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Title: Animal Sensory Systems and Movement


1
Animal Sensory Systems and Movement
  • Chapter 46

2
Animal Sensory Systemsand Movement
  • Movement is fundamental to how animals work
  • Sensory information must be accurate for animals
    to move effectively
  • Sensory cells convert sound, light, and other
    stimuli to a change in membrane potential
  • Send action potentials to the brain, where the
    signals are processed and integrated.

3
How Do Sensory Organs Convey Information to the
Brain?
4
Sensing a Stimulus
  • The process of sensing a stimulus has four
    components
  • Transductiontheconversion of an external
    stimulus to an internal signal in the form of an
    action potential
  • Amplification of the signal
  • Transmission of the signal to the central nervous
    system (CNS)
  • Integration or processing with other signals

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Sensory Transduction
  • Conversion of stimulus energy into a change in
    the membrane potential of a sensory receptor
  • This change in the membrane potential
  • Is known as a receptor potential
  • It is a graded potential whose magnitude changes
  • Many sensory receptors are extremely sensitive
  • With the ability to detect the smallest physical
    unit of stimulus possible

8
Amplification and Transmission
  • The strengthening of stimulus energy by cells in
    sensory pathways
  • After energy in a stimulus has been transduced
    into a receptor potential
  • Some sensory cells generate action potentials,
    which are transmitted to the CNS
  • Like motor neurons
  • Sensory cells without axons
  • Release neurotransmitters at synapses with
    sensory neurons
  • Such as the hair cells in the ear

9
Transmission
  • The magnitude of affects the frequency of action
    potentials that travel to the CNS
  • Many sensory neurons spontaneously generate
    action potentials at a low rate
  • A stimulus does not switch the production of
    action potentials on or off, it modulates action
    potential frequency

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Integration
  • The integration of sensory information
  • Begins as soon as the information is received
  • Occurs at all levels of the nervous system
  • Some receptor potentials
  • Are integrated through summation
  • Another type of integration is sensory adaptation
  • A decrease in responsiveness during continued
    stimulation
  • Reduces continuous sensation of common stimuli

14
Types of Sensory Receptors
  • Based on the energy they transduce, sensory
    receptors fall into five categories
  • Mechanoreceptors
  • Chemoreceptors-
  • Electromagnetic receptors
  • Thermoreceptors
  • Pain receptors
  • Mechanoreceptors sense physical deformation
  • Caused by stimuli such as pressure, stretch,
    motion, and sound

15
Mechanoreceptors
  • The mammalian sense of touch
  • Relies on mechanoreceptors that are the dendrites
    of sensory neurons

16
Chemoreceptors
  • Include
  • General receptors that transmit information about
    the total solute concentration
  • And specific receptors that respond to individual
    kinds of molecules
  • Two of the most sensitive and specific
    chemoreceptors known
  • Are present in the antennae of the male silkworm
    moth

17
Electromagnetic Receptors
  • Electromagnetic receptors detect various forms of
    electromagnetic energy
  • Such as visible light, electricity, and magnetism
  • Some snakes have very sensitive infrared
    receptors
  • That detect body heat of prey against a colder
    background

18
Electromagnetic Receptors
  • Many mammals appear to use the Earths magnetic
    field lines
  • To orient themselves as they migrate

19
Thermoreceptors
  • Respond to heat or cold
  • Help regulate body temperature by signaling both
    surface and body core temperatures

20
Pain Receptors
  • In humans, pain receptors, also called
    nociceptors
  • Are a class of naked dendrites in the epidermis
  • Respond to excess heat, pressure, or specific
    classes of chemicals released from damaged or
    inflamed tissues
  • Prostaglandins increase sensitivity of pain
    receptors to pain
  • Analgesics such as aspirin and ibuprophen reduce
    prostaglandin synthesis and reduce sensitivity

