Lecture 1 - Introduction to neuronal cell biology Flashcards

1
Q

What are some of the structures in the brain?

A

Don’t need to learn all, just familiarity

  • Cerebral cortex (higher functions e.g. thinking, sense perception)
  • Choroid plexus
  • Hypothalamus (Control of visceral (ANS) and somatic functions e.g. temp)
  • Thalamus (Sensory relay for cerebral cortex)
  • Pituitary gland
  • Spinal cord
  • Medulla (controls breathing, swalling, digestion, heartbeat)
  • Pons
  • Cerebellum (little brain. Muscle tone, balance, voluntary movement, motor learning)
  • Corpus callosum
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2
Q

What is the hierarchy of brain complexity?

A
Brain regions and circuits
Neurons and Glia
Axon and Dendrites
Synapses
Post-translational modification
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3
Q

How many neurons and glia are there in the brain?

A
Neurons = 8.8 x 10^9
Glia = 2-3 x number of neurons
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4
Q

How many axons/dendrites per neuron?

A

1 Axon

Dendrites, many, varies between cell types

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5
Q

How many synapses per neuron/in total?

A

around 10,000 average

10^15 total

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6
Q

What is white matter?

A

consists of glial cells and myelinated axons that transmit signals from one region of the cerebrum to another and between the cerebrum and lower areas of the brain

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7
Q

What is grey matter?

A

contains numerous cells bodies and non myelinated neurons

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8
Q

How do white and grey matter differ in their water and lipid components?

A
White
70% water
19% lipid (higher because forms major myelinated connections between neurons)
Grey
83% water
7% lipid
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9
Q

What is the funtion of neurons and how many types are there?

A
  • receive and transmit impulses

- around 50 types

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10
Q

What is the function of glia?

A

structural and metabolic support for neurons

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11
Q

What is the history behind the Neuronal vs Reticular theory (organisation of the nervous system)?

A

reticular theory = network of interconnect cells
Neuron doctrine = nervous system made up of independent cells
-1871- originally the reticular theory (Gerlach)
-1873- Golgi then introduced the silver-chromate technique to stain brain tissue
-1888- followed by the neuron doctrine (Cajal) gaps between cells
-1891- Waldeyer coined term ‘neuron’. Golgi - defence of the physiological significance of the ‘diffuse nerve network’ theory
-1892- Laws of dynamic polarisation of neurons (Cajal)
-1897- Concept of synapse (Sherrington)
-1906- Nobel prize, Cajal and Golgi
-1921- Nobel prize, Sherrington - the integrative action of the nervous system, modern neurophysiology

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12
Q

What are two features of neurons that make them different to normal body cells?

A

1) Polarity - develop from epithelial cells and share structural features
- basolateral (dendrites - input)
- apical (Axon - output)
2) high excitability

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13
Q

Give an example of two different types of neurons and their features

A

Spiny Neurons
-critical in learning and memory
-have ‘spines’ along the dendrites (post synaptic receptors which detect glutamate(neurotransmitter, amino acid))
-excitatory
Non-spiny neurons
-release GABA (neurotransmitter, amino acid)
-inhibitory

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14
Q

What are the different types of glia?

A

Astrocytes
Oligodendrocytes
Microglia

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15
Q

What are some features of Astrocytes?

A
  • most numerous of the glia
  • star like shape (processes have end like feet)
  • involved in the blood brain barrier
  • take up neurotransmitter/K+ ions from synaptic cleft
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16
Q

What are some features of the Oligodendrocytes?

A
  • schwann cells in the parasympathetic nervous system (PNS)

- ensheath axons with myelin (up to 15/OD)

17
Q

What are some features of Microglia?

A
  • during development arise from cells outside the CNS
  • the macrophage of the CNS
  • become activated during infection, injury and seizure
18
Q

What are the three major types of neuronal specific cytoskeletal proteins?

A
  • microtubules (+MAPs, different in axons and dendrites)
  • neurofilaments (intermediate filaments of the brain, ‘bones’ of the axon)
  • microfilaments (Actin)
19
Q

How are microtubules different in the axons and dendrites?

A

Axon -long and continuous

Dendrites -in small chunks

20
Q

How was it found that neurons use active transport to move e.g. mitochondria from the cell body to the axon?

A

Took a cat syatic nerve and removed it
-tied it off
-observed that it began to ‘bunch up’, suggesting active transport
Second experiment
-took syatic nerve and cut it up
-enzyme activity (identified by markers) build up at the gaps, suggesting a movement of enzymes and active transport

21
Q

What is anterograde and retrograde transport?

A

Anterograde (away from cell body)

Retrograde (towards cell body)

22
Q

What proteins transport organelles from the cell body to the axon?

A

transport along microtubules mediated by dynesins and kinesins

23
Q

What are the two types of axonal transport?

A

Fast transport
-rate between 50 - 400 mm/day
Slow transport
-rate between 0.2-8 mm/day

24
Q

How is cargo e.g. mitochondria, deposited at its destination?

A
  • Adapter protein Miro binds mitochondria to kinesin
  • synaptic activity causes cytoplasmic Ca2+ to increase, recruiting mitochondria via Ca-dependent protein-protein interactions
  • Ca2+ binding to Miro causes an uncoupling of the mitochondria from the kinesin motor
25
Q

What does the cytoskeleton of the neuron define?

A

neuronal shape and polatiry

26
Q

How is the problem of axon length overcome?

A

bi-directional fast and slow transport

27
Q

What did Ramon y Cajal do?

A

Used novel staining techniques to characterise the cell types of the CNS and develop neuronal theory

28
Q

What did Weiss and Hiscoe demonstrate?

A

the presence of axonal transport