Lecture 4 Flashcards

1
Q

Na+ is smaller than K+ but has the same charge. How do K+ leak channels exclude Na+? (1) Experiment

A

Using x-ray crystallography, worked out the proteins shape and the shape of its pore

Figured that arginine was the protein with outlying carbonyl groups. Wanted to replace with lycine

Made the DNA with the sequence we wanted

Put into frog egg cell because it is large, easy to see and has few ion channels (so does not distort results).

Found a promoter region that works for all eukaryote cells and causes them to express the protein.

Put it into frog and soon the frog was covered in modified channel

Thus found what group prevented NA= from crossing

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2
Q

X-ray chrytsalography

A

Get a pure protein sample
Crystallize it
Image with xrays and detect their diffusion pattern
Allows the derivation of the only shape the protein could have

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3
Q

Na+ is smaller than K+ but has the same charge. How do K+ leak channels exclude Na+? (2) results

A

Ions in water get coated in water

Carbonyl groups in channel are optimally speced to interact with the K+ group and so decoat it so it travels through the pore alone.

Na+ is smaller and so cannot optimally interact with the pore hence, is not decoated (and thus cannot fit)

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4
Q

the 40 kinds of voltage gated potassium channels

what is there genetic origin
have they been conserved
what influenced a choice for them

A

First appeared before multicellular organisms
Has been conserved for hundreds of millions of years
No perfect one, cell chooses which to express to optimize cell functions

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5
Q

Weird use of modern neuroscience

speed up activation

A

Lidocane is slow, can try to speed up by using electrical communication

Make an ion channel that opens in response to light. Brain is normally dark so none evolved but certain species of algea have these.

Take these and modify them if needed

An example is making mice aggressive by making their amygdala activate via lasers

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6
Q

Neuroglia

more glia or neurones

A

Glial cells are all over the neurons. Help traffic neurons and maintain molecular stability in the extracellular space. The outnumber neurons by between 2:1 and 5:1

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7
Q

Support cells: astrocytes

A

physical support and cleans up debris via phagocytocis. Control chemical composition of the surrounding area to nourish neurons

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8
Q

Support cells: microglia

A

Smallest glial cells

immune function

CNS does not allow most immune cells in so has its own

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9
Q

Support cells: Oligodendricytes

A

Make the myelin sheath

During development make processes like canoe paddles

Each wraps itself around a neuron many times and thus produces layers of mellin that make the myelin sheath

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10
Q

Myelin sheath

A

Insulation

Made of fat

Speeds up conduction in the neuron

each wrap is about 20 microns long and their are gaps in between that are 1 micron long

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11
Q

The distribution of ions and the mechanism of saltatory conduction

A

Charged ions aggregate at the membrane. Negative ones in it and positive ones outside it. Further from the membrane, there is less aggregation because there is no electrostatic force making it so

at a node of ranvier, when an action potential happens, positive ions (Na+) come in and immediately stick to the membrane as discussed. These new positive ions repel the old positive ions that were in solution in the cell. These move further away in both directions.

The next node becomes depolarized. The last node is still in the refractory period and blocked by the balls and chains of the Na+ voltage gated channels. So the action potential is only propagated in one direction

As the movement of ions goes away from the node, it is decremental. It is regenerated at the next node

This makes conduction 20x faster

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12
Q

Things that speed up action potentials

A

Size of axon (less resistence)

Mylenation

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13
Q

Example of different mylenated and not conduction speeds

A

Touch something hot
The touch is mylenated so can feel you have touched. Pain and temp is not so it takes a second before that info makes it to your brain

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14
Q

Synapses very basics

A

Junction between axon terminal of sending neuron and the receiving neuron

Communication goes from the axon terminal to the membrane of the other cell

This communication is mediated by a neurotransmitter

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15
Q

The synapse structure

A

The terminal bouton contains synaptic vesicles

When the action potential arises it opens voltage gated ca2+ channels which allow Ca2+ in. This binds immediately to receptors which trigger the exoxcytosis of the contents of the synaptic vesicles

This free neurotransmitter diffuses across the synaptic cleft and binds to recpetors on the post synaptic membrane

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16
Q

Size of things in synapse

A

mitochondria is 1um

17
Q

Omega shapes

A

Are formed by synaptic vesicles undergoing exocytosis and releasing their neurotransmitter

18
Q

Ligands

A

Generic name for signaling molecule that binds to the binding site of a receptor

Neurotransmitters are ligands

19
Q

Binding site

A

:ocation on a receptor to which a ligand binds

20
Q

Postysnaptic receptor

A

Receptor protein on postsynaptic membrane that neurotransmitter binds to

21
Q

Ligand-gated ion channel

A

A receptor that is an ion channel. Also known as an ionotrophic receptor. Opens when a ligand binds to it

22
Q

2 categories of neurotransmitter receptors

A

Ionotrophic - is an ion channel

Metabotropic - are a g protein coupled receptor that can open ion channels through an intracellular signaling cascade

23
Q

intra cellular, Post, pre and extrasynaptic receptors

A

Post are post

Pre is pre

Intracellular receptors are stored receptors waiting to be used

Extrasynaptic receptors are stored receptors waiting to be used (on membrane, not at synapse

When cell needs new receptors, it uses the extrasynaptic ones andmoves intracellular ones to the membrane in their place

24
Q

Ionotrophic receptor mechanism

A

Ion binds

Receptor no longer stable in this form

Changes form which allows ions to move through

New form not stable with ion that is bound to receptor

Breaks off and leaves

Now channel no longer stable in this shape, turns back

No more ions can pass

takes half a milisecond

25
Q

Termination of postsynaptic potentials

A

Enzymatic deactivation - enzyme breaks up neurotransmitter

Reuptake - Reentry of a neurotransmitter just liberated by s terminal back through its membrane for recycling or the same but with the products of neurotransmitter breakdown

26
Q

Postsynaptic potentials can be (2 things)

A

Excitatory or inhibitory

27
Q

Excitatory post synaptic potential (EPSP) or current (EPSC)

A

Na+ in

Makes more positive

28
Q

Inhibitory post synaptic potential (IPSP) or current (IPSC)

A

Cl- in

Makes more negative

29
Q

Neural Integration

A

One EPSP is not enough to casue an action potential. The depolarazing effect will be balanced by K+ leaving the cell. Many EPSPs have to happen at once.

Na+ has to come in faster than K+ can leave and this =ve charge must reach the axon hillock where the new action potential will be made

When EPSPs and IPSPs come in at the same time the Cl- ions decrease the chance the cell will fire.

Hence, the activation is a balance between the two

30
Q

What determines if a neurotransmitter is inhibitory or exititatory

A

The receptor

The same neurotransmitter can activate many receptors. The cell chooses the one it wants to express. Some let in Cl- (inhibitory) some Na+ exitation

31
Q

Relfex

A

Painful stimulus

Sensory neuron activated

Goes to CNS, activates interneuron

This activates motor neuron

This activates muscle

32
Q

Top down moderation of neurons

A

There are many cells from the brain that act on interneurons. Some inhibit them, some excite them.

Brain can moderate interneuron and hence some reflexes

33
Q

Inhibitory networks

A

Inhibitory neurons reliably cause IPSPs downstream

But sometimes these act on inhibitory neurons and hence can make a behaviour more likley to occur

Often big chains

Neural excitation is not the same as behavioural excitation. Neural inhibition is not the same as behavioural inhibition.