Title: Nervous Coordination
1Nervous Coordination
2Irritability
- The ability to respond to environmental stimuli
is a fundamental property of life. - Single celled organisms respond in a simple way
e.g. avoiding a noxious substance. - The evolution of multicellularity required more
complex mechanisms for communication between
cells. - Neural mechanisms rapid, brief
- Hormonal mechanisms slower, long term
3CNS PNS
- Central Nervous System (CNS) includes the brain
and spinal cord. - Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) includes motor
and sensory neurons.
4Neurons
- A neuron (nerve cell) is the functional unit of
the nervous system. - Sensory (afferent) neurons carry impulses from
sensory receptors to the CNS. - Motor (efferent) neurons carry impulses away from
the CNS to effectors (muscles and glands). - Interneurons connect neurons together.
5Neurons
- Two types of cytoplasmic processes extend from
the cell body. - Dendrites bring signals in to the cell body.
- Often highly branched.
- Axons carry signals away from the cell body.
6Nerves
- Nerve processes (usually axons) are often bundled
together, surrounded by connective tissue,
forming a nerve. - Cell bodies are located in the CNS or in ganglia
(bundles of cell bodies outside the CNS).
7Glial Cells
- Non-neural cells that work with neurons are
called glial cells. - Astrocytes star-shaped cells that serve as
nutrient and ion reservoirs for neurons.
8Glial Cells
- The axon is covered with an insulating layer of
lipid-containing myelin, which speeds up signal
propagation. - Concentric rings of myelin are formed by Schwann
cells in the PNS and oligodendrocytes in the CNS.
9Action Potential
- A nerve signal or action potential is an
electrochemical message of neurons. - An all-or-none phenomenon either the fiber is
conducting an action potential or it is not. - The signal is varied by changing the frequency of
signal conduction.
10The Nerve Impulse
- Across its plasma membrane, every cell has a
voltage called a membrane potential. - The inside of a cell is negative relative to the
outside.
11The Nerve Impulse
- Neuron at rest active transport channels in the
neurons plasma membrane pump - Sodium ions (Na) out of the cell.
- Potassium ions (K) into the cell.
- More sodium is moved out less potassium is moved
in. - Result is a negative charge inside the cell.
- Cell membrane is now polarized.
12Sodium-Potassium Exchange Pump
- Na flows into the cell during an action
potential, it must be pumped out using sodium
pumps so that the action potential will continue.
potassium
13The Nerve Impulse
- Resting potential the charge that exists across
a neurons membrane while at rest. - -70 mV.
- This is the starting point for an action
potential.
14The Nerve Impulse
- A nerve impulse starts when pressure or other
sensory inputs disturb a neurons plasma
membrane, causing sodium channels on a dendrite
to open. - Sodium ions flood into the neuron and the
membrane is depolarized more positive inside
than outside.
15The Nerve Impulse
- The nerve impulse travels along the axon or
dendrites as an electrical current gathered by
ions moving in and out of the neuron through
voltage-gated channels. - Voltage-gated channels protein channels in the
membrane that open close in response to an
electrical charge.
16The Nerve Impulse
- This moving local reversal of voltage is called
an action potential. - A very rapid and brief depolarization of the cell
membrane. - Membrane potential changes from -70 mV to 35 mV.
- After the action potential has passed, the
voltage gated channels snap closed and the
resting potential is restored. - The membrane potential quickly returns to -70 mV
during the repolarization phase. - An action potential is a brief all-or-none
depolarization of a neurons plasma membrane. - Carries information along axons.
- An action potential is self-propagating once
started it continues to the end.
17High Speed Conduction
- Speed is related to the diameter of the axon.
- Larger axons conduct faster.
- A squids giant axon can carry impulses 10x
faster than their normal axons. - Used for powerful swimming.
18High Speed Conduction
- Vertebrates do not have giant axons.
- Instead, they achieve high speed conduction by a
cooperative relationship between axons and layers
of myelin.
19High Speed Conduction
- Insulating layers of the myelin sheath are
interrupted by nodes of Ranvier where the surface
of the axon is exposed to interstitial fluid. - Action potentials depolarize the membrane only at
the nodes. - This is saltatory conduction, where the action
potential jumps from node to node.
20Synapses Junctions Between Nerves
- Eventually, the impulse reaches the end of the
axon. - Neurons do not make direct contact with each
other there is a small gap between the axon of
one neuron and the dendrite of the next. - This junction between a neuron another cell is
called a synapse.
