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Electrical Signals in Animals

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Title: Electrical Signals in Animals


1
Electrical Signals in Animals
  • Chapter 45

2
Nervous Systems
  • Consist of circuits of neurons and supporting
    cells
  • All animals except sponges have some type of
    nervous system
  • Differ in the way that the neurons are organized
    into circuits
  • The simplest animals with
  • nervous systems, the cnidarians
  • Have neurons arranged in nerve nets

3
Nervous Systems
  • More complex animals contain nerve nets as well
    as nerves
  • Bundles of fiber-like extensions of neurons
  • Sea stars have a nerve net in each arm
  • Connected by radial nerves to a central nerve ring

4
Nervous Systems
  • Cephalization evolved with greater complexity in
    nervous systems
  • Clustering of neurons in a brain near the
    anterior end in worms
  • Small brain, longitudinal nerve chords
    constitute the simplest central nervous system

5
Nervous Systems
  • Annelids and arthropods have more complicated
    brains
  • Have segmentally arranged clusters of neurons
    called ganglia
  • These ganglia connect to the
  • CNS
  • And make
  • up a peripheral
  • nervous system
  • (PNS)

6
Nervous Systems
  • Nervous systems in mollusks
  • Correlate with the animals lifestyles
  • Sessile mollusks have simple systems
  • While more complex mollusks have more
    sophisticated systems
  • Can complete complicated tasks

7
Nervous Systems
  • In vertebrates
  • The central nervous system consists of a brain
    and dorsal spinal cord
  • The PNS connects to the CNS

8
Neuron Structure
  • The ability of the neuron to receive and transmit
    information depends on their structure. Consists
    of
  • Cell body- where most of the organelles are
    housed
  • Numerous dendrites- highly branched extensions
    that receive signals from other neurons
  • Axon- larger extension that transmits signals,
    may be covered with a myelin sheath

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Dendrite
  • Receives electrical signals from the axons of
    adjacent cells.
  • Axon then sends the signal to the dendrites of
    other neurons
  • Cell body, or soma, which includes the nucleus,
    integrates the incoming signals and generates an
    outgoing signal in the axon

11
Neurons
  • Neurons have a wide variety of shapes
  • That reflect their input and output interactions
  • Reflects the number of synapses it has with other
    neurons

12
Glia
  • Glia are supporting cells
  • That are essential for the structural integrity
    of the nervous system and for the normal
    functioning of neurons
  • In the CNS astrocytes regulate extracellular ion
    concentrations

13
  • Oligodendrocytes (in the CNS) and Schwann cells
    (in the PNS)
  • Are glia that form the myelin sheaths around the
    axons of many vertebrate neurons
  • Act as insulators
  • Multiple Sclerosis is deterioration of the myelin
    sheath

14
Resting Potential of a Cell
  • Ion pumps and ion channels maintain the resting
    potential of a neuron
  • The resting potential
  • Is the membrane potential of a neuron that is not
    transmitting signals
  • Across its plasma membrane, every cell has a
    voltage
  • Called a membrane potential
  • The inside of a cell is negative
  • Relative to the outside

15
Resting Potential of a Cell
  • The concentration of Na is higher in the
    extracellular fluid than in the cytosol
  • While the opposite is true for K
  • A neuron that is not transmitting signals
  • Contains many open K channels and fewer open Na
    channels in its plasma membrane
  • The diffusion of K and Na through these
    channels
  • Leads to a separation of charges across the
    membrane, producing the resting potential

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Gated Ion Channels
  • Ungated ion channels are always open, results in
    the resting potential of the cell
  • Gated ion channels open or close
  • In response to membrane stretch or the binding of
    a specific ligand
  • In response to a change in the membrane potential
  • Neurons have gated ion channels
  • Responsible for generating the signals of the
    nervous system

