles.
False
Small unmyelinated axons utilize saltatory conduction to speed up their conduction.
False
The amount of current flow of an ion across the membrane is determined only by its driving force
False
The effects of transmitters on metabotropic receptors are to open channels that are part of the receptor and thereby generate action potentials.
False
The mapping of the body surface in the brain is hard wired and cannot change.
False
The myelin sheath slows down the conduction velocity of an axon because it prevents the movement of ions across the cell membrane.
False
The representation of the body surface in the somatosensory pathway is a distorted representation since the largest parts of the body surface receive a disproportionate amount of neural space.
False
The representation of the body surface in the somatosensory pathway is an exact representation of the size of each of the body parts
False
ACh is excitatory at the neuromuscular junction, because it generates EPSPs in skeletal muscles. This means that it is the transmitter, ACh in this case, that determines whether the postsynaptic response in any neuron will be excitatory or inhibitory.
False - ACh does not determine it, it is the kind of presynaptic neuron that releases its transmitter into that synapse. The critical factor is the response of the ligand-gated channel to the release of transmitter.
Cholinesterase is located inside the presynaptic terminal and breaks down ACh once it is reabsorbed after release.
False - ACh esterase
Amyloid precursor protein (APP) is normally spliced in two steps. The first splice is made by alpha secretase and the second by beta secretase, which produces a shorter version of the amyloid protein that does not form plaques.
False - Alpha-secretase cuts APP closer to cell membrane so APP fragment released is longer than when Beta-secretase cuts APP - Second cut by Gamma-secretase releases 40 beta-amyloid, the short version that doesn't aggregate and form plaques
Plaques form and Alzheimer's disease occurs when there is an imbalance in the short and long forms of the beta-amyloid, where the amount of short form greatly exceeds the amount of long form.
False - Plaques are formed when "sticky" 42 Beta-amyloid monomers agglutinate to form dimers which then form oligomers. These oligomers agglutinate into plaques
Synapsin is the calcium sensor that cause vesicle fusion when calcium enters the presynaptic terminal.
False - Synaptotagmin
Curare is an antagonist for muscarinic Ach receptors.
False - antagonist for nicotinic Ach receptor
Skeletal muscle fibers are interconnected by electrical synapses or gap junctions.
False - by NMJ
The quantal hypothesis holds that synaptic transmission occurs through the release of one molecule of transmitter, where each molecule constitutes a quantum of transmitter that generates a miniature end plate potential.
False - causes the simultaneous release of many quanta
the thalamus is part of the telencephalon
False - diencephalon
the cerebellum is a part of the midbrain
False - hindbrain
the pons is a part of the midbrain
False - hindbrain
Threshold for generating an action potential occurs when the influx of potassium is just slightly greater than the efflux of sodium.
False - influx of sodium and efflux of potassium
It is the transmitter that determines whether the postsynaptic response in any neuron will be excitatory or inhibitory.
False - it is the kind of presynaptic neuron that releases its transmitter into that synapse and the response of the ligand-gated channel to the release of transmitter.
Spines are found on dendrites and axons.
False - just dendrites
Anode break excitation occurs after a long period of membrane depolarization.
False - occurs when a neuron is hyperpolarized for tens of milliseconds, then quickly brought back to rest, therefore lowering the threshold and generating an action potential.
Nodes of Ranvier are plentiful on long thin dendrites
False - on axon
People who suffer a small stroke confined only to their right precentral gyrus will often deny the existence of parts of their bodies on the left side.
False - precentral gyrus is the motor cortex
The S3 segment is the voltage sensor in all voltage gated ion channels
False - s4
Muscarinic Ach receptors are metabotropic receptors.
True
Neurofibrillary tangles are formed from tau proteins liberated from microtubules when tau become hyperphosphorylated.
True
A person whose hand been amputated might still feel sensations in his or her hand when either portions of the face or arm are stimulated.
True
All striated muscle is innervated by neurons that use acetylcholine as their neurotransmitter.
True
Alternative splicing of RNA transcription is one feature that accounts for the large number of different types of potassium channels found in cells.
True
Botulinum toxin attacks proteins involved in vesicle fusion, and thus prevents transmitter release, but only in excitatory neurons.
True
CaMKII is necessary for generating Long Term Potentiation (LTP). One way that it acts is by phosphorylating AMPA receptors.
True
Calcium is stored in the sarcoplasmic reticulum in skeletal muscle.
True
Catecholamine transmitters, such as serotonin and noradrenalin, are not usually broken down by a catalytic enzyme, but instead, are retaken into the presynaptic terminal by transporters.
True
Freeing of vesicles tethered to the cytoskeleton in the storage pool is brought about by phosphorylation of synapsin by a Ca++/calmodulin dependent protein kinase.
True
GABA and glycine receptors are the two major types of ligand gated channels that produce inhibitory responses in the central nervous system.
True
If a neuron is electrically stimulated at the terminal of its axon, it should generate an action potential that propagates backward to its soma.
True
In skeletal muscle, a single action potential causes the release of sufficient amounts of calcium to occupy all troponin sites and thereby cause a maximal shortening of all sarcomeres in the fiber.
True
Just outside the active zone, a reserve pool of transmitter-filled vesicles is held anchored to actin filaments of the cytoskeleton.
True
LTP and LTD are opposite process whereby generating LTD can reverse LTP at a synapse.
True
LTP is caused by an increase in the conductance of AMPA receptors due to phosphorylation of a portion of the receptor together with the recruitment of additional AMPA receptors at the synapse.
True
Loewi's experiment on the heart was the first conclusive demonstration of chemical neurotransmission between a nerve and its target cell
True