exam 1 Lecture 1 LTP intro Flashcards

1
Q

What is the innervation from the dentate gyrus to the C1 neurons?

A

The dentate gyrus sends its axons to the CA3 neurons. The CA3 neurons sends its axons called the schaffer collaterals to the CA1 neurons synapse with the apical dendrites of the CA1 neurons.

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2
Q

What is a tetanus and what does it do?

A

A tetnus is an intense stimulation that makes the presynaptic neuron release more glutamate. It causes PTP then LTP.

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3
Q

What is PTP (post tetanic potentiation)? How long does it last for?

A

Extreme response due to lots of calcium release. Short lived response.

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4
Q

What is LTP?

A

LTP makes the post synaptic neuron more receptive to glutamate, and LTP has a higher EPSP. Strengthens synapses between neurons. The enhanced responsiveness of a subset of inputs to stimuli. Post synaptic phenomenon.

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5
Q

How do you get around the fact that the EPSP is contaminated with action potential?

A

You measure the slope of the EPSP, which is voltage/time. The slope is proportional to the magnitude of the EPSP.

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6
Q

What is the EPSP?

A

The EPSP tells you the likelihood of a neuron firing an action potential.

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7
Q

What does measuring the EPSP have anything to do with learning and memory?

A

You stimulate axons and drive the post synaptic cell by converging inputs. The convergence enhances the inputs because the response is that those inputs are enough to drive the cell. Only the inputs that receive the excitation get enhanced. Others will get reduced. Reduction in inputs results in loss of learning and memory.

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8
Q

What type of neuron that we are studying releases glutamate?

A

The Schaffer Collaterals of the CA3 neurons.

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9
Q

What type of phenomenon is PTP and where does it occur?

A

PTP is a pre-synaptic phenomenon that occurs at the CA1 synapses.

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10
Q

What is the rapid release pool of glutamate?

A

The RRP is the release pool that is in the zone of activation. Proteins in the plasma membrane links the RRP to the voltage gated calcium channels. Following an action potential, calcium enters the pre-synaptic cell through those voltage gated calcium channels. The RRP is the first to sense the change in calcium levels.

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11
Q

What is the reserve pool of glutamate and how is it released?

A

The reserve pool is farther down into the cell and is used when the RRP is used up.

  1. Continuous input increases the calcium in the presynaptic terminal.
  2. calcium activates calmodulin.
  3. Calmodulin activates M2.
  4. M2 slowly releases the slow release vesicles into the active zone area and they associate with the voltage gated calcium channels.
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12
Q

Why is M2 is unlikely to be involved in the movement?

A

There are other myosins that are better designed to be involved in the movement of vesicles.

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13
Q

What neurotransmitter is released as a response to the tetanus?

A

Glutamate

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14
Q

Why does PTP stop as soon as the tetanus stops? What happens after PTP and tetanus stop?

A

The axon is efficient at pumping calcium out without the stimulus. Calcium is good at leaving so you don’t need a stimulus anymore when the calcium itself is good. After PTP and tetanus stop, LTP starts.

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15
Q

Why is calcium a good second messanger?

A

The axon terminals are good at removing calcium.

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16
Q

Is LTP post synaptic or presynaptic?

A

Post synaptic

17
Q

Where do Schaffer collaterals synapse? (be specific)

A

On the dendritic spines of CNS neurons. They synapse on the apical dendrites of the CA1 neurons.

18
Q

Where are the dendritic spines on the dendrites located?

A

They are at the site where one glutamate axon forms a synapse.

19
Q

How do you observe spine dynamics?

A

You fill the cell with a fluorescent molecule.

20
Q

Why is there ATP in the presynaptic specialization (presynaptic neuron)?

A

Calcium pumps need ATP to pump calcium out.

21
Q

From where does a spine receive excitatory input?

A

From one presynaptic bouton, where one glutamate axon forms a synapse.

22
Q

Are spines dynamic?

A

Yes. They are affected by LTP.

23
Q

What happens at the spine?

A

The spine receives glutamergic inputs. It is where post synaptic changes (selected) take place so it is a post synaptic phenomenon.

24
Q

Why are spines advantageous?

A

Dendritic spines are compartmentalized so inputs have their own volume that they can control, which individualizes the responsiveness to the inputs.

25
Q

Can you induce LTP with low frequency stimulation? If so, how?

A

Yes. You pair it with an action potential or a post synaptic depolarization in a process called associativity.

26
Q

What determines the net flow of sodium and calcium into the cell?

A

Concentration and electrical gradients.

27
Q

What ion determines the resting membrane potential and why?

A

K+ because the membrane is more permeable to K+ than any other ion. K+ has more leak channels than Na+ and Cl-, so they influence the membrane potential less.

28
Q

Why doesn’t Cl- enter the cell and contribute to the resting membrane potential?

A

It has less leak channels, and the inside of the cell is already more negative than the outside, and Cl- is negatively charged.

29
Q

Why doesn’t Ca2+ contribute to the membrane potential?

A

There are no calcium leak channels.

30
Q

Do AMPARs pass K+?

A

Yes, but not much as the driving force on K+ is not high.

31
Q

Is the driving force on Ca2+ and Na+ large?

A

Yes.

32
Q

Where are the two pinhole places in fluorescence and their purpose?

A
  1. Between the object and light source to let maximum amount o flight possible onto the specimen.
  2. Detector and specimen to reduce out of focus light since the specimen emits light spherically.
33
Q

How confocal microscopy is used

A

check notebook