18
Starting An Action Potential?
  • An action potential is a rapid, temporary change
    in a membrane potential
  • Has three phases depolarization, repolarization,
    and the undershoot
  • The initial event is a rapid depolarization of
    the membrane
  • Membrane potential must shift from its resting
    potential of 70 mV to about 55 mV

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  • If the threshold potential is reached, channels
    in the axon membrane open and ions rush into the
    axon, following their electrochemical gradients
  • The current flow causes further depolarization
  • When the membrane potential reaches about 40 mV
    the membrane experiences a rapid repolarization
    as ions flow out of the axon

21
  • The repolarization event results in the membrane
    becoming more negative than the resting potential
  • Called the undershoot
  • All phases occur in about a millisecond

22
Regeneration of the Action Potential
  • An action potential can travel long distances
  • By regenerating itself along the axon
  • At the site where the action potential is
    generated
  • An electrical current depolarizes the neighboring
    region of the axon membrane

23
Regeneration of the Action Potential
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Action Potentials
  • The speed of an action potential
  • Increases with the diameter of an axon
  • In vertebrates, axons are myelinated
  • Also causing the speed of an action potential to
    increase
  • Causes the membranes to have a simulated wider
    width
  • Action potentials in myelinated axons
  • Jump between the nodes of Ranvier in a process
    called saltatory conduction

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32
Synapses
  • Neurons communicate with other cells at synapses
  • In an electrical synapse
  • Electrical current flows directly from one cell
    to another via a gap junction
  • Synchronize the activity of neurons responsible
    for rapid responses (flight response)
  • The vast majority of synapses
  • Are chemical synapses
  • Not as fast as electrical synapsis

33
Chemical Synapses
  • In a chemical synapse, a presynaptic neuron
  • Releases chemical neurotransmitters, which are
    stored in the synaptic terminal

34
Synapses
  • The interface between two neurons is called a
    synapse.
  • Just inside the synapse, the axon contains
    synaptic vesicles that serve as storage sites for
    neurotransmitters
  • The sending cell is called the presynaptic neuron
    and the receiving cell is called the postsynaptic
    neuron

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What Do Neurotransmitters Do?
  • There are several categories of
    neurotransmitters
  • Many neurotransmitters function as ligands that
    bind to ligand-gated ion channels
  • Cause the ion channels to open, generating a
    postsynaptic potential
  • Causes the start of a new action potential

38
The Vertebrate Nervous System
  • The vertebrate nervous system is regionally
    specialized
  • In all vertebrates, the nervous system
  • Shows a high degree of cephalization and distinct
    CNS and PNS components

39
The Central Nervous System
  • The brain provides the integrative power
  • That underlies the complex behavior of
    vertebrates
  • The spinal cord integrates simple responses to
    certain kinds of stimuli
  • And conveys information to and from the brain
  • The central canal of the spinal cord and the four
    ventricles of the brain
  • Are hollow, since they are derived from the
    dorsal embryonic nerve cord

40
The Central Nervous System
  • CNS consists of spinal chord and four ventricles
    in the brain
  • Contain cerebrospinal fluid
  • Assists in supply of nutrients and hormones to
    parts of the brain and in removal of wastes
  • Grey matter contains mostly dendrites
  • White matter contains long axons with great
    bundles of myelin sheaths

41
The Peripheral Nervous System
  • The PNS transmits information to and from the CNS
    and plays a large role in regulating a
    vertebrates movement and internal environment
  • The cranial nerves originate in the brain
  • And terminate mostly in organs of the head and
    upper body
  • The spinal nerves originate in the spinal cord
  • And extend to parts of the body below the head

42
The Peripheral Nervous System
  • The PNS can be divided into two functional
    components
  • The somatic nervous system and the autonomic
    nervous system

43
The Peripheral Nervous System
  • The somatic nervous system
  • Carries signals to skeletal muscles
  • Often considered voluntary
  • The autonomic nervous system
  • Regulates the internal environment, in an
    involuntary manner
  • Is divided into the sympathetic, parasympathetic,
    and enteric divisions

