Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Biology Unit 4.1.2- Nerves
- Sensory receptors- specialised
cells that can detect changes in the
surroundings
- Recpetors
- rods and cones-
light intensity and
range of wavelength
- olfactory cells-
pressence of volatile
chemicals- smell
- taste buds, palate, epiglottis,
oesophogus- soluble chemicals
- pressure receptors
(pacinan corpucles)-
pressure on skin
- cochlea- vibrations in air
- muscle spindle
(proprioceptors)- length
of muscle fibres
- Generating Nerve impulses
- 1. changing membrane permeability
- neurones
- specific channel
proteins- Na+ or K+
- gated channel proteins-
usually closed but can open
- open- permeability increases,
closed- permeability decreases
- carrier proteins actively transport
Na+ out and K+ in using sodium
potassium pumps 3Na:2K
- polarised- membrane that has a
potential difference across it
(Resting Potential)- inside= -vely
charged
- Depolarisation- loss of
polarisation across
membrane. increased
permeability to NA+ down a
concentration gradient into
cell. inside= less -ve
- 2.generator potential
- generator potential- small
depolarisation caused by
sodium ions entering the cell.
larger stimuli=more channels
open
- action potential- when membrane is
depolarised to =40mV. All or Nothing
response. leading up to action potential-
membrane depolarises and reached
threshold- lots of NA+ enters axon and
action potential is reached
- sensory and motor neurones
- sensory- carries action
potential to CNS. long dendron
carries AP from sensory to cell
body
- motor- carries action potential
from CNS to effectors (muscles)-
cell body in CNS and long axon
carries action potential to effector
- intermediate.relay- connect
sensory and moto
- similarities in structure...
- long and
transmits over
long distances
- gated sodium
potassium ion
pumps
- sodium
potassium pumps
- maintain
potential
difference
- fatty sheath- schwann
cells and nodes of
ranvier
- numerous dendrites
connected to other
neurones
- Resting and Action potential
- Resting neurone
- not transmitting an
action potential
- Interior of cell is more
negative compared to
exterior
- Resting potential- potential
difference/voltage across
neurone at rest (-60mV)
- Action Potential
- At rest- sodium ion
channels are
closed
- Sodium potassium ion
pumps use ATP
- Voltage gated channels- allows
charged particles and ions.
gates respond to change in
potential difference.
- 1. All or nothing
- Depolarisation must be large
enough to reach a threshold
potential (-50mV) it will open
nearby channels. depolarisation
reaches =40mV Action
Potential transmitted
- 2. ionic movement
- Action potential- depolarisation of
membrane (inside more positive
that outside) =40mV
- Steps
- 1. Resting state- polarised
inside -60 mV compared to
outside
- 2. Na+ channels open, some
diffuse in
- 3. Depolarised- less
negative inside and
threshold reached
(-50mV)
- 4. Voltage gated sodium
ion channels open (in
more positive than out)
- 5. potential difference-
+40mV. in more positive than
out
- 6. Na+ channel close,
K+ opens
- 7. repolarisation- K+
diffuses out therefore more
negative in than out
- 8. hyperpolarised- potential
difference overshoots slightly
- 9. refractory period- cell
recovery and potential
difference restored
- Transmission of Action potential
- 1. local currents
- 1. sodium ion channels open at
particular point therefore, Na+ can
diffuse across membrane from high
concentration (outside) to low
concentration (inside)
- 2. movement upsets balance of
ionic concentration created by
pumps
- 3. concentration of Na+ inside rises
until more Na+ channels open.
- 4. Na+ diffuses
sideways away from
increased
concentration
- 5. movement of
charged particles is
known as the local
currents
- 2. Voltage gated sodium ions
- gated sodium ion channels are
operated by a change in voltage
across the membrane
- movement of Na+ across neurones alters
potential difference, when reduced, gates
open
- Na+ enters at point further across/
along membrane therefore, action
potential moves across membranes
- 3. myelin Sheath
- insulating layer of
fatty material
- Na+ or K+
cannot diffuse
through this fatty
layer
- Ionic exchange that causes an
action potential therefore only
occur at nodes of ranvier
- Action potential jumps from
one node to another - saltatory
- 4. Advantages of Slatatory conditions
- speeds up
transmission of
action potential
- Myelinated neurones
conduct action potential
quicker (120ms-1)
compared to non myelinated
- Nerve junctions
- cholinergic synapses
- synanpse junction between
2+ neurones- communication
and signals
- synamptic cleft- gap between
2 neurones
- presynaptic action potential
causes release of chemicals
that diffuse across the gap and
generates action potential
- neurotransmitter- chemical that
diffuses across cleft of synapses
to transmit signals to post
synaptic neurone
- cholinergic synapses use
acetylcholine as a
transmitter
- 1. synaptic knob- swelling at the
end of presynaptic neurone
- mitochondria
- smooth endoplasmic reticulum
- vesicles of acetylcholine
- voltage gates ca2+
channels in
membranes
- 2. postsynaptic membrane
- Na2+ channels- 5 polypeptide
molecules, two which have recpetor
site to acetylcholine, when binds,
channels open
- Transmission across synapses
- 1. action potential
arrives at knob,
Ca2+ opens and
diffuses into knob
- 2. ca2+ causes
synaptic vesicles to
make and fuse with
presynaptic
membrane
- 3. acetylcholine released
via excocytosis. diffuses
across cleft and bind to
receptor sites of Na+
channels in post synaptic
membrane into neurone.
- 4. generator potential
created if threshold
reached and new action
potential created in post
synapse
- Acetylcholiinesterase- enzyme in
synaptic cleft which breaks down
acetylcholine to ethanoic acid and
choline
- stops transmission signals
- re- enter synaptic
knob (diffusion),
recombine with ATP
- signals and messages
- Roles of synapses in the nervous systems
- connects 2 neurones so
a signal can be passed
- several presynaptic converge to
one postsynaptic. allows signals
from different parts of nervous
system
- one presynaptic diverge to several
postsynaptic. allows one signal to be
transmitted to several parts of
nervous system
- synapses ensure signals
transmitted in correct
direction. only knob
contains acetylcholine
- synapses filter out
unwanted low
signals
- low levels may be
amplified via summation
- generate several
successive action potentials
in presynaptic neurones
- 1. temporal summation
- 1 action potential in
presynapticc does not
produce in postsynaptic
- series of action
potentials are required
in presynaptic
- small excitatory postsynaptic
potentials (EPSP) dont create an
action potential in postsynaptic
until they act together
- 2. spatial summation
- several presynaptic
neurones may each
contribute to producing an
action potential in
postsynaptic
- acclimatisation- after repeated stimulation,
vesicles with transmitter substances, therefore
synapse fatigues and no longer responds to
the stimuli- background noises
- frequency of transmission- when stimuli is at
higher intensity, the sensory receptor will produce
more generator potentials, therefore more vesicles
released. higher frequency means more intense
stimuli
- myelinated and non myelinated
neurones- non myelinated neurones:
AP moves along the neurones in a wave
rather than jumping between nodes
- Advantages of myelinated...
- speed:
Myelinated:
100-120 ms-1,
Non myelinated:
2-20ms-1
- myelinated:
sensory->CNS->effector (long),
Non myelinated: co ordinates
body finctions (shorter)