Nerves 5 Flashcards

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1
Q

What are most synapses?

A

Chemical

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2
Q

What is the basis of a chemical synapse?

A

An electrical signal (AP) is turned into a chemical signal that is squirted onto the post synaptic cell to evoke a new electrical signal

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3
Q

Where is muscle contraction triggered?

A

Triggered by AP in sarcolemma

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4
Q

What occurs in the presynaptic cell of NMJ?

A
  • AP in motor neurone
  • Opens voltage gated Ca channels in presynaptic terminal
  • ~Triggers fusion of vesicles
  • Acetylcholine released
  • Diffuses across synaptic cleft
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5
Q

What happens after the ACh diffuses across the cleft?

A
  • It binds to ACh (nicotinic)
  • Opens ligand gated Na/~K channels
  • Evokes graded (local) potential (end plate potential)
  • Always depolarises adjacent membrane to threshold
  • Opens voltage gated NA channels which evokes a new AP
  • ACh removed by acetylchoniestera
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6
Q

What does tetrodotoxin do?

A

Blocks Na channels and so blocks AP

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7
Q

What does toro spider toxin do?

A

Blocks Ca channels and so stops transmitter release

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8
Q

What does botulinum toxin do?

A

Disrupts the release machinery and so blocks transmitter release

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9
Q

What does curare do?

A

Blocks ACh receptors and so prevents the end plate potential

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10
Q

What does anti cholinesterase do?

A

Blocks ACh breakdown and so increases transmission at the NMJ

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11
Q

How many neurotransmitter can be used at CNS synapses?

A

A range each with several receptors

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12
Q

What postsynaptic potentials are therefore CNS synapses?

A
  • Fast EPSPs (inotropic)
  • Slow EPSPs (metabotropic)
  • Fast IPSPs
  • Slow IPSPs
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13
Q

How does the anatomical arrangement of synapse vary?

A
  • NMJ does not change

- CNS synapses can be axo-somatic, axo-dendritic or axo-axonal

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14
Q

What is the synaptic connectivity of NMJ?

A

Always motor neurone to muscle cell

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15
Q

What is the synaptic connectivity of CNS synapses?

A
  • Convergence
  • Divergence
  • Feedback inhibition
  • Monosynaptic vs polysynaptic pathways
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16
Q

Why are CNS synapses more complex than NMJ?

A
- Rage of neurotransmitters
Range of postsynaptic potentials
- Small potentials
- Variations on anatomical arrangement
- Variations on connectivity of neurones