Title: Neuron Structure and Function
1Neuron Structure and Function
2General Nervous System Functions
- Control of the internal environment
- Nervous system works with endocrine system
- Difference?
- Voluntary control of movement
- Spinal cord reflexes
- Assimilation of experiences necessary for memory
and learning
3Components of the nervous system
CNS
Motor neurons
Sensory neurons
Action
Integration
Perception
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5Organization of the Nervous System
- Central nervous system (CNS)
- Brain and spinal cord
- Peripheral nervous system (PNS)
- Neurons outside the CNS
- Sensory division
- Afferent fibers transmit impulses from receptors
to CNS - Motor division
- Efferent fibers transmit impulses from CNS to
effector organs - Somatic system to muscle
- Autonomic system
6Neurons
- Vary in structure and properties
- Use same basic mechanisms to send signals
Figure 4.1
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8Structure of a Neuron Fig 4.2
- Cell body
- Dendrites
- Conduct impulses toward cell body
- Axon
- Carries electrical impulse away from cell body
- May be covered by Schwann cells
- Forms discontinuous myelin sheath along length of
axon - Synapse
- Contact points between axon of one neuron and
dendrite of another neuron
9Electrical Activity in Neurons
- Resting membrane potential
- At rest, neurons are negatively charged
- Action potential
- Potential across membrane changes
10Squid Giant axon
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14Membrane permeability
- Small molecules and those less strongly
associated with water will pass across membrane - Ions will not cross membrane
15Sodium potassium dependant ATPase
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18Resting Potential
- Resting potential
- Donnan Equilibrium
- Approx -70mV
19Resting Potential
Negative charge
Positive charge
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21Nearnst Equation
- EPotential across membrane
- RUniversal gas constant
- T Absolute temperature oK
- zCharge
- FFaradays constant
- At 18oC, RT/ZF 0.058
- During Resting potential
- KI 400mM, Ko 20mM
- Calculate Resting Potential?
22Nearnst Equation
- EPotential across membrane
- RUniversal gas constant
- T Absolute temperature oK
- zCharge
- FFaradays constant
- At 18oC, RT/ZF 0.058
- During Resting potential
- KI 400mM, Ko 20mM
- Calculate Resting Potential?
20
log
0.058
E
400
E
E -0.0754V
E -75.4mV
23How do we manipulate potential experimentally?
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26Goldman Equation I
- EPotential across membrane
- RUniversal gas constant
- T Absolute temperature oK
- zCharge
- FFaradays constant
- At 18oC, RT/ZF 0.058
- During Resting potential
- PK1 (K i400mM K o20)
- PNa0.0013 (Na i50 Na o440)
- PCl 0.0017 (Cl- i90 Cl- o560)
- So what is the Resting potential?
27Electrical Activity in Neurons
- Resting membrane potential
- At rest, the neurons are negatively charged
- Determined by concentrations of ions (Na, K,
Cl-) across membrane - Action potential
- Depolarization
- Permeability of the membrane changes-leads to
sodium influx - Repolarization
- Change in membrane permeability, restores resting
potential
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30Goldman Equation II
- During Action Potential
- PK1 (K i400mM K o20)
- PNa100 (Na i50 Na o440)
- PCl 0.0017 (Cl- i90 Cl- o560)
- What is the potential across the membrane?
31So what happens during an action potential?
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36Sodium is pumped out during resting potential
Dinitrophenol
37Sodium enters nerve during AP
200,000 impulses!
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41Ion Channels
42Several types of ion channel
43Potassium channel
44Potassium channel
Bacterial Potassium channel
45Lysine residues on S4
46Sodium channel
47Structure of a bacterial K channel
48Specificity of the selectivity filter in a
bacterial K channel
49Model for the gating of a bacterial K channel
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51Sodium Channel Blockers
52Potassium Channel Blockers
53Hodgkin Cycle
54Action Potential
55Patch clamping
56- Sodium channels are either open or closed
- Sensitivity varies
57Matters of Threshold!
- Threshold is voltage at which sodium channel
opening is subject to positive feedback - Variable depending on nerve and portion of nerve.
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59Effect of ion channel density on membrane
threshold
- To generate an AP, a certain number of sodium
ions must cross membrane - Determined by number of open sodium ion channels
- Ion channels have varying voltage sensitivities
(normal distribution) - Assume we need to open 100 channels to generate
AP
60Effect of ion channel density on membrane
threshold, part deux
- Cell One (Blue)
- 1,000 channels per mm2
- Must generate enough potential to open 1/10th
- Cell Two (Red)
- 10,000 channels per mm2
- Must generate enough potential to open 1/100th
61Refractory period
- Ensures discrete impulses
- Absolute
- Relative
- 2 factors involved
- State of gate
- Duration of opening
62Nature of refractoriness
- Absolute
- Sodium channels in closed/inactive state
- Therefore no sodium can enter to depolarize the
cell - Relative
- Potassium channels
- Different Na channels stay open for different
times
63Accommodation
- Gradually changing sub-threshold stimulus
strength - Time-dependent response to depolarization
64- Strong accommodation
- Weak accommodation
- Increasing interspike interval
- Adaptation
65Summary
Sodium and potassium flux during AP