Title: Nervous System: General Principles
1Nervous System General Principles
- Anatomy Physiology 1
- Tony Serino. Ph.D.
- Biology Dept.
- Misericordia University
2Nervous System
- Controls and/or modifies all other systems
- Rapid response time
- Usually short duration
Lecture Outline
- General anatomy and physiology of neurons
- CNS (Central Nervous System)
- PNS (Peripheral Nervous System)
3Functional Areas
4Divisions of the Nervous System
5Nervous Tissue
- Non-excitable Tissue (Supportive cells)
- Neuroglia present in CNS
- Schwann and Satellite cells present in PNS
- Neurons (excitable tissue)
- Initiate and conduct electrical signals (action
potentials)
6Neuroglia (glial cells)
Phagocytic,protective
- Form BBB
- Regulate microenvironment
- Pass on nutrients get rid of waste
7Neuroglia
Secrete myelin in CNS
8PNS Supportive Cells
- Schwann cells secrete myelin in PNS
- Satellite cells surround neuron cell bodies in
PNS
9Neuron Anatomy
Axonal terminal Nerve ending Synaptic
boutons Synaptic knobs
10Functional Zones of a Neuron
Receptor Zone
Initial segment of Axon(trigger zone)
Nerve endings
Axon
11Internal Cell Body Structures
12Myelination
- In PNS, a Schwann cell wraps and individual
segment of a single axon - In the CNS, an oligodendrocyte performs the same
function but can attach to more than one axon
13Node of Ranvier gaps in myelin sheath
14Types of Neurons
- Anatomical classification
- Based on number of process projecting from cell
body - Functional Classification
- Based on location of neuron and direction of
information flow
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18General Terms
- Ganglia vs. Nuclei
- Areas of densely packed nerve cell bodies
- Ganglia are usually found in PNS
- Nuclei are found in CNS
- Nerve vs. nerve fiber
- A nerve is a dissectible structure containing
hundreds of axons - A nerve fiber is a single axon
- CT sheaths covering peripheral nerves
19Nerve CT sheaths
20Synapses
- Areas where neurons communicate with other cells
- Can be chemical (with neurotransmitters) or
electrical (gap junctions)
21Anatomy of Synapse (chemical)
Neurotransmission ends when NT diffuses
away, re-absorbed by presynaptic neuron, or NT
metabolized (degraded) by enzymes in cleft
22Neurotransmission signal transduction
23Neurotransmission
- Electrical signal (action potential (AP))
descends axon to synaptic knob (nerve end) - Depolarization opens Ca channels to open in
presynaptic membrane - Triggers a number of synaptic vesicles to fuse
with outer membrane - Dumps neurotransmitter (NT) into synaptic cleft
- NT diffuses across cleft and binds to receptor on
postsynaptic membrane - This leads to channels opening on postsynaptic
membrane changing the membranes potential
24Types of Anatomical Synapses
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26Membrane Potentials
- Produced by the unequal distribution of ions
across a selectively permeable membrane - The inside of the cell is called negative by
convention - The intensity of the ion difference is expressed
as voltage (measured in millivolts (mV))
27Measuring Membrane Potentials
28Resting Membrane Potential
Parameters necessary to create a resting membrane
potential
- A semi-permeable membrane
- Distribution of ions across membrane
- Presence of large non-diffusible anions in
interior - Na-K pump (3 Na out for every 2 K in)
29Gated Channel Proteins
- Opening gate allows ions to travel into or out of
the cell thereby changing the membrane potential - Can be controlled chemically or electrically
30Chemically Gated Channel Protein
31Voltage (electrically) Gated Channel Protein
32Graded Potentials
- Transient
- Decremental
- Most due to chemically gated channels opening
- Can be summated
- May be excitatory or inhibitory
Depolarization
Inside of cell becomes less negative
Will only trigger AP if the threshold of the
neuron is reached.
Hyperpolarization
Inside of cell becomes more negative
33Graded potentials magnitude vary with stimulus
strength
34Summation
- Temporal a single axon fires repeatedly
- Spatial two or more axons fire simultaneously
35Typical Receptor Zone Activity
36Action Potentials
- Wave-like, massive depolarization
- Propagated down entire length of axon or muscle
cell membrane - All or none
- No summation possible
- Due to opening of voltage gated channels and
corresponding positive feedback cycle established - 1. Foot graded potentials
- 2. Uplimb fast depolarization
- 3. Downlimb fast repolarization
- 4. After Hyperpolarization overshoot due to ion
distribution
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37Events in Membrane during the AP
38Refractory Periods
Foot
39AP propagation in unmyelinated axons
The depolarization event triggersdepolarization
in the next area of theaxon membrane followed
by repolarization. In this way the AP appears to
move in a wave-like fashion over an unmyelinated
axon membrane.
40AP propagation in myelinated axons
The AP appears to jump from node to node
(saltatory conduction)the myelin sheath
eliminates the need to depolarize the entire
membrane.
41Axonal Transport
- Anterograde towards synapse flow of synaptic
vesicles, mitochondria, etc. - Retrograde towards CB recycled membrane
vesicles, neuromodulators, etc.
42Regeneration of Nerve Fibers
- Damage to nerve tissue is serious because mature
neurons are post-mitotic cells - If the soma of a damaged nerve remains intact,
damage may be repaired - Regeneration involves coordinated activity among
Schwann cells, Neurons and WBCs or microglia - remove debris
- form regeneration tube and secrete growth factors
- regenerate damaged part
43Response to Injury
- Anterograde degeneration with some retrograde
phagocytic cells (from Schwann cells, microglia
or monocytes) remove fragments of axon and myelin
sheath - Cell body swells, nucleus moves peripherally
- Loss of Nissl substance (chromatolysis)
- In the PNS, some Schwann cells remain and form a
tubular structure distal to injury if gap or
scarring is not great axon regeneration may occur
with growth down tube - In the CNS, glial scar tissue seems to prevent
regeneration
If contact with tube is not established then no
regeneration and a traumatic neuroma forms
44Drug Intervention Possibilities
- Increase leakage and breakdown of NT from
vesicles - Agonize NT release
- Block NT release
- Inhibit NT synthesis
- Block NT uptake
- Block degradative enzymes in cleft
- Bind to post-synaptic receptor
- Stimulate or inhibit second messengers in
post-synaptic cell