Exam 2 Circuit Analysis 1 Flashcards
What is circuit analysis?
Assessing the connections and activity of the nervous system.
What is EEG? How is it performed? What does it show? What are the advantages and disadvantages?
- EEG records the depolarization of thousands of neurons under an electrode.
- Advantage is that it has good temporal resolution, and see more deeper into the gyri. Another advantage is that you can do it over the entire surface of the brain.
- A disadvantage is that it has poor spatial resolution because it has cm depth.
How does the EEG reading differ based on how coordinated the depolarization is?
- Coordinated depolarization shows smooth waves that have a high amplitude and low frequency. -
- Uncoordinated depolarization just shows noise, with low amplitude and high frequency waves.
What is MEG, how is it better than EEG and how is it worse than EEG?
- MEG uses an electric field and a magnetic field to record activity.
- Better: has better spatial resolution than EEG (mm resolution). It is magnetic, so the skull and other tissue between the magnet and neurons don’t interfere with the readings.
- Worse: doesn’t give as much depth, so you are left with looking at the superficial levels, and can’t see into the gyri, which EEG lets you do.
What is local field potential, what are its advantages, what are its disadvantages compared to the other imaging techniques?
- Local Field Potential lets you look at action potentials from a small group of neurons measure with one electrode.
- If you use multiple electrodes you can identify which neurons are undergo action potentials. You can’t study action potentials in EEG or MEG.
- It has better spatial and temporal resolution than MEG or EEG.
- A disadvantage is unlike EEG, you can’t do it over the entire surface of the brain.
What is EcoG?
It is similar to EEG. You insert the electrode beneath the skull so it covers a surface of the brain.
What are the differences in resolution for EEG and LFP?
EEG has a lower frequency resolution because you cover a greater part of the cortex. LFP has higher frequency resolution over a small area of the cortex.
What are optogenetic sensors and how do they work?
They are proteins. You put the promoter and enhancer in front of the pseudogene that encodes the fluorescent protein.
- The fluorescent protein is specific to the neuron that you are recording from so it fluoresces in response to changes in that neuron.
- They allow you to sense a change in the neuron’s activity by sensing a change in voltage or calcium in the event of an action potential voltage.
What are the advantages of using optogenetic sensors over using other approaches?
- The optogenetic sensors are permanently expressed since the changes are genetic. Thus, you can image for long periods of time or return to the same cell later.
- This method is less invasive since you are not introducing electrodes into the animal. Other approaches limit you to how long the animal stays alive for.
- Optogenetic sensors allows you to identify the neuron that you are recording from.
Why do scientists change the amino acid sequences of GFP and RFP?
Changing the amino acid sequences enhances the fluorescence of the natural colours. They are helpful because the tissues don’t interfere with the longer wavelength dyes as much so you can see more deeper into the tissue than you would had you used short wavelength dyes.
Function of aequorin?
As calcium levels increase, there is a chemical reaction that occurs inside aequorin that makes it produce CO2 and fluores blue light.
How does fluorescence normally work?
An electron absorbs light energy and is excited to a higher energy orbital. It releases a lower energy, higher wavelength light as it falls back to its ground state.
What is FRET and how does FRET work at the level of the electron?
- FRET is a type of resonance energy transfer.
- The first electron absorbs light energy and is excited to a higher energy orbital. It falls to the ground state and releases lightless energy, which is absorbed by a second neighbouring electron.
- The neighbouring electron is excited to a higher energy orbital. When that electron returns to the ground state, it releases the energy as light.
- We never see light released by the donor, perhaps it might be faint.
How does FRET work when you couple it with a GEVI?
Under resting conditions, the donor and acceptor are too far away from each other so FRET does not take place. A voltage reversal snaps the donor and acceptor into close proximity to one another. Then you periodically excite the donor so it transfers the energy to the acceptor. Then the acceptor will give off the light energy. The light that you see is from the donor.
What happens if the donor and acceptor are not close to each other and you excite the donor with fluorescent light?
The donor will fluores its colour and you don’t get FRET.