Nervous System III Flashcards
What are Astrocytes?
- highly branched glial cells in CNS believed to make up half of all cells in brain
- form functional network, can communicate with one another
What are functions of Astrocytes?
- take up and release chemicals at synapses (feet at synapse, augment signalling)
- provide neurons with substrates for ATP production
- help maintain homeostasis in the ECF (take up K + and H20)
- surround vessels (part of BBB and influence localized blood flow)
What are microglia?
- specialized immune cells that reside in the CNS
- serve to protect and preserve neuronal cells from pathogens and facilitate recovery from metabolic insults (survey area)
- use phagocytosis
Why does microglia have to protect brain?
Immune cells cannot readily enter ECF of brain because of BBB
What happens if microglia are activated pass the threshold?
- these cells start to display detrimental properties
- Alzheimer’s disease, ALS, neuropathic pain
What are ependymal cells?
Line fluid filled cavities in the brain and spinal cord
What is functions of ependymal cells?
- help to circulate cerebrospinal fluid that fills these cavities and surrounds the brain and spinal cord
- cerebrospinal fluid helps with protection, chemical stability, clearing wastes
What are satellite glial cells?
- exist within ganglia in the PNS
- form a supportive capsule around cell bodies of neurons (sensory and autonomic)
What happens in a peripheral neuron injury?
CNS repair less likely to occur naturally, glia tend to seal off and form scar tissue
- cannot repair spinal cord injury and synapses cannot reform
How do schwann cells guide the regenerating axon?
Create a tube
- 1 mm/day in small neurons
- 5 mm/day in large neurons
Why are neurons and muscle cells excitable?
Due to their ability to propagate electrical signals over long distances in response to a stimulus
What is the Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation?
- predicts membrane potential that results from contribution of all ions that can cross
- combined contribution of each ion (concentration x permeability)
-different from Nernst (calculates a single ion)
What is resting membrane potential in most neurons?
~ 70 mV, mainly due to K+
What alters the membrane potential?
A change in the K+ concentration gradient or change in permeability to ions
What does not happen with a significant change in membrane potential (-70 to +30 mV)?
- does not indicate a change in concentration gradients of a given ion
- very few ions need to move to alter membrane potential (to alter by 100 mV, 1 out of 100,000 K+ ions must enter or leave cell)
- concentration gradients for ions remain relatively constant during alterations