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Hearing and Equilibrium
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Hearing and Equilibrium
  • The mechanoreceptors involved with hearing and
    equilibrium detect settling particles or moving
    fluid
  • Hearing and the perception of body equilibrium
  • Are related in most animals
  • Produce receptor potentials when some part of the
    membrane is bent
  • Most invertebrates have sensory organs called
    statocysts
  • That contain mechanoreceptors and function in
    their sense of equilibrium

26
Hearing and Equilibrium
27
Hearing and Equilibrium
  • Many arthropods sense sounds with body hairs that
    vibrate
  • Or with localized ears consisting of a tympanic
    membrane and receptor cells

28
Hearing and Equilibrium In Terrestrial Vertebrates
29
Hearing
  • Vibrating objects create percussion waves in the
    air
  • That cause the tympanic membrane to vibrate
  • The three bones of the middle ear
  • Transmit the vibrations to the oval window on the
    cochlea
  • These vibrations create pressure waves in the
    fluid in the cochlea
  • That travel through the vestibular canal and
    ultimately strike the round window

30
Hearing
31
Hearing
  • The pressure waves in the vestibular canal
  • Cause the basilar membrane to vibrate up and down
    causing its hair cells to bend
  • The bending of the hair cells depolarizes their
    membranes
  • Sending action potentials that travel via the
    auditory nerve to the brain
  • At the end near the round window, the hair bends
    the other way and reduces neurotransmitter
    release and frequency of sensations
  • Volume and pitch are determined by rapidness of
    the vibration and length of vibration

32
Hearing
  • The cochlea can distinguish pitch
  • Because the basilar membrane is not uniform along
    its length
  • Each region of the basilar membrane vibrates most
    vigorously
  • At a particular frequency and leads to excitation
    of a specific auditory area of the cerebral cortex

33
Equilibrium
  • Several of the organs of the inner ear
  • Detect body position and balance
  • The utricle, saccule, and semicircular canals in
    the inner ear
  • Function in balance and equilibrium
  • Different body angles cause different hair cells
    and their sensory neurons to be stimulated
  • Decreases or increases the release of
    neurotransmitter
  • Spinning causes disruption in the equilibrium of
    the semicircular canals and you become dizzy

34
Equilibrium
35
Vision
36
Vision
  • Many types of light detectors
  • Have evolved in the animal kingdom
  • Most invertebrates
  • Have some sort of light-detecting organ
  • One of the simplest is the eye cup of planarians
  • Provides information about light intensity and
    direction but does not form images

37
Eyes
  • Two major types of image-forming eyes have
    evolved in invertebrates
  • The compound eye and the single-lens eye
  • Compound eyes are found in insects, crustaceans
    and some polychaetes
  • Consists of several thousand light detectors
    called ommatidia
  • Presents a mosaic image
  • Good at detecting movement
  • Some can see in the ultraviolet range, like bees

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Eyes
  • Single-lens eyes
  • Are found in some jellies, polychaetes, spiders,
    and many molluscs
  • Work on a camera-like principle
  • Eye has only one hole through which light enters
    the eye
  • Iris changes the diameter of the pupil
  • A single lens focuses light on a layer of
    photoreceptors
  • The eyes of vertebrates are camera-like
  • But they evolved independently and differ from
    the single-lens eyes of invertebrates

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Parts of the Vertebrate Eye
  • The main parts of the vertebrate eye are
  • The sclera, which includes the cornea
  • The choroid, a pigmented layer
  • The conjunctiva, that covers the outer surface of
    the sclera
  • The iris, which regulates the pupil
  • The retina, which contains photoreceptors
  • The lens, which focuses light on the retina

42
Focusing the Eye
  • Humans and other mammals
  • Focus light by changing the shape of the lens

43
Photoreceptors
  • The human retina contains two types of
    photoreceptors
  • Rods are sensitive to light but do not
    distinguish colors
  • Enable us to see at night
  • Cones distinguish colors but are not as sensitive
  • Color vision is found in all vertebrate classes
    but not in all species ( most mammals do not)

