Introduction Flashcards

1
Q

What 4 things does the nervous system do?

A
  • Senses input
  • Processes
  • Reacts
  • Memorises
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2
Q

Why does the nervous system need to process information

A

To decide if the input is important enough to fire action potentials

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3
Q

How does the nervous system ‘react’?

A

By executing a certain behavioural programme

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4
Q

As well as memorise, when must the nervous system be able to do?

A

Adapt to changes in the environment

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5
Q

What are 3 important behaviours of an organism?

A

Mating
Eating
Avoiding predators

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6
Q

What determines how the nervous system is organised?

Example?

A

Mating, eating, predators of the organism

Killer fly - eats drosophila - fast photoreceptors
Drosophila eats things that don’t move - slow photoreceptors

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7
Q

What is the resting potential of the neuron and why?

A

-70mV

Due to the selectivity of the membrane channels

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8
Q

Where is sodium high?

A

Outside the cell

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9
Q

Where is potassium high?

A

Inside the cell

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10
Q

Describe the action potential

A
Voltage gated Na channels open 
Membrane depolarises
Membrane potential reaches a peak
Na channels close 
VG K channels open - potential decreases 

Undershoot - hyperpolarisation

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11
Q

What regulates the firing rate of the action potentials?

How?

A

Hyperpolarisation (undershoot)

Longer the undershoot, the smaller the firing rate

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12
Q

How does the action potential propagate along the axon?

A

As Na moves in through the VG Na channels - Na slightly diffuses away to neighbouring part of the axon

Causes this part of the axon to become slightly depolarised

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13
Q

How is the action potential propagated?

A

Through saltatory conduction:

- Jumping of the electrical impulse to the Nodes of Ranvier (where there is no myelin sheath)

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14
Q

What does the myelin sheath do around a neuron?

A

Increases conductance by improving the ‘leakiness’ of the membrane

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15
Q

Which neurons don’t have a myelin sheath and why?

A

Interneurons and neurons of the retina

They are too short

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16
Q

Is GABA excitatory or inhibitory?

A

Inhibitory

17
Q

Is glutamate excitatory or inhibitory?

A

Excitatory

18
Q

What allows rapid release of neurotransmitter from the presynaptic terminal?

A

Some vesicles containing neurotransmitters are already docked at the membrane

19
Q

What happens when an action potential reaches the presynaptic terminal?

A
  • Depolarisation of the membrane
  • Ca2+ influx through voltage gated channels
  • Triggers a conformational change in SNARE proteins
  • Vesicles fuse with the presynaptic membrane
  • Neurotransmitter release
20
Q

What is an EPSP?

A

Excitatory postsynaptic potential:

  • A TEMPORARY increase in the membrane potential in the post synaptic neuron
21
Q

What can occur if there is enough EPSPs?

A

May change the membrane potential in the postsynaptic membrane high enough and trigger an action potential

22
Q

What 2 ways can an action potential occur in the post synaptic membrane?

A

Spatial summation

Temporal summation

23
Q

What are the 3 types of glutamate receptors?

Are these ionotropic or metabotropic?

A

NDMA
AMPA
Kainate

Ionotropic

24
Q

What ions pass through AMPA receptors and how is this different to NDMA receptors?

A

AMPA: Na in and K out

NDMA: Na and Ca in and K out

25
Which glutamate receptors are important in triggering LTP and LTD?
NDMA receptors
26
What is an IPSP? What neurotransmitter can trigger this?
Inhibitory post synaptic potential Triggered by GABA
27
What receptor is usually present on a postsynaptic membrane, which triggers an EPSP? Which ion is this channel permeable to?
GABAa receptor Permeable to Cl
28
What happens to the postsynaptic membrane during an IPSP? What does this result in?
In is HYPERpolarised Making is HARDER for an action potential to occur
29
What determines if an action potential occurs in a postsynaptic neuron?
The balance between all the EPSPs and IPSPs