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The Nervous System

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This action is not integrated by the CNS. Supporting Cells ... Astrocytes: form connections between capillaries and neurons for feeding and waste disposal; ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Nervous System


1
The Nervous System
  • Ch. 48-49

2
The Nervous System
  • Performs three basic continuous functions
  • Sensory input
  • Integration
  • Motor output

It Is Brain surgery
3
Sensory Input
  • Sensory Receptors collect information from the
    outside environment.

4
Integration
  • Input is interpreted and linked to appropriate
    responses
  • Accomplished by the CNS (central nervous system)
  • Brain
  • Spinal cord

5
Motor Output
  • Signal conduction from CNS to effector cells in
    PNS (peripheral nervous system)
  • CNS is connected to effector cells via neurons,
    or nerve cells

6
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7
The Nervous System
CNS
  • PNS

Afferent
Efferent
Brain
Spinal Cord
Autonomic
Somatic
Sympathetic
Parasympathetic
8
Neurons and the Connections They Love
  • The NEURON, or nerve cell is the functional unit
    of the nervous system.
  • Composed of cell body, dendrites, axon, myelin
    sheath, synaptic terminals (bulbs)

9
  • Dendrites receive afferent signals, incoming
    from other neurons or receptors
  • Axon only one per neuron efferent pathway to
    other neuron or an effector cell (muscle, gland)
  • Myelin sheath lipid layer that insulates axon
    produced by Schwann cells.
  • Synaptic Terminals (bulbs) transmit signals from
    axon by release of neurotransmitters (Ach)
  • Synaptic cleft (synapse) site of contact between
    two neurons or neuron and effector
  • Postsynaptic cell the receiver.

10
Label This Drawing
A
H
B
G
F
E
D
C
11
How do Scientists Study Nerves?
12
From One Neuron to its Neighbor
13
The Simplest Nerve Circuit
The Reflex Arc Often involves only two nerve
cells, the sensory neuron and the motor neuron.
This action is not integrated by the CNS.
14
Supporting Cells
  • GLIA glue
  • Used to believe they were wholly supportive, new
    research says not!
  • Provide nutrition and protection.
  • Lead neurons from neural tube along pathway in
    embryonic development.

15
Three Types of Glial Cells
  • Astrocytes form connections between capillaries
    and neurons for feeding and waste disposal in
    brain, they form tight junctions which form the
    blood-brain barrier.
  • Microglial cells immune system cells which
    engulf microbes in the brain alcohol kills
    microglial cells in fetuses.
  • Oligodendrocytes (CNS) and Schwann Cells (PNS)
    form around axons like burritos insulate
    electrical impulses and speed up nerve signal
    transduction.

16
How a Nerve Cell Passes a Signal
  • All cells have a membrane potential, a difference
    in charge between inside and outside. Developed 2
    weeks post conception, maintained through life.
  • The resting potential of an unstimulated nerve
    cell is about -70mV negative inside the cell.
  • The resting membrane potential is maintained by
    the Sodium-Potassium Pump.
  • Neurons have a 50X greater permeability to K
    than Na.

17
Resting MP
Extracellular 1 cation 1 anion Intracellular
1 cation 1 anion
Resting Potential Video
18
Excitable cells
  • Cells in the body like muscle and nerve cells can
    create large changes in their membrane
    potentials.
  • Environmental stimuli can cause these cells to
    alter their membrane potential, possibly causing
    an action potential.

19
The Action Potential in Words
  • Stimulus causes Na gates to open.
  • Na influx changes membrane potential.
  • If Na influx is great enough to achieve
    threshold potential (-50mV), then all Na gates
    open.
  • All or none phenomenonat threshold, all gates
    will be opened (below threshold, no extra gates
    will open) and stimulus is transmitted.
  • Additional Na influx causes depolarization of
    membrane (action potential).
  • K channels remain closed. Cell becomes positive.

