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Nervous System: Part 1 By Taylor Barnhill, Julia Bogiages, Bridget Brown, and Ellen Kitsos

Nervous System: Part 1

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Nervous System: Part 1. By Taylor Barnhill, Julia Bogiages, Bridget Brown, and Ellen Kitsos. Nervous System Overview. Animation. Motor Neuron Structure. Dendrites : Input zones where the neuron receives information Nucleus : the powerhouse of the neuron - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Nervous System: Part 1

Nervous System: Part 1By Taylor Barnhill, Julia Bogiages, Bridget

Brown, and Ellen Kitsos

Page 2: Nervous System: Part 1

Nervous System Overview

• Animation

Page 3: Nervous System: Part 1
Page 4: Nervous System: Part 1

Motor Neuron Structure• Dendrites: Input zones where the neuron

receives information

• Nucleus: the powerhouse of the neuron

• Cell body: Cell membrane containing organelle

• Trigger Zone: Plasma membrane where protein pumps and gated ion channels are located. Between the cell body and axon.

• Axon: Conduction zone, pass on signals from the trigger zone

• Axon endings: the output zone where messages are sent to other cells

• *Myelin Sheath: fatty substance that wraps around the dendrites catalyst that enhances rate of action potential and speeds up gate openings

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Sodium Potassium Protein Pumps• Gradients determine the direction of diffusion.

• Pumps require ATP to distribute against the gradient.

• Gradients reverse during an action potential and sodium-potassium pumps correct them.

• Moves in a 3:2 ration, pumping more potassium ions on the outside. Positive ions entering and leaving, this is why the cell is negative voltage (at resting potential: -70 volts)

• Sodium Potassium Protein Pump Animation

Page 7: Nervous System: Part 1

Gated Ion Channels• Protein pumps and channel proteins allow potassium

and sodium ions to pass through.

• Gated ion channels are types of channel proteins, they facilitates diffusion but can close off at a certain voltage.

• Sodium ions rush in when a certain voltage is reached.

Page 8: Nervous System: Part 1

What is Action Potential?-A reversal in voltage differences across the

plasma membrane of the neuron (input zone)

-Triggered by a strong signal stimulus.

-Causes change in ion concentration and a voltage spike (graph peak)

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Action Potential Sequence1) Stimulus hits the input zone

2) Signals spread form input zone into the trigger zone, where many sensitive, volted channels for Na+ ions are present

3) Certain amount of change in voltage difference across plasma membrane is called threshold level and triggers action potential

4) Positively charged Na+ ions flow into the neuron, causing more gates to open, more sodium to enter (positive feedback)

5) Neuron becomes more positive on the inside

Page 11: Nervous System: Part 1

Action Potential Sequence Cont.

6) Influx of Na+ ions causes voltage spike

7) Gated Na+ channels close

8) Halfway through the reversal, K+ channels open, causing K+ to flow out

9) This restores original voltage difference across the membrane

10) Na+/K+ pumps restore ion gradients

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Sources

1)http://www.google.com/imgres?q=neuron+diagram&um=1&hl=en&client=safari&sa=X&rls=en&biw=1202&bih=629&tbm=isch&tbnid=yq3fWGAwg973GM:&imgrefurl=http://webspace.ship.edu/cgboer/theneuron.html&docid=BhtVqrZnXJW4QM&imgurl=http://webspace.ship.edu/cgboer/neuron.gif&w=700&h=500&ei=Mt6XUNzgJtGH0QHOr4GYBA&zoom=1&iact=hc&vpx=155&vpy=328&dur=984&hovh=190&hovw=266&tx=150&ty=102&sig=114060480899373829760&page=1&tbnh=144&tbnw=246&start=0&ndsp=12&ved=1t:429,r:4,s:0,i:146

2) Starr, Cecie. Biology: The Unity and Diversity of Life. Ninth ed. Pacific Grove:

Brooks/Cole, 2001. Print.

3) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i-NgGKSNiNw&feature=player_embedded