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The Nervous System Chapter 11

The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

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Page 1: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

The Nervous System

Chapter 11

Page 2: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure Stretch

External Chemical

Page 3: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Functions of the Nervous system II Integration: Integration means making sense of

sensory input. Analyzing stimuli based on experience, learning, emotion & instinct and reacting in a useful way (you hope).

Motor (output): The response to the sensory input and

subsequent integration. Sending signals to the muscles and other organs of the body instructing them how to respond to the stimuli.

Page 4: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

The Basic Scheme

Page 5: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Organization of the Nervous system

Page 6: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

The CNS compared with thePNS

Page 7: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Support Cells of the Nervous system

the Central Nervous System Astrocytes Microglia Oligodendrocytes Ependymal Cells

the Peripheral Nervous System Schwann Cells

(a.k.a. Neurolemmocytes)

Satellite Cells

Page 8: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Astrocytes & microglia

Astrocytes & microglial cells protect the neurons of the CNS.

Page 9: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Astrocytes & microglia Functions of astrocytes:1. Connect neurons to capillaries. This makes up

the “blood-brain barrier”. 2. Maintain the the electrochemical environment• Capture and recycle neurotransmitters• Absorb and return K+ and other ions.• Connected to one another and capable of

communicating via gap junctions.Function of microglial cells:1. Dendritic macrophages that phagocytize

microbes and necrotic (dead) tissue.

Page 10: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Ependymal Cells & oligodendrocytes

Page 11: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Ependymal Cells & oligodendrocytes

Functions: Ependymal Cells - Line the ventricles of

the brain an central canal of the spinal cord. They aid in the circulation of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).

Oligodendrocytes - These cells have processes that wrap around the axons of neurons. This creates an insulation coating called a myelin sheath.

Page 12: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Schwann Cells & satellite cells

•These are the support cells in the peripheral nervous system.•Schwann cells provide the myelin sheath for peripheral axons.•Satellite cells serve a slightly similar function to astrocytes, supporting the cell bodies of peripheral neurons.

Page 13: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Neurons - the “action cells”

Page 14: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Characteristics of neurons

Long-lived Generally last a life time with 90% are formed

by the time you are 6 years old. The rest are produced when as you go through puberty.

Amitotic Until recently it was thought that neurons

didn’t regenerate at all! Some may but generally what you have at adulthood is all you get.

High metabolic rate This means high oxygen demand and lots of

mitochondria. Neurons also require glucose.

Page 15: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

MyelinMyelin is a lipid-rich component of the cell membranes of Schwann cells and oligodendrocytes.It acts kind of like the insulation on an electrical wire.

Page 16: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Chemically gated ion channels

Page 17: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Voltage gated ion channels

Page 18: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

A Resting Membrane Potential

Because there is a higher concentration of Na+ outside than there is K+ inside.This leads to an electric charge or electric potential.

Page 19: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Relative ion concentrations

Ions have differential permeability. The RMP is maintained by the pumping action of a Na+/K+ pump, powered by ATP

Page 20: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Polarization (subthreshold) and hyperpolarization

Page 21: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

A stimulus leads to a depolarization

A change in ion concentrations leads to a reversal of the charge separation.

Page 22: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Ion flow in a neuron

The depolarization spreads along the cell membrane by serial opening and closing of ion gates.

Page 23: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

A graded potential

Graded potentials are not “all-or-none”, like action potentials

Page 24: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

The cycle of an Action Potential

Page 25: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Propagation of an Action Potential

Page 26: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Propagation of an Action Potential

Page 27: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Propagation of an Action Potential

Page 28: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Temporal summation

Page 29: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Anatomy of an Action Potential

Page 30: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Salutatory conduction

Page 31: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Different types of synapses

Page 32: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

A Chemical Synapse

Page 33: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

EPSPs & IPSPs

Page 34: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Integration: summation of potentials

Page 35: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Synthesis of Neurotransmitters

Page 36: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Mechanisms of Neurotransmitter activity

Page 37: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

A Basic Neural Circuit

Page 38: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Type of neurons

Page 39: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Three structural classes of neurons

Multipolar Most numerous Many dendrites Motor and association neurons

Unipolar Second most numerous Rounded body with one process Somatic & general sensory neurons

Bipolar Least common, found in special sensory organs

Page 40: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Comparison of neuron types

Page 41: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

Functional categories of neurons

Page 42: The Nervous System Chapter 11. Functions of the Nervous system I Sensory (input): Light Sound Touch Temperature Taste Smell Internal Chemical Pressure

This is it for 231

Lecture Final at 10 am next Tuesday.

Lab Practicals: Tuesday, 6/8 @ 2 pm

Thursday, 6/10 @ 10 am

.