20
  • Repolarization begins when K gates open and Na
    gates are closed. ( 50mV)
  • K ions leave the cell, causing the interior to
    become more negative.
  • BUTThe ions are in reversed concentrations!
  • When K gates finally close, there is slightly
    more K outside than inside hyperpolarization.
  • Refractory period returns ions to resting state.
  • Sodium-Potassium pump restores resting
    potentialno stimuli can be transmitted during
    this phasethe neuron is BUSY!

21
Action Potential Video
22
How Fast Are Impulses Conducted?
  • Campbell p. 1020

23
How Do Muscle Contractions Fit in?
  • All motor neurons are associated with muscle
    fibers at their peripheral endthe neuromuscular
    junction.
  • There is a space between a neuron and a muscle
    fiberthe synaptic cleft.
  • The depolarization wave cannot pass across the
    cleft!

24
Three Types of Muscle in the Body
  • Cardiacfound only in the heart striated
    involuntary
  • Smoothlines internal organsdigestive tract,
    blood vessels, rep. tract, bladder not striated
    involuntary.
  • Skeletalattaches to skeleton striated
    voluntary multinucleate

25
General Anatomy of a Muscle
Muscle Fiber Cell w/ myofibrils
26
A Little Bit Closer
ONE MUSCLE FIBER(cell)
27
Myofibril Anatomy
  • Skeletal muscle is striated
  • Individual units are called sarcomeres.
  • Thin filaments actin
  • Thick filaments myosin

28
The Neuromuscular Junction
The Neuromuscular Junction
29
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30
Signal Transduction
  • The depolarization wave in the neuron cannot
    traverse the synaptic cleft.
  • When action potential reaches the synaptic end
    bulb, Ca in the cleft flows into the bulbs.
  • This calcium causes vesicles filled with
    neurotransmitters (acetylcholine) to migrate to
    the neural membrane.

31
  • The vesicles fuse with the cell membrane and
    exocytose their contents into the synaptic cleft.
  • Receptors on sarcolemma bind acetylcholine
    causing gated Na channels to open. As Na comes
    into the sarcoplasm, what happens?!
  • DEPOLARIZATION !

32
  • The depolarization wave (DW) passes across the
    sarcolemma which extends into the muscle fiber
    via the T-tubules.
  • T-tubules have close associations with the
    sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), the Ca warehouse.
  • The DW opens gated Ca channels allowing Ca to
    flow into the sarcoplasmthis is the important
    part!!!!

33
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34
  • Ca binds the troponin complex.
  • Once troponin is removed, the tropomyosin shifts
    away from the myosin binding sites.
  • Ca serves as an enzyme cofactor with myosin and
    they become ATPase!
  • The ATP is broken down into ADP and Pi. This
    allows myosin to bind to the actin filaments and
    contract the filament to the center of the
    sarcomere.

35
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36
Muscle Contraction
37
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38
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39
So, How Do You Stop It?
  • The binding of the acetylcholine receptors on the
    sarcolemma signals the release of
    acetylcholinesterase from the sarcolemma.
  • This enzyme breaks down acetylcholine in the
    synaptic cleft.
  • How do you get the contraction to continue?

One molecule of acetylcholinesterase breaks down
25,000 molecules of acetylcholine each second.
This speed makes possible the rapid "resetting"
of the synapse for transmission of another nerve
impulse.
40
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41
Belgian Blue Bull
  • The myostatin gene is effectively blocked by
    being mistranscribed (its truncated)leads to
    double-muscled animal.

42
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43
  • Negative Feedback Control (depends on four
    detector types so that the CNS knows what the
    muscles are doing and can make adjustments
    accordingly)
  •      Muscle spindles (so-called stretch
    receptors) actually length detectors
  •      Golgi tendon organs detectors of tension
    in tendons
  •      Joint angle receptors indicate the angle
    of a joint
  •      Skin stretch and compression receptors
    give information about how the skin is deformed
    around a joint

44
Storytime
  • The Function of the Sympathetic Nervous System
    and Wartime
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