Inhibitory Synapses and Neuromuscular Junctions Flashcards

1
Q

What do inhibitory synapses do?

A

cause K+ ions to move out and Cl- ions to move in to the post-synaptic neurone

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2
Q

What does the movement of Cl- and K+ ions result in?

A

the hyperpolarisation, combined effect lowers voltage to around -80mV, so action potentials unlikely to occur

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3
Q

Why are inhibitory synapses important?

A

Will not overwhelm sense as not all stimuli will lead to a response

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4
Q

What is a neuromuscular junction?

A

the gap between a motor neurone and a muscle

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5
Q

What do neurotransmitters stimulate in a muscle?

A

contraction

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6
Q

What is a similarity between neuromuscular junctions and synapses?

A

unidirectional

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7
Q

What are 3 differences between neuromuscular junctions and synapses?

A
  • neuromuscular junctions only connect motor neurones to muscle, whereas synapses join 2 neurones of any type
  • NMJ are end point of the action potential, synapses trigger new action potentials
  • Receptors bind to muscle membrane vs. receptors binding to membrane on post-synaptic neurone
  • NMJ are only excitatory whereas synapses can be inhibitory as well
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8
Q

Why would an inhibitor weaken muscle contraction?

A

no neurotransmitters bind to receptors, so no depolarisation/action potential

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9
Q

Why would a reduction in acetylcholinesterase reduce the effects of an inhibitor at a neuromuscular junction?

A

less acetylcholine broken down, so more bind to receptors, therefore depolarisation can occur

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