lecture 2.2 Flashcards
Cajal’s Neuron Dcotrine:
- neuron: neuron is the unit of the nervous system.
- synapse: neurons are separated by gaps
- connection specificity: each neuron contacts only specific target cells.
- dynamic polarization: impulses travel in one direction in a neuron.
what are the evidence for chemical transmission at the synapse?
- information appears flow in one direction from axon to dendrite
- some interaction appears to be inhibitory
- a delay of several milliseconds present
what are the excitatory neurotransmitters?
- acetylcholine (PNS)
- glutamate (CNS)
- noradrenaline
- dopamine
- serotonin
- ATP
- neuroactive peptides
what are the inhibitory neurotransmitters?
- GABA (in brain)
2. glycine (in spinal)
4 compartments in neurons?
- input compartment (dendrite & soma):
spines receive mainly excitatory inputs while soma receives mainly inhibitory inputs (one input can shut it all down) - integrative compartment (soma & axon initial segment):
- conductile compartment (axon)
- output compartment (axon terminal):
what are En Passant synapses?
where one neuron joins another at a place besides axon terminal
- in fact, en passant synapses are far more common in CNS than synapses that form at axon tips
- neurotransmitter release is not found along the entire length of the axon, but only at boutons and terminals
how is synapse size related to functional efficacy?
a larger synapse is a stronger synapse
microtubules to actin ratio in dendrites and axon?
- dendrites have a higher microtubule to actin ratio than axons.
- dendrites have less filamentous actin than axon.
microtubule polarity in dendrites and axon?
- dendritic microtubules are in both directions
2. in axons all the plus ends pointed distally.
Role of dynein and kinesins in axonal transport?
- kinesins move in anterograde direction
2. dyneins move in retrograde direction
which substances can be used as anatomical tracing?
- anterograde: lectins (wheat germ agglutinin –WGA)(it can jump synapse), phaseolus lectin (PHA-L)(purely anterograde), H3-Amino acids, Aden-associated virus, Herpes Simplex Virus
- retrograde: HRP, Fluorogold, Cholera toxin-gold, fluorescent microspheres, Rabies Virus(can jump synapses)
where do unipolar cells and pseudo unipolar cells located?
- unipolar cells are located in invertebrate nervous system
2. pseudo unipolar cells are in vertebrate nervous system
what are PSD composed of ?
the postsynaptic membrane contains a high concentration of glutamate receptors, associated signaling proteins, and cytoskeletal elements, all assembled by a variety of scaffold proteins into an organized structure called the postsynaptic density (PSD)
what are the microtubule associated proteins that axon and dendrite express?
- the MAP Tau is found exclusively in axons
2. MAP2 is found only in dendrites
summary: Axon vs. Dendrite
- propagation of electrical signals:
- passive input to dendrites
- active output from axon - synaptic components:
- postsynaptic density & spines
- synaptic neurotransmitter vesicles - different cytoskeletal components:
- MAP2 (dendrite) vs. MAP tau(axon)
- different filament polarity - different organelle organization and distribution: polyribosomes and Golgi outputs vs. actively transported cargo (vesicles and mitochondria)