6.1.2 Receptors Flashcards
Describe the basic structure of a Pacinian corpuscle(draw and label it)
Should’ve included all these key terms
Lamellae (layers of connective tissue)
Stretch medicated sodium channels (closed)
Sensory neuron ending
Sensory neuron axon
Myelin sheath(Schwann cells)
Gel
Describe how a generator potential is established in a Pacinian corpuscle
- Mechanical stimulus eg. pressure deforms
lamellae and stretch- mediated sodium ion
(Na+) channels - So Nachannels in membrane open and Na
diffuse into sensory neurone
○ Greater pressure causes more Na
channels to open and more Na to enter - This causes depolarisation, leading to a
generator potential
○ If generator potential reaches threshold
it triggers an action potential
Explain what the Pacinian corpuscle illustrates
● Receptors respond only to specific stimuli
○ Pacinian corpuscle only responds to mechanical pressure
● Stimulation of a receptor leads to the establishment of a generator potential
○ When threshold is reached, action potential sent (all-or-nothing principle)
Explain the differences in sensitivity to light for rods & cones in the retina
Rods are more sensitive to light
● Several rods connected to a single neurone
● Spatial summation to reach / overcome threshold (as enough
neurotransmitter released) to generate an action potential
Cones are less sensitive to light
● Each cone connected to a
single neurone
● No spatial summation
Explain the differences in visual acuity for rods & cones in the retina
Rods give lower visual acuity
● Several rods connected to a single neurone
● So several rods send a single set of impulses
to brain (so can’t distinguish between
separate sources of light)
Cones give higher visual acuity
● Each cone connected to a single neurone
● Cones send separate (sets of) impulses to brain
(so can distinguish between 2 separate sources
of light)
Explain the differences in sensitivity to colour for rods & cones in the retina
Rods allow
monochromatic vision
● 1 type of rod / 1
pigment
Cones allow colour vision
● 3 types of cones - red-
, green- and blue-sensitive
● With different optical pigments → absorb different wavelengths
● Stimulating different combinations of cones gives range of colour perception