Synapses & Neural Integration pt 2 Flashcards

1
Q

what is neural integration

A

nervous system communication involving more than one presynaptic and postsynaptic cell at any one time

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2
Q

what are the types of neural integration

A
  • divergence/convergence
  • axon hillock and threshold
  • summation
  • frequency coding
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3
Q

describe axon divergence

A

axon has many collaterals that communicate with many other neurons

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4
Q

describe axon convergence

A

any given neuron receiving communication from tons of neurons

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5
Q

describe axon hillock in relevance to threshold

A

AH of postsynaptic neuron acts as an integrator which sums signals of all active synapses

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6
Q

why is summation needed for neural integration

A

single EPSP is generally not enough to depolarize post synaptic neuron to threshold

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7
Q

what are the types of neural summation

A

temporal (one at a time) and spatial (several at the same time)

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8
Q

describe frequency coding

A

considers number of action potentials (affected by summation) to find the degree of depolarization at the axon hillock

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9
Q

what is presynaptic modulation

A

regulation of communication across another synapse

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10
Q

what are the two possible effects of presynaptic modulation

A

release of NT can be enhanced or suppressed

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11
Q

what is presynaptic facilitation

A

release of neurotransmitter can be enhanced

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12
Q

what is presynaptic inhibition

A

release of neurotransmitter can suppressed

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13
Q

what are the classes of the neurotransmitters

A

choline derivative, biogenic amines, amino acids, purines, neuropeptides, unique molecules

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14
Q

what are examples of purines

A

ATP, ADP, adenosine

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15
Q

what are examples of unique molecules

A

nitric oxide, endocannabinoids

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16
Q

what are examples of choline derivatives

A

acetylcholine

17
Q

what are examples of amino acids

A

glutamate, aspartate, glycine, GABA

18
Q

what are examples of biogenic amines

A

serotonin, histamine, catecholamines (dopamine, epinephrine, norepinephrine)

19
Q

what are examples of neuropeptides

A

TRH, vasopressin, oxytocin, substance P, cholecystokinin, endogenous opioid (enkephalins, endorphins), orexin

20
Q

describe acetylcholine; where is it found, stored, released

A
  • most abundant NT in PNS, also found in CNS
  • stored in synaptic vesicles once synthesized in cytosol
  • action potentials trigger its release thru exocytosis
21
Q

what are the 2 types of acetylcholine receptors

A

nicotinic and muscarinic cholinergic receptors

22
Q

describe nicotinic cholinergic receptors

A

found in PNS (autonomic neurons on skeletal muscle cells) and CNS, ionotropic

23
Q

describe muscarinic cholinergic receptors

A

found on some effector organs for ANS, this is the dominant cholinergic receptor type found in CNS, metabotropic

24
Q

why are unique NT molecules considered unique

A

appear to function as neurotransmitters but are not stored in synaptic vesicles nor released by exocytosis

25
Q

what are neuropeptides

A

short chains of amino acids made in rough endoplasmic reticulum, and packed into secretory vesicles by Golgi, most are hormones

26
Q

what does oxytocin regulate

A

uterine contraction and milk flow

27
Q

what does cholesystokinin regulate

A

gall bladder contraction

28
Q

what does antidiuretic hormone (vasopressin) regulate

A

kidney output

29
Q

what is orexin involved in

A

sleep-wake cycle

30
Q

what are endocannabinoids, what are they made by, function

A

unique NTs, made in neurons from membrane phospholipids but their function is still unknown

31
Q

when is glutamate released and the classes of receptors it binds to

A

at excitatory synapses in CNS; NMDA, APA, Kainate receptors

32
Q

when is GABA released and the classes of receptors it binds to

A

at inhibitory synapses in CNS; GABA A & C (ionotropic), GABA B (metabotropic)