Neurone cells Flashcards

1
Q

What classes can neural cells be split into?

A

neurons
differentiated glia
- ogliodendrocytes
- microglia
- astrocytes
other glial cells

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2
Q

Where are inputs into neurones?

A

dendrites

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3
Q

Where are action potentials propogated from?

A

axon hillock, then down the axon

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4
Q

What are the 2 types of synapses?

A

chemical - use neurotransmitters, bind to receptors

electrical - much less - channels that allow direct flow of current -

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4
Q

Cell make up at synapses?

A

MANY proteins for receptors - electron dense material on TEM
mitochondria for energy to pass neurotransmittors

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4
Q

Why are electrical synapses important?

A

important for synchronised electrical activity

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5
Q

How does chemical synaptic transmission work?

A

axon potential depolarises synaptic terminal membraneS

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6
Q

Structure of electrical synapses

A

lots of electron dense material - gap junctions - continuous channel allows transmission of ions and currents

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7
Q

Where are most excitatory sysnapses?

A

often concentrated on dendritic spines

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8
Q

What is neural plasticity?

A

changes in neronal/synaptic structure ans function in respinse to neural activity

spines are dynamic structures - number, size, composition
spine remodelling linked to neural activity

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9
Q

What are betz cells? (upper motor neurones)

A

upper motor neurons - large excitatory (glutamatergic)
long projectiions, pyramidal cells
vulnerable in motor neurone disease

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10
Q

What are medium spiny neurones?

A

striatal interneurons
small, inhibitory, (GABAeric)
vulnerable in huntigtons disease

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11
Q

What are ogliodendrocytes?

A

myelinating cells of the CNS
enables rapid nerve conduction
Myelin sheath interrupted by nodes of Ranvier

they also provide metabolic support for the axons (lactate transporters)

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12
Q

What is saltatory conduction?

A

propogation of an impulse across nodes of Ranvier due to myelination

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13
Q

How is the myelin sheath formed?

A

ogliodendrocyte processes wrap around axons
Highly compacted - 70% lipid, 30% protein
Myelin specific proteins and be used as markers - very specialised proteins

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14
Q

Microglia?

A

originate from different palce embryologically
resting state is highly ramified, motile processes survey environment
on activationm retract processes, become amoeboid and motile
are prolifereative

15
Q

What are the functions of microglia?

A

immune surveillance
phagocytosis - debris, microbes
synaptic plasticity - pruning of spines
‘bad’ and ‘good’ microglia - some more antiinflammatory

16
Q

What are astrocytes?

A

‘star-like’ cells
most numerous glial cells in CNS (similar numbers to neurons)
highly heterogeneous -morphology is variable - not all star shaped
contribute to blood brain barrier

17
Q

How do astrocytes contribute to the blood brain barrier?

A

processes of the astrocytes wrap around of the capillaries
express proteins for specialised water channels

18
Q

Functions of astrocytes?

A

structurally they define the brain mico-architecture
metabolic support - e.g. Glutamate-Glutamine shuttle
neurovascular coupling - changes in cerebral blood flow (vasodilation+) in response to neural activity
envelop synapses - buffer K+, glutamate etc
Proliferate during disease
important in scarring of CNS

19
Q

Other specialised glia?

A

radial cells - important for brain development
bergmann glia in cerebellum
Muller cells - scaffold for other cells to form in the retina

20
Q

Brief description of motor neurone disease?

A

Loss of motor neurons in upper cortex and lower spinal cord - pathological changes in all neural cell types though

21
Q

Brief description of MS?

A

Damaged ogliodendrocytes - are attacked - this is where the primary pathology is
acute symptoms relfect dysfunction of the neurons

22
Q

Where are axons gathered? in cns
Where is PNS?

A

tracts

bundled into nerves

23
Q

What are tracts that cross the midline called?

A

tracts are gathered axons
commissures

24
Q

What id the difference in myelination between CNS and PNS?

A

ogliodendrocytes in brains and spinal cord

schwann cells in peripheral

25
Q

How is the blood brain barrier formed?

A

endothelial cell tight junctions
basement membrane (few fenestrations)
astrocyte end feet
pericytes

26
Q

What are ependymal cells?

A

line ventricles and central canal of the spinal cord

involved in CSF production, flow and absorption

ciliated to facilitate flow

allow solute exchange between nervous tissue and \CSF

27
Q
A