cell communication Flashcards

1
Q

what is the nervous system designed to carry ?

A

information rapidly and efficiently

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2
Q

what is the key of communication

A

To detect changes and carry information to the CNS
To process the information
To decide and plan on appropriate response
To tell the body what do to

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3
Q

what does communication depend on ?

A

Interactions between neurons
Anatomical relationship between neurons

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4
Q

what happens once the action potential reaches the synapse ?

A

it needs to cross to the next cell

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5
Q

2 types of synapse which enable cell-cell communication

A

1.chemical synapse
2.electrical synapse

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6
Q

3 different types of connections

A

1.axo-dendritic
2.axo-somatic
3.axo-axonic

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7
Q

chemical synapse

A

Can cope with fast transmission rates
Ionotropic and metabotropic channels
Vesicles releases from presynaptic terminal
Act on receptors in postsynaptic terminal
Major drug target

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8
Q

Electrical

A

More effective with slower transmission rates Gap junctions
Small molecules and current
‘low-pass filter’
Synchrony
Up-and-coming drug target

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9
Q

what functions does chemical synapse have?

A

1.pre-synaptic terminal
2.vesicle
3.transmitter
4.receptor

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10
Q

what functions does electrical have?

A

1.gap junction
2.post-synpatic terminal

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11
Q

4 methods by which cellular communication occurs

A

1.excitation
2.inhibiton
3.disinhibition
4.lateral inhibition

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12
Q

how do neurones carry the message ?

A

action potential is a method of communication

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13
Q

what does the strength of the action potential be altered at?

A

level of the neuron or the network

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14
Q

when coding information , why is inhibition important?

A

inhibition of thecells shapes the pattern of action potentials to give it meaning.

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15
Q

when coding information what does excitation do?

A

the principal cell is important (providing the action potentials that are carried along

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16
Q

Direct inhibition

A

neurones generally, lack of pattern means nothing to the brain, but when the inhibitory neurons block some of the firing this gives rise to patterns that can contain information

17
Q

disinhibition

A

plays a key role in the Basal Ganglia circuitry which shapes motor function

18
Q

what does activation of inhibitory circuit lead to

A

excitation

19
Q

Lateral inhibiton

A

Activation of excitatory cells also activates associated inhibitory cells

20
Q

in lateral inhibition, what does inhibition act on?

A

neighbouring cells to reduce activity

21
Q

in lateral inhibiton what does inhibition do to the response?

A

Strengthens response of cell directly stimulated

22
Q

in lateral inhibition what are the sensory pathways?

A

-vision
-touch
-olfaction

23
Q

what are the 3 ways you can improve the signal transmission?

A

1.myelination
2.plasticity
3.sychrony

24
Q

how can Myelination improve signal transmission?

A

You can alter the speed of transmission along the axon

25
Q

how can plasticity improve signal transmission?

A

You can alter the strength of the signal at the level of the network

26
Q

what is myelination

A

Acts like Insulation on a wire:
Speeds communication
Allows Saltatory conduction

27
Q

what 2 disorders associate with myelination

A

Multiple Sclerosis (CNS)
Guillain Barré (PNS)

28
Q

Plasticity

A

describes the ability of a neuron to up- or down-regulate the strength of it’s synaptic connections

29
Q

what are the 3 way that occurs in plasticity:

A

1.Synaptic morphology
2.Metabolic changes
3.Receptor changes

30
Q

what the two models of plasticity

A

1.Long-term potentiation
2.Long-term depression

31
Q

what does plasticity improve

A

improves synaptic transmission at the neuronal level

32
Q

Synchrony

A

describes the co-ordinated firing of a number/network of cells

33
Q

2 ways synchronous activated can be activated?

A

1.gap junctions
2.pacemaker cells

34
Q

what do gap junctions and pacemaker cells help with?

A

allow network of cells to fire simultaneously