16. Reflexes and Escape Behaviour

Beschreibung

BS2066 Lecture 16 by VS - Reflexes and Escape Behaviour
Mimi E
Karteikarten von Mimi E, aktualisiert more than 1 year ago
Mimi E
Erstellt von Mimi E vor mehr als 7 Jahre
73
0

Zusammenfassung der Ressource

Frage Antworten
Define locomotion The ability of an organism to move in space in purposeful ways by using efficient mechanisms that are suitable for the purposes of the movement
What are the specific animal adaptations for locomotion? • Muscles (locomotion requires muscles) • The nervous system (muscle contraction requires control)
What makes a good model system for studying the control of locomotion? • The behaviour needs to be, reliable, reproducible and simple • The underlying control mechanisms need to be simple • The system needs to be accessible
Briefly describe crayfish escape behaviour in response to a tail touch. What causes the response? - Touching the tail with a probe triggers a downward tail flip that propels the animal up and away from the stimulus • It's fast --> the time between the stimulus and the response is 10ms • Contraction of the tail is caused by the rapid contraction of the flexor muscles
Describe the crayfish nervous system • The brain: a collection of ganglion fused in the head region • Subesophageal ganglion complex • 5 thoracic ganglia (correspond to the 5 thoracic ganglia) • 6 abdominal ganglia (correspond to the 6 abdominal ganglia) • Each ganglion is connected by axons
Where is the circuitry for the tail flip response located? In the abdominal ganglia
Describe the pathway for the tail flip circuitry • Tail afferents (bipolar sensory cells) -> Sensory interneurons -> Lateral Giant Interneuron (LGI) -> Giant Motor Neurons (MoG) -> Fast flexor muscles
[Diagram of tail flip circuitry] The zig-zag lines indicate electrical synapses
Describe the anatomical organisation of the lateral giant interneurons • There is one LGI per abdominal ganglion • They are coupled to each other via segmental electrical synapses [The LGIs essentially operate as a single unit because of how strongly they are connected (ensures rapid spread of activity throughout the ganglia)]
• This experiment proves that LGI activity is necessary for the tail flip response • After electrically stimulating the sensory neuron (mimics tail touch) > depolarisation of LGI > APs in motor neuron • Injecting negative current leads to hyperpolarisation > no AP in LGI > no AP in motor neuron
Describe crayfish escape behaviour in response to a head touch. What interneuron is involved in this escape response? • Triggers a tail flip that propels the animal backwards • The Medial Giant Interneuron (MGI) is involved
What's the difference between the MGI and the LGI? • MGI is carries sensory information from the head • LGI carries sensory information from the tail
What's the difference between how the MGI and the LGI cause the tail flip response? • LGI synapses with MoGs in abdominal segments 1 - 3 so only these muscles contract • MGI synapses with all segments
How are escape networks specialised for fast responses? • Neurons have large axon diametres • Networks have many electrical synapses
Describe the squid jet propulsion escape response. • It rapidly contracts body and expels water to propel itself away from the stimulus • It is triggered by the activity of the Squid Giant Axon
Describe the Drosophila escape jump response. • The fly jumps upwards and backwards and flies away • Giant Fibres carry sensory information from the eyes to the tergotrochanteral muscles which contract to make them jump
Zusammenfassung anzeigen Zusammenfassung ausblenden

ähnlicher Inhalt

Biology AQA 3.1.3 Cells
evie.daines
Biology AQA 3.2.5 Mitosis
evie.daines
Biology AQA 3.1.3 Osmosis and Diffusion
evie.daines
Biology- Genes, Chromosomes and DNA
Laura Perry
Biology- Genes and Variation
Laura Perry
Enzymes and Respiration
I Turner
GCSE AQA Biology - Unit 2
James Jolliffe
GCSE AQA Biology 1 Quiz
Lilac Potato
Using GoConqr to study science
Sarah Egan
Cells and the Immune System
Eleanor H
GCSE Biology AQA
isabellabeaumont