5.3 - Neural Communication Flashcards
What is a sensory receptor?
Specialised cell that detects change in an environment. An energy transducer that converts energy from one form to another, e.g. light energy into biochemical energy of the action potential.
Name stimuli, their receptor and the energy change.
Stimulus: Light intensity. Receptor: Rods and cones in eye. Energy change: Light to electrical.
Stimulus: Temperature. Receptor: Skin receptors and hypothalamus. Energy change: Heat to electrical.
Stimulus: Pressure. Receptor: Pancinian corpuscles in skin. Energy change: Movement to electrical.
Stimulus: Sound. Receptor: Vibration receptors in cochlea. Energy change: Movement to electrical.
Stimulus: Muscle length. Receptor: Spindle fibres. Energy change: Movement to electrical.
Stimulus: Chemicals in air. Receptor: Olfactory cells in nose. Energy change: Chemical to electrical.
Stimulus: Chemicals in food. Receptor: Receptors in taste buds. Energy change: Chemical to electrical.
What is the Pacinian corpuscle?
Pressure sensor in skin.
Describe the structure of the Pacinian corpuscle.
Oval shaped, concentric rings of connective tissue.
Wrapped around nerve ending.
Pressure distorts rings of connective tissue.
Sensitive only to changes in pressure.
If pressure is constant, cells stop responding.
Name the proteins associated with the nervous system and describe their action.
Protein: Sodium ion channels. Action: Ion specific channels, sensitive to small movements in nerve membrane, distortion increases permeability of membrane to sodium ions allowing diffusion into cell, may be gated.
Protein: Potassium ion channels. Action: Ion specific channels, may be gated.
Protein: Sodium/ potassium pump. Action: Active transport of 3 sodium ions out of nerve cell; active transport of 2 potassium ions into nerve cell.
Describe the nerve cell membrane when at rest.
Polarised. More positive sodium ions leave the membrane then positive potassium ions enter. Negatively charged on inside compared to outside.
Describe the three types of neurones.
Motor - carry action potential from CNS to an effector - gland or muscle.
Sensory - carry action potential from receptor to CNS.
Relay- connect motor and sensory neurones.
Describe the features common to all neurones.
Long.
Cell surface plasma membrane high in ion channels.
Sodium potassium pump uses ATP for active transport of ions.
Potential difference maintained across cell surface plasma membrane.
Cell body rich in mitochondria and ribosomes.
Dendrites connect neurones and carry impulses towards cell body.
Axon carries impulses away from cell body.
Many neurons wrapped in fatty sheath of myelin.
Describe the differences between neurones.
Motor neurones - cell body in CNS, long axon carries impulse to effector.
Sensory neurones - long dendron carries impulse from receptor to cell body, short axon from cell body to CNS.
Relay neurone - many dendrites, short axons, interconnect motor and sensory neurones.
Describe the myelin sheath.
Formed from Schwann cells wrapped tightly around neurone.
Several layers within cytoplasm.
Restricts diffusion of ions in/out of neurone.
Gaps in sheath at 1-3mm intervals called nodes of Ranvier.
Ions diffuse in/out of neurone at nodes of Ranvier.
Action potential jumps from node to node.
What are the advantages of myelination?
Action potential transmitted more rapidly than in non-myelinated. 100-120 m/s, non-myelinated 2-20 m/s. Myelinated neurones longer.
Describe non-myelinated neurones.
Associated with Schwann cells. Several neurones loosely wrapped by on Schwann cell. Ions able to diffuse in/out of neurone. Action potential moves in waves along neurone.
What is the action potential?
A brief reversal of potential across the membrane of a neurone. +40mV.
What is the resting potential?
The potential difference across the membrane. -60mV.
Describe the neurone at rest.
Active transport of ions - 3 Na+ out, 2 K+ in. Sodium potassium pump uses hydrolysis of ATP to ADP + Pi.
Gated sodium ion channels closed. Some potassium ion channels are open.
Membrane more permeable to potassium ions so some diffuse from cell, across membrane down concentration gradient - passive diffusion.
Interior of cell is negative compared to outside.
Membrane is polarised, difference across membrane is -60mV. This is resting potential.