L3.2 Neural Communication: Synapses Flashcards

1
Q

define synapse

A

information from one neuron must be passed to other neurons to be useful. a synapse is the connection between 2 neurons - one presynaptic neuron and one postsynaptic neuron

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2
Q

what are the types of synapses

A
  • electrical (connected by gap junctions)

- chemical (a chemical messenger diffuses across the junction that separates the two neurons)

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3
Q

describe the steps involved in chemical synapses

A
  • action potential arrives along the presynaptic axon at a terminal
  • once it arrives, it depolarises the membrane of the terminal
  • in the membrane of the terminal there is voltage gated calcium channels- calcium channels open and calcium will enter the terminal
  • calcium enters the knob and within the knob there are vesicles of neurotransmitters. the vesicles bind to the membrane and open and release neurotransmitters into the synaptic cleft
  • they then diffuse across a cleft and bind onto receptors of the neurotransmitters and there receptors are already sitting in the membrane of the post synaptic neuron (these receptors/neurotransmitters are ion channels in essence). they open the specific channel = action potential in the membrane
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4
Q

fill in the gaps:
presynaptic action potential –> opening of ________ –> increased _______ –> release of neurotransmitter —> ___________ –> NT binds to receptor OR _____ –> from NT binds to receptor: _______

A

presynaptic action potential –> opening of voltage gated calcium channels –> increased intracellular calcium –> release of neurotransmitter —> diffusion of NT across synaptic cleft –> NT binds to receptor OR breaks down and gets recycled –> from NT binds to receptor: EPSP or IPSP
(see notes for more info)

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5
Q

explain EPSP

A

EPSP = excitatory postsynaptic potential (i.e. depolarisation)

  • becomes less negative = toward threshold
  • synapses are excitatory (NT examples: acetylcholine and glutamate)
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6
Q

explain IPSP

A

IPSP = inhibitory postsynaptic potential (i.e. hyperpolarization)

  • becomes more negative = away from threshold
  • inhibitory (e.g. glycine and GABA)
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7
Q

explain the ‘graded potential summation’ diagram from the lecture (SEE NOTES)

A

EX1: synapse excitatory creating EPSP
EX2: also excitatory creating EPSP
IN1: inhibitory creating IPSP
- EX1 by itself: no summation
- EX1 by itself at higher frequency: reaching threshold = temporal summation
- EX1 and EX2 at same time: two graded potential will summate - depolarise enough to reach threshold = spatial summation
- IN1 by itself: hyperpolarisation
- EX1 and IN1 at same time: cancel each other out and nothing happens = EPSP-IPSP cancelation

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8
Q

explain the ‘presynaptic inhibition’ diagram from the lecture (SEE NOTES)

A
  • although A is excitatory on its own, the inhibitory axon B sitting on it cancel its input
  • A fires by itself: graded potential
  • A and B fire at same time: inhibitory neuron hyperpolarises the membrane of the terminal of synapse A then nothing happens and no neurotransmitters are being released = no changes
  • D fires by itself: postsynaptic depolarisation
  • D and B fire at same time: graded potential because the inhibitory input of B only has affect on A and not D
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9
Q

what are the types of direct intercellular communication?

A
  • gap junctions: between two adjacent cells

- transient direct link up of cells’ surface markers

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10
Q

what are the types of indirect intracellular communication via extracellular chemical messengers?

A
  • paracrine secretion: secreting cells produce a chemical and binds onto local target cells (only happens in short distances)
  • neurotransmitter secretion: synapses between 2 cells. electrical signal travels along the neuron and synapses on local target cell
  • hormonal secretion: transported through the bloodstream to target distant cells
  • neurohormone secretion: neurotransmitters released into the bloodstream to target distance cell
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11
Q

what are possible synaptic drug actions?

A
  • altering the synthesis, axonal transport, storage or release of a neurotransmitter
  • modifying neurotransmitter interaction w/ the postsynaptic receptor
  • influencing neurotransmitter reuptake or destruction
  • replacing a deficient neurotransmitter w/ a substitute transmitter
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