Action Potentials Flashcards
What does the presence of the absolute refractory period prevent? And what does this mean?
The signal going back on itself. It means that when you stimulate an action potential on the membrane, it will always move away from the point of stimulation
Where do action potential usually start in an axon?
The axon hillock
Where can current loops form in a myelinated neurone?
Node of ranvier
What are two advantages of saltatory conduction?
- Speed
- Energy efficiency
What is the best way to increase the speed of action potential transmission?
Myelination
What is a con of myelination?
Myelinated neurones take up more space
What is the difference between convergent and divergent systems?
- In convergent systems, the activity of many cells influence the activity of one/few (multiple neurones feed information to a single cell)
- In divergent systems, the activity of one cell influence the activity of many (one cell is going to branch its terminals and they’re going to influence multiple cells)
Describe the process of a chemical synapse
Electrical signal in the presynaptic cell gets converted into a chemical signal, and it’s that chemical signal that will then transfer between the cells using the synapse, and that will then induce an electrical signal in the post synaptic cell
What is a neurotransmitter?
a chemical messenger which is used for transmitting information from neurons
What are some of the ways to get rid of excess neurotransmitters in synaptic clefts?
- they will diffuse and move away
- reuptake of neurotransmitter into the pre-synaptic cell
- enzymes that sit within the synaptic cleft, there to break down the neurotrannsmitter
What are some presynaptic factors that effect synaptic effectiveness?
- availability of neurotransmitters
- availability of enzymes
- Calcium ion concentrations
- presynaptic receptors
What are some postsynaptic factors that affect synaptic effectiveness?
- immediate history (IPSPs, EPSPs)
- drugs
- disease
- receptor concentrations
- NT concentrations in cleft
- NT agonists/antagonists