21Synapses Junctions Between Nerves
- Thousands of synaptic knobs may rest on a single
nerve cell body and its dendrites. - Two types of synapses
- Electrical synapses
- Chemical Synapses
22Electrical Synapse
- Electrical synapses are points where ionic
currents flow directly across a narrow gap
junction from one neuron to another. - No time lag important in escape reactions.
23Chemical Synapse
- Presynaptic neurons bring action potentials
toward the synapse. - Postsynaptic neurons carry action potentials away
from the synapse. - A synaptic cleft is the small gap between the two
neurons.
24Neurotransmitters
- Chemical messengers called neurotransmitters
carry the message of the nerve impulse across the
synapse.
25Neurotransmitters
- Neurotransmitters are released into the synapse
and bind with receptors on the postsynaptic cell
membrane, which cause ion channels to open in the
new cell.
26Acetylcholine Example Neurotransmitter
27Kinds of Synapses
- There are many types of neurotransmitters, each
recognized by certain receptor proteins. - Excitatory synapse the receptor protein is a
chemically gated sodium channel (it is opened by
a neurotransmitter). - When opened, sodium rushes in and an action
potential begins in the new neuron.
28Kinds of Synapses
- Inhibitory synapse the receptor protein is a
chemically gated potassium channel. - When opened, potassium ions leave the cell which
increases the negative charge and inhibits the
start of an action potential.
29Kinds of Synapses
- An individual nerve cell can have both types of
receptors. - Sometimes both excitatory and inhibitory
neurotransmitters arrive at the synapse. - Integration is the process where the various
neurotransmitters cancel out or reinforce each
other.
30Evolution of Nervous Systems
- Metazoan phyla show a progressive increase in the
complexity of their nervous systems. - Reflects stages of evolution.
31Evolution of Nervous Systems
- The simplest animals with nervous systems, the
cnidarians, have neurons arranged in nerve nets.
32Evolution of Nervous Systems
- In relatively simple cephalized animals, such as
flatworms, a central nervous system (CNS) is
evident.
33Evolution of Nervous Systems
- Annelids have a bilobed brain, a double nerve
cord with segmental ganglia (clusters of neurons)
and distinctive sensory and motor neurons. - These ganglia connect to the CNS and make up a
peripheral nervous system (PNS).
34Evolution of Nervous Systems
- Molluscs generally have three pairs of
well-defined ganglia. - In cephalopods, these ganglia have developed
into complex nervous centers with highly
developed sense organs.
35Evolution of Nervous Systems
- The arthropod plan resembles that of annelids,
but ganglia are larger and sense organs are
better developed. - Often elaborate social behavior.
36Evolution of Nervous Systems
- Sea stars have a nerve net in each arm connected
by radial nerves to a central nerve ring.
37Evolution of Nervous Systems
- In vertebrates, the central nervous system
consists of a brain and dorsal spinal cord. - The PNS connects to the CNS.
38Vertebrate Nervous System
- Vertebrates have a hollow, dorsal nerve cord
terminating anteriorly in a large ganglionic mass
the brain. - Invertebrate nerve cords are solid and ventral.
- Encephalization the elaboration of size,
configuration, and functional capacity of the
brain.
39Spinal Cord
- The spinal cord begins as an ectodermal neural
groove, which becomes a hollow neural tube. - The spinal cord is protected by the vertebrae
(derived from the notochord). - White, myelinated sheath of axons dendrites
surround the gray matter containing cell bodies.
40Reflex Arc
- A simple reflex produces a very fast motor
response to a stimulus because the sensory neuron
bringing information about the stimulus passes
the information directly to the motor neuron.
41Reflex Arc
- Usually, there are interneurons between sensory
and motor neurons. - An interneuron may connect two neurons on the
same side of the spinal cord, or on opposite
sides.
42Brain
- The vertebrate brain has changed dramatically
from the primitive linear brain of fishes and
amphibians. - It has expanded to form the deeply fissured,
intricate brain of mammals.
43The Vertebrate Brain
- The vertebrate brain has three parts
- Hindbrain extension spinal cord responsible for
hearing, balance, and coordinating motor
reflexes. - Midbrain contains optic lobes and processes
visual information. - Forebrain process olfactory information.
44The Hindbrain
- The hindbrain consists of the medulla oblongata,
the pons, and the cerebellum. - The medulla oblongata, is really a continuation
of the spinal cord. - The pons carries impulses from one side of the
cerebellum to the other and connects the medulla
and cerebellum to other brain regions.