44
Photoreceptors
  • The human retina contains about 125 million rods
    and about 6 million cones
  • Account for about 70 of all the receptors in the
    body
  • Each rod or cone in the vertebrate retina
  • Contains visual pigments that consist of a
    light-absorbing molecule called retinal bonded to
    a protein called opsin

45
Photoreceptors
  • Rods contain the pigment rhodopsin
  • Which changes shape when it absorbs light
  • Cones have three classes of visual pigments
    called photopsins red, green and blue
  • Depending on which class of pigment is more
    stimulated is what color you will see

46
How Do Rods and ConesDetect Light?
  • Rods and cones have segments packed with
    membrane-rich disks

47
Photoreceptors
  • The membranes contain large quantities of a
    transmembrane protein called opsin associated
    with one retinal pigment molecule
  • Retinal changes shape when it absorbs a photon of
    light, leading to a change in opsins
    conformation
  • This change, in turn, leads to a series of events
    that culminates in a change in the cells
    membrane potential

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Visual Processing
  • Three other types of neurons contribute to
    information processing in the retina
  • Ganglion cells, horizontal cells, and amacrine
    cells

51
Visual Processing
  • Signals from rods and cones
  • Travel from bipolar cells to ganglion cells
  • The axons of ganglion cells are part of the optic
    nerve
  • Horizontal and amacrine cells help integrate
    signals before it is sent to the brain

52
Taste and Smell
53
Taste in Humans
  • The receptor cells for taste in humans
  • Are modified epithelial cells organized into
    taste buds
  • Scattered in several areas of the tongue and
    mouth
  • Five taste perceptions involve several signal
    transduction mechanisms
  • Sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami (elicited
    by glutamate)
  • Respond to a broad range of chemicals but is
    responsive to a particular type of substance
    (chemoreceptors)

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Smell
  • Olfactory receptor cells
  • Are neurons that line the upper portion of the
    nasal cavity
  • When odorants reach the nose, they diffuse into a
    mucus layer in the roof of the nose and activate
    olfactory receptor neurons via membrane-bound
    receptor proteins
  • When odorant molecules bind to specific receptors
  • A signal transduction pathway is triggered,
    sending action potentials to the brain

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Movement
59
Skeletons
  • Information about the environment is useless
    unless an animal can respond to it, usually by
    moving
  • All movement relies on muscles working together
    against some type of skeleton
  • Animal skeletons function in support, protection,
    and movement
  • The three main types of skeletons are
  • Hydrostatic skeletons, exoskeletons, and
    endoskeletons

60
Hydrostatic Skeletons
  • A hydrostatic skeleton
  • Consists of fluid held under pressure in a closed
    body compartment
  • This is the main type of skeleton
  • In most cnidarians, flatworms, nematodes, and
    annelids
  • Animals control their form and movement by using
    muscles to change the shape of fluid-filled
    compartments
  • Annelids use their hydrostatic skeleton for
    peristalsis

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Hydrostatic Skeletons
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Exoskeletons
  • An exoskeleton is a hard encasement
  • Deposited on the surface of an animal
  • Exoskeletons
  • Are found in most molluscs and arthropods
  • Muscles are attached to the shell

63
Endoskeleton
  • An endoskeleton consists of hard supporting
    elements
  • Such as bones, buried within the soft tissue of
    an animal
  • Endoskeletons
  • Are found in sponges, echinoderms, and chordates
  • The mammalian skeleton is built from more than
    200 bones
  • Some fused together and others connected at
    joints by ligaments that allow freedom of movement

64
The Human Skeleton
  • Vertebrate skeleton can be divided into two main
    parts
  • The axial skeleton consists of the skull,
    vertebral column and rib cage
  • The appendicular skeleton made up of limb bones
    and the pectoral and pelvic girdle that anchor
    the appendages to the axial skeleton
  • Joints at the appendages provide flexibility for
    body movements

