Neurons%20and%20Synapses - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Neurons%20and%20Synapses

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Neurons and Synapses Types of Neurons Sensory Motor Interneurons Sensory Neurons INPUT From sensory organs to the brain and spinal cord. Motor Neurons OUTPUT From the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Neurons%20and%20Synapses


1
Neurons and Synapses
Types of Neurons
Sensory
Motor
Interneurons
2
Sensory Neurons
  • INPUT From sensory organs to the brain and
    spinal cord.

Brain
Sensory Neuron
Drawing shows a somatosensory neuron Vision,
hearing, taste and smell nerves are cranial, not
spinal
Spinal Cord
3
Motor Neurons
  • OUTPUT From the brain and spinal cord To the
    muscles and glands.

4
Interneurons
  • Interneurons carry information between other
    neurons only found in the brain and spinal cord.

5
Structures of a neuron
6
The cell body
  • Contains the cells Nucleus
  • Round, centrally located structure
  • Contains DNA
  • Controls protein manufacturing
  • Directs metabolism
  • No role in neural signaling

7
Dendrites
  • Information collectors
  • Receive inputs from neighboring neurons
  • Inputs may number in thousands
  • If enough inputs the cells AXON may generate an
    output

8
Dendritic Growth
  • Mature neurons generally cant divide
  • But new dendrites can grow
  • Provides room for more connections to other
    neurons
  • New connections are basis for learning

9
Axon
  • The cells output structure
  • One axon per cell, 2 distinct parts
  • tubelike structure branches at end that connect
    to dendrites of other cells

10
Myelin sheath
  • White fatty casing on axon
  • Acts as an electrical insulator
  • Not present on all cells
  • When present increases the speed of neural
    signals down the axon.

11
How neurons communicate
  • Neurons communicate by means of an electrical
    signal called the Action Potential
  • Action Potentials are based on movements of ions
    between the outside and inside of the cell
  • When an Action Potential occurs a molecular
    message is sent to neighboring neurons

12
Ion concentrations
13
The Cell Membrane is Semi-Permeable
14
Resting Potential
  • At rest the inside of the cell is at -70
    microvolts
  • With inputs to dendrites inside becomes more
    positive
  • if resting potential rises above threshold an
    action potential starts to travel from cell body
    down the axon
  • Figure shows resting axon being approached by an
    AP

15
Depolarization ahead of AP
  • AP opens cell membrane to allow sodium (NA) in
  • inside of cell rapidly becomes more positive than
    outside
  • this depolarization travels down the axon as
    leading edge of the AP

16
Repolarization follows
  • After depolarization potassium (K) moves out
    restoring the inside to a negative voltage
  • This is called repolarization
  • The rapid depolarization and repolarization
    produce a pattern called a spike discharge

17
Finally, Hyperpolarization
  • Repolarization leads to a voltage below the
    resting potential, called hyperpolarization
  • Now neuron cannot produce a new action potential
  • This is the refractory period

18
Neuron to Neuron
  • Axons branch out and end near dendrites of
    neighboring cells
  • Axon terminals are the tips of the axons
    branches
  • A gap separates the axon terminals from dendrites
  • Gap is the Synapse

19
Synapse
  • axon terminals contain small storage sacs called
    synaptic vesicles
  • vesicles contain neurotransmitter molecules

20
Neurotransmitter Release
  • Action Potential causes vesicle to open
  • Neurotransmitter released into synapse
  • Locks onto receptor molecule in postsynaptic
    membrane

21
Locks and Keys
  • Neurotransmitter molecules have specific shapes
  • Receptor molecules have binding sites
  • When NT binds to receptor, ions enter

positive ions (NA ) depolarize the neuron
negative ions (CL-) hyperpolarize
22
Some Drugs work on receptors
  • Some drugs are shaped like neurotransmitters
  • Antagonists fit the receptor but poorly and
    block the NT
  • e.g. beta blockers
  • Agonists fit receptor well and act like the NT
  • e.g. nicotine.

23
Summary
  • 3 types of neurons
  • The cell membrane
  • Ion movements
  • Action potentials
  • Synapse
  • Neurotransmitters
  • Receptors and ions
  • Agonists and antagonists
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