45Cerebellum
- The cerebellum controls balance posture, and
muscle coordination. - Birds have a highly developed cerebellum because
flying is complicated.
46Brain Stem
- The brain stem includes the midbrain, pons, and
medulla oblongata. - It connects the rest of the brain to the spinal
cord. - Controls breathing, swallowing, digestive
processes, heartbeat, and diameter of blood
vessels.
47Midbrain
- The midbrain consists of the tectum, including
optic lobes, which contain nuclei that serve as
centers for visual and auditory reflexes.
48Forebrain
- Vertebrates other than fishes have a complex
forebrain - Diencephalon contains
- Thalamus relay center between cerebrum
sensory nerves. - Hypothalamus participates in basic drives
emotions. Also controls pituitary gland. - Telencephalon (cerebrum in mammals) is devoted to
associative activity.
49Thalamus
- The thalamus is the major site of sensory
processing. - Sensory information is received from the sensory
nerves processed in the thalamus and sent on to
the cerebral cortex. - The thalamus also controls balance.
50Hypothalamus
- The hypothalamus integrates internal activities,
regulating processes such as - Body temperature
- Blood pressure
- Respiration
- Heartbeat
- The hypothalamus also controls the pituitary a
major hormone producing gland.
51Cerebrum
- The cerebrum is the control center of the brain.
- Right and left halves called cerebral
hemispheres. - Functions in language, conscious thought, memory,
personality development, vision.
52Cerebrum
- The gray outer layer of the cerebrum is the
cerebral cortex and is the most active area. - Gray color comes from the many cell bodies.
- The inner white area contains myelinated nerve
fibers that shuttle information between the
cortex and the rest of the brain.
53Cerebrum
- The right and left halves of the brain are
connected by the corpus callosum. - The left side of the brain is associated with
language, mathematical abilities, and learning. - The right side of the brain is associated with
spatial, intuitive, musical, and artistic
abilities.
54Peripheral Nervous System
- The peripheral nervous system includes all
nervous tissue outside the CNS. - Sensory nerves bring sensory info to the CNS.
- Motor nerves carry motor commands to muscles and
glands. - Somatic nervous system innervates skeletal
muscle. - Autonomic nervous system innervates smooth
muscle, cardiac muscle, and glands.
55Autonomic Nervous System
- The autonomic nervous system is involuntary.
- Works all the time carrying messages to muscles
and glands that work without you even noticing. - Works to maintain homeostasis.
56Autonomic Nervous System
- The sympathetic nervous system (fight or flight)
dominates in times of stress. - Increases blood pressure, heart rate, breathing
rate blood flow to muscles. - The parasympathetic nervous system (rest
digest) conserves energy by slowing the heartbeat
and breathing rate and promoting digestion.
57Sense Organs
- Sense organs are specialized receptors for
detecting environmental cues. - A stimulus is some form of energy electrical,
mechanical, chemical, or radiant. - A sense organ transforms energy from the stimulus
into an action potential. - Perception of a sensation is determined by which
part of the brain receives the action potential.
58Classification of Receptors
- Exteroceptors receive information about the
external environment. - Based on the energy they transduce, sensory
receptors fall into five categories - Mechanoreceptors
- Chemoreceptors
- Electromagnetic receptors
- Thermoreceptors
- Pain receptors
- Interoceptors receive information about internal
organs.
59Chemoreception
- Chemoreceptors include general receptors that
transmit information about the total solute
concentration of a solution. - Unicellular organisms use contact chemical
receptors to locate food or avoid toxins. - Chemotaxis is orientation toward or away from a
chemical. - Metazoans use distance chemical receptors
(olfaction).
60Chemoreception
- The perceptions of gustation (taste) and
olfaction (smell) are both dependent on
chemoreceptors that detect specific chemicals in
the environment.
61Chemoreception
- The taste receptors of insects are located within
sensory hairs called sensilla which are located
on the feet and in mouthparts.
62Chemoreception
- The receptor cells for taste in humans are
modified epithelial cells organized into taste
buds. - Five taste perceptions
- Sweet
- Sour,
- Salty
- Bitter
- Umami (meaty or savory)
63Chemoreception
- Olfactory receptor cells are neurons that line
the upper portion of the nasal cavity. - When odorant molecules bind to specific receptors
a signal transduction pathway is triggered,
sending action potentials to the brain.