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The Human Skeleton
66
Endoskeletons
  • Endoskeletons are composed of the connective
    tissues cartilage and bone


67
Cartilage and Bone
  • Cartilage is made up of cells scattered in a
    gelatinous matrix of polysaccharides and protein
    fibers
  • Bone is composed of cells in a hard extracellular
    matrix of calcium phosphate with small amounts of
    calcium carbonate and protein fibers
  • Bones meet and interact at articulations, or
    joints. Bones articulate in ways that allow limbs
    to swivel, hinge, or pivot

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Skeletal Muscles and Movement
  • Muscles move skeletal parts by contracting
  • The action of a muscle
  • Is always to contract, they can extend only
    passively
  • Skeletal muscles are attached to the skeleton in
    antagonistic pairs
  • With each member of the pair working against each
    other

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Skeletal Muscles and Movement
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How Do Muscles Contract?
  • Vertebrates have three types of muscle tissue

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Types of Muscle Tissue
  • Skeletal muscle consists of unbranched,
    multinucleate cells.
  • Cardiac muscle contains branched cells whose ends
    are connected via specialized regions called
    intercalated discs.
  • Smooth muscle is unbranched, lacks myofibrils,
    and is often organized into thin sheets.
  • Vertebrate skeletal muscle
  • Is characterized by a hierarchy of smaller and
    smaller units

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Vertebrate Skeletal Muscle
  • A skeletal muscle consists of a bundle of long
    fibers
  • Running parallel to the length of the muscle
  • A muscle fiber
  • Is itself a bundle of smaller myofibrils arranged
    longitudinally
  • The myofibrils are composed to two kinds of
    myofilaments
  • Thin filaments, consisting of two strands of
    actin and one strand of regulatory protein
  • Thick filaments, staggered arrays of myosin
    molecules

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Sliding Filament Model of Muscle Contraction
  • According to the sliding-filament model of muscle
    contraction
  • The filaments slide past each other
    longitudinally, producing more overlap between
    the thin and thick filaments
  • As a result of this sliding
  • The I band and the H zone shrink

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Sliding Filament Model of Muscle Contraction
0.5 ?m
(a) Relaxed muscle fiber. In a relaxed muscle
fiber, the I bandsand H zone are relatively wide.
Z
H
A
Sarcomere
(b) Contracting muscle fiber. During contraction,
the thick and thin filaments slide past each
other, reducing the width of theI bands and H
zone and shortening the sarcomere.
(c) Fully contracted muscle fiber. In a fully
contracted muscle fiber, the sarcomere is shorter
still. The thin filaments overlap,eliminating
the H zone. The I bands disappear as the ends of
the thick filaments contact the Z lines.
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Sliding Filament Model of Muscle Contraction
  • The sliding of filaments is based on
  • The interaction between the actin and myosin
    molecules of the thick and thin filaments
  • The head of a myosin molecule binds to an actin
    filament
  • Forming a cross-bridge and pulling the thin
    filament toward the center of the sarcomere

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Sliding Filament Model of Muscle Contraction
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Muscle Contraction
  • A skeletal muscle fiber contracts
  • Only when stimulated by a motor neuron
  • The stimulus leading to the contraction of a
    skeletal muscle fiber
  • Is an action potential in a motor neuron that
    makes a synapse with the muscle fiber
  • The synaptic terminal of the motor neuron
  • Releases the neurotransmitter acetylcholine,
    depolarizing the muscle and causing it to produce
    an action potential

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Muscle Contraction
  • Action potentials travel to the interior of the
    muscle fiber
  • Along infoldings of the plasma membrane called
    transverse (T) tubules
  • The action potential along the T tubules
  • Causes the sarcoplasmic reticulum to release Ca2
  • The Ca2 binds to the troponin-tropomyosin
    complex on the thin filaments
  • Exposing the myosin-binding sites and allowing
    the cross-bridge cycle to proceed

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