myelinated and unmyelinated axons Flashcards
what is myelination?
- Performed by 2 types of glial cells:
○ Schwann Cells (peripheral NS)- lie along the axon.
§ Wrap around the axon
§ Wrap individually around the axon
○ Oligodendrocytes (central NS)- myelinating cells
§ Feature of MS (malfunction due to change in function and forming of myelination)
Service a number of cellulation points
what is the difference between Schwann cells and Oliogdendrocytes?
SC= wrap around individual axons
O= wrap around several axons
what is the anatomy of a myelinated axon?
- Schwann cells= the production of myelin sheaths
- “naked” axon= called nodes of Ranvier
- Ions can only cross the membrane at Nodes of Ranvier
○ Crucial because of the movement of the action potential along the neurons
○ Only move due to the node of Ranvier
○ All gates are situated here
§ No ion leakage (quicker action potential)
No ion leakage so influence of AP spreads a further distance in myelinated axons
- Ions can only cross the membrane at Nodes of Ranvier
what are the differenences between myelinated and unmyelinated axons?
unmyelinated= AP causes passive spread of current, depolarises adjacent membrane
myelinated= myelin stops leakage of ions across membrance, AP only retriggers at each node, saltatory conduction, faster
what are the advantages of myelination?
- Speed
○ Faster than unmyelinated
§ More myelination = faster
§ [Diameter can compensate] - Economy
○ Less Na+ enters during AP’s (which need to be removed with ATP)
what are the reasons for demyelination?
- Hereditary - Tay-Sachs disease, Niemann-Pick disease, Gaucher disease, and Hurler syndrome
○ Usually from the mother - Stroke
- Infections
- Immune disorders
- Metabolic disorders
- Nutritional deficiencies (such as a lack of vitamin B12)
- Poisons (such as carbon monoxide)
- Drugs or medications (such as the antibiotic ethambutol)
Excessive use of alcohol
which part of the neuron releases the neurotransmitters?
terminal buttons
What is responsible of the myelination in the PNS?
schwann cells
If a patient has relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, which of the following statements relating to treatments is true?
Inferions B and Glatiramer acetate are both effective treatments
fill in the balnks: in an unmyelinated axon, an action potential causes ____ spread of current, where ion movement is a continuous process down the ____.
- passive
- membrane
fill in the blanks: In a myelinated axon, they myelin stops ___ ___ across the membrane and action potentials are only triggered at each ___ __ _____.
- ion leakage
- node of Ranvier
Multiple sclerosis is a disorder of which part of the nervous system?
CNS
True or false: An unmyelinated axon produces a faster speed of conductance than a myelinated axon
False
what is significant about the amplitude of the action potential?
it is always the same amplitude and duration in a given cell
You feel a tickle on you arm that feels like a spide. You jerk your arm away. What is the typical neural pathway fgo rthis type of action?
Sensory neuron -> interneuron -> motor neuron -> muscle