Neurons structure and function Flashcards

1
Q

What is a neuron?

A

A specialised cell that is electrically and chemically excitable
A basic cellular unit of nerves and brains
Responsible for transmitting information to other nerve cells, gland cells and muscles

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2
Q

Describe the structure of a presynaptic cell

A

Has a cell body that contains the nucleus and other organelles
Has dendrites to receive information from other neurons

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3
Q

Describe the structure of a postsynaptic cell

A

Has a cell body that contains the nucleus and other organelles
Receives information from the axon terminals

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4
Q

How are ion channels opened and closed?

A

By specific triggers;
Ligands
Voltage conditions
Association with structural elements

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5
Q

What is a graded potential?

A

A potential at the cell body
A change from the resting potential that is proportional to the magnitude of the stimulus
A means of integrating stimuli because the membrane can respond with proportional amounts of depolarisation or hyperpolarisation

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6
Q

What is conduction with decrement?

A

A graded potential ‘s signal will decrease with distance

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7
Q

Describe how conduction with decrement occurs?

A

Neurotransmitter binds to a ligand gated Na+ channel
The Na+ enters through the open channel
The current will spread through the cell
The signal strength will then decrease with distance

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8
Q

What is spatial summation?

A

Where signals arriving from dendrites will be summed over a certain space at the axon hillock

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9
Q

What is temporal summation?

A

Signals arriving at the axon hillock from dendrites will be summed over time

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10
Q

What are the activation and inactivation gates in Na+ channels?

A

The activation gate opens and allows ions to pass through

The inactivation gate plugs the pore preventing ion passage

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11
Q

What is the resting potential?

A

-70mV

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12
Q

What is the threshold potential?

A

-55mV

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13
Q

What is the potential at which the membrane will begin to repolarise?

A

+30mV

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14
Q

Explain how Na+ channels are activated

A

At resting potential the inactivation gate plugs the pore preventing Na+ entry
A suprathreshold depolarising graded potential causes the activation gate to open allowing Na+ to enter the cell
Positive feedback loop causes more Na+ channels to open and more Na+ enters the cell
The inactivation gate closes as membrane approaches +30mV preventing Na+ entry and the K+ channels open
K+ leaves the cell which repolarises the membrane
ATPase is Na+/K+ pump
Overshoots-hyperpolartisation then equilibrium

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15
Q

What is the all-or-nothing principle?

A

When it comes to an action potential, the threshold value of around -55mV is needed to produce an action potential, anything less than this will not result in the production of an action potential

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16
Q

Describe the features of a graded potential

A
Vary in magnitude
Vary in duration
Decay with distance 
Occur in dendrites and the cell body
Caused by the opening/closing of many kinds of ion channels
17
Q

Describe the features of an action potential

A
Always the same size and shape 
Always the same duration
Don't decay with distance 
Occur in axons 
Caused by the opening/closing of voltage gated ion channels
18
Q

Describe how action potentials move across synapses?

A

Action potential arrives at axon terminal
Voltage gated Ca2+ channels open and Ca2+ enters the cell and signal to the vesicles
The vesicles move to the plasma membrane
Docked vesicles release neurotransmitter by exocytosis
The neurotransmitter diffuses across the synaptic cleft to the postsynaptic cleft
The neurotransmitter binds to receptors on the post synaptic cell

19
Q

Explain how acetylcholine moves from the presynaptic cell to the postsynaptic cell

A

Acetyl CoA is made in the mitochondria
Choline acetyl transferase catalyses the conversion of acetyl CoA and choline into acetylcholine
Acetylcholine is packaged into synaptic vesicles
Acetylcholine is released into synapses
Acetylcholine binds to receptors on the postsynaptic cell
Acetylcholinesterase breaks down the acetylcholine into acetate and choline thus terminating the signal in the postsynaptic cell
The presynaptic cell takes up and recycles the choline and the acetate diffuses out of the cell

20
Q

What are Glial cells?

A

A group of different cells surrounding neurons to provide support and insulation

21
Q

What do astrocytes do?

A

Maintain homeostasis

22
Q

What do microglial cells do?

A

Remove damaged neurons and tackle infections

23
Q

What do oligodendrocytes do?

A

Wrap around neurons for insulation

24
Q

What are Schwann cells?

A

Oligodendrocytes of the periphery

25
Q

What do Schwann cells do?

A

Produce the myelin sheath

26
Q

What is the myelin sheath?

A

An extended and modified plasma membrane that is wrapped around the axon in a spiral

27
Q

How fast are action potentials in myelinated axons?

A

Up to 100m/s

28
Q

Are axons myelinated in invertebrates?

A

No