lecture 19 - synaptic transmission Flashcards
How is information transferred between cells?
Chemically- via synaptic interactions
What are the features of a synapse? (7)
Pre-synaptic nerve terminal, synaptic cleft, post-synaptic cell, receptors, voltage gated Ca2+ channels, synaptic vesicles, neurotransmitter inactivation enzyme.
When an action potential arrives at an axon terminal, what are triggered?
Voltage gated calcium channels, allowing Ca2+ to enter the terminal
When calcium ions diffuse into the axon terminal during a synapse, what does this trigger?
Trigger synaptic vesicles to release neurotransmitters via exocytosis
What is the fundamental process in which synaptic vesicles release neurotransmitters?
Exocytosis
When neurotransmitters diffuse across the synaptic cleft, what occurs at the post-synaptic cell?
Neurotransmitters bind to chemically gated sodium ion channels, allowing them to open and release sodium into the cell, creating a graded depolarisation (local potential).
When chemically gated sodium channels close after depolarisation in the post-synaptic cell, what happens to the neurotransmitters that were bound to the channel?
They are released and broken down by enzymes.
When Acetylcholine is broken down after release from chemically gated sodium channels, what is formed?
AChE enzyme breaks it down into Acetate and Choline, which is reabsorbed by the axon terminal.
What is the enzyme used to break acetylcholine down into acetate and choline after it is release from the post-synaptic chemically gated sodium channels?
AChE
How does the axon terminal ‘recycle’ the neurotransmitter ACh?
The axon terminal reabsorbs choline from the synaptic cleft and combines it with Acetyl-CoA (from the mitochondria) to form acetylcholine which can then be released again via synaptic vesicles.
What is the name for a synapse that uses the neurotransmitter Acetylcholine?
Cholinergic synapse.
What is the overall process of synaptic transmission?
Action potential triggers Ca2+ channels, Ca2+ enters cells and triggers release of synaptic vesicles (containing neurotransmitters). neurotransmitters diffuse across synaptic cleft and bind to chemically gated Na+ channels creating a local potential. Neurotransmitters are release and broken down by enzymes before being reabsorbed by the terminal.
What kind of synaptic junction is involved in electrical synapses?
Gap junction
What are gap junctions?
Channels that connect the post- and pre- synaptic neuron that allow electrical signals to be passed on directly without chemical signals.
What is an electrical synapse?
An electrical event that allows a presynaptic cell to trigger an electrical signal in the postsynaptic cell directly, without chemical signals. (Ca2+ channels or neurotransmitters)