64Chemoreception
- Many animals produce species-specific compounds
called pheromones. - Pheremones released into the environment carry
information about territory, social hierarchy,
sex and reproductive state.
65Mechanoreceptors
- Mechanoreceptors sense physical deformation
caused by stimuli such as pressure, stretch,
motion, and sound. - The mammalian sense of touch relies on
mechanoreceptors that are the dendrites of
sensory neurons.
66Mechanoreceptors
- Thermoreceptors, which respond to heat or cold
help regulate body temperature by signaling both
surface and body core temperature.
67Mechanoreceptors
- In humans, pain receptors are a class of naked
dendrites in the epidermis that respond to excess
heat, pressure, or specific classes of chemicals
released from damaged or inflamed tissues.
68Mechanoreceptors
- Most fishes also have a lateral line system along
both sides of their body. - The lateral line system contains mechanoreceptors
with hair cells that respond to water movement. - Allows the fish to detect any changes in current
associated with nearby prey or predators.
69Hearing
- Few invertebrates can hear.
- Exceptions include insects that have simply
designed ears that allow the insects to hear
calls of potential mates, rival males, or
predators. - Moths can detect the ultrasonic sounds of bats.
70Hearing
- Vertebrate ears originated as a balance organ, or
labyrinth. - A part of the labyrinth elaborated into the
cochlea.
71Hearing
- Vibrating objects create percussion waves in the
air that cause the tympanic membrane to vibrate. - The three bones of the middle ear transmit the
vibrations to the oval window on the inner ear,
or cochlea.
72Hearing
- These vibrations create pressure waves in the
fluid in the cochlea that travel through the
vestibular canal and ultimately strike the round
window.
73Hearing
- The pressure waves in the vestibular canal cause
the basilar membrane to vibrate up and down
causing its hair cells to bend. - The bending of the hair cells depolarizes their
membranes sending action potentials that travel
via the auditory nerve to the brain.
74Hearing
- The cochlea can distinguish pitch because the
basilar membrane is not uniform along its length. - Each region of the basilar membrane vibrates most
vigorously at a particular frequency and leads to
excitation of a specific auditory area of the
cerebral cortex.
75Equilibrium
- Most invertebrates have sensory organs called
statocysts that contain mechanoreceptors and
function in their sense of equilibrium. - When an animal changes position, statoliths
shift, disturbing cilia.
76Equilibrium
- In most terrestrial vertebrates the sensory
organs for hearing and equilibrium are closely
associated in the ear.
77Equilibrium
- Several of the organs of the inner ear detect
body position and balance.
78Electromagnetic Receptors
- Electromagnetic receptors detect various forms of
electromagnetic energy such as visible light,
electricity, and magnetism.
79Electromagnetic Receptors
- Some snakes have very sensitive infrared
receptors that detect body heat of prey against a
colder background. - Many mammals appear to use the Earths magnetic
field lines to orient themselves as they migrate.
80Vision
- Many types of light detectors have evolved in the
animal kingdom and may be homologous. - Light sensitive receptors are called
photoreceptors.
81Vision
- Even some unicellular organisms have
photoreceptors. - Dinoflagellate
82Vision in Invertebrates
- Most invertebrates have some sort of
light-detecting organ. - One of the simplest is the eye cup of planarians
which provides information about light intensity
and direction but does not form images.
83Vision in Invertebrates
- Two major types of image-forming eyes have
evolved in invertebrates the compound eye and the
single-lens eye.
84Vision in Invertebrates
- Compound eyes are found in insects and
crustaceans and consist of up to several thousand
light detectors called ommatidia.
85Vision in Invertebrates
- Single-lens eyes are found in some jellies,
polychaetes, spiders, and many molluscs. - They work on a camera-like principle.
86Vision in Vertebrates
- The eyes of vertebrates are camera-like, but they
evolved independently and differ from the
single-lens eyes of invertebrates.
87Vision in Vertebrates
- The main parts of the vertebrate eye are
- The sclera, white, includes the transparent
cornea. - The iris, colored, regulates the pupil.
- The retina, which contains photoreceptors.
- The lens, which focuses light on the retina.
88Vision in Vertebrates
- The human retina contains two types of
photoreceptors - Rods are sensitive to light but do not
distinguish colors. - Cones distinguish colors but are not as
sensitive.
89Color Vision
- Cones contain three types of visual pigments
red, green, and blue. - Colors are perceived by comparing levels of
excitation of the three different kinds of cones. - Color vision is found in some fishes, reptiles,
birds, and mammals.