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Brain Structures in an Adult
46
Parts of The Brain
  • The brainstem consists of three parts
  • The medulla oblongata, the pons, and the midbrain

47
Brainstem
  • The medulla oblongata
  • Contains centers that control several visceral
    functions
  • The pons
  • Also participates in visceral functions
  • The midbrain
  • Contains centers for the receipt and integration
    of several types of sensory information

48
The Cerebellum
  • The cerebellum
  • Is important for coordination and error checking
    during motor, perceptual, and cognitive functions
  • The cerebellum
  • Is also involved in
  • learning and
  • remembering motor
  • skills

49
Diancephalon
  • The embryonic diencephalon develops into three
    adult brain regions
  • The epithalamus, thalamus, and hypothalamus
  • The epithalamus
  • Includes the pineal
  • gland and the
  • choroid plexus
  • Produce cerebro-
  • spinal fluid

50
Diancephalon
  • The thalamus
  • Is the main input center for sensory information
    going to the cerebrum and the main output center
    for motor information leaving the cerebrum
  • The hypothalamus regulates
  • Homeostasis
  • Basic survival behaviors such as feeding,
    fighting, fleeing, and reproducing

51
Cerebrum
  • The cerebrum has right and left cerebral
    hemispheres
  • That each consist of cerebral cortex overlying
    white matter and basal nuclei

52
Cerebrum
  • The basal nuclei
  • Are important centers for planning and learning
    movement sequences
  • In mammals
  • The cerebral cortex has a convoluted surface
    called the neocortex
  • Sensory information is analyzed , motor commands
    are issued, and language is generated
  • Corpus callosum allows communication between
    hemispheres

53
Cerebral Cortex
  • In humans, the largest and most complex part of
    the brain
  • Is the cerebral cortex, where sensory information
    is analyzed, motor commands are issued, and
    language is generated
  • Controls voluntary movement and cognitive
    functions
  • Each side of the cerebral cortex has four lobes
  • Frontal, parietal, temporal, and occipital

54
Cerebral Cortex
55
Lateralization
  • During brain development, in a process called
    lateralization
  • Competing functions segregate and displace each
    other in the cortex of the left and right
    cerebral hemispheres
  • The left hemisphere
  • Becomes more adept at language, math, logical
    operations, and the processing of serial
    sequences
  • The right hemisphere
  • Is stronger at pattern recognition, nonverbal
    thinking, and emotional processing

56
CNS Injuries
  • Unlike the PNS, the mammalian CNS
  • Cannot repair itself when damaged or assaulted by
    disease
  • Current research on nerve cell development and
    stem cells
  • May one day make it possible for physicians to
    repair or replace damaged neurons

57
Diseases of the Nervous System
  • About 1 of the worlds population suffers from
    schizophrenia
  • Schizophrenia is characterized by
  • Hallucinations, delusions, blunted emotions, and
    many other symptoms
  • Available treatments have focused on
  • Brain pathways that use dopamine as a
    neurotransmitter

58
Diseases of the Nervous System
  • Two broad forms of depressive illness are known
  • Bipolar disorder and major depression
  • Bipolar disorder is characterized by
  • Manic (high-mood) and depressive (low-mood)
    phases
  • In major depression
  • Patients have a persistent low mood
  • Treatments for these types of depression include
  • A variety of drugs such as Prozac and lithium

59
Diseases of the Nervous System
  • Alzheimers disease (AD)
  • Is a mental deterioration characterized by
    confusion, memory loss, and other symptoms
  • AD is caused by the formation of
  • Neurofibrillary tangles and senile plaques in the
    brain

60
Diseases of the Nervous System
  • Parkinsons disease is a motor disorder
  • Caused by the death of dopamine-secreting neurons
    in the substantia nigra
  • Characterized by difficulty in initiating
    movements, slowness of movement, and rigidity
  • There is no cure for Parkinsons disease
  • Although various approaches are used to manage
    the symptoms
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