Session 10 - Nervous Tissue Flashcards
What are the anatomical divisions of the nervous system?
Central Nervous System (CNS):
- Composed of Brain and Spinal Cord
- Contains Relay Neurons
Peripheral Nervous System:
- Composed of cranial, spinal and peripheral nerves
- Contains sensory and motor neurons
What is the difference between the grey and white matter and where is it located?
Grey Matter:
- Found peripherally in the brain and also in areas called “nuclei” but centrally in the spinal cord (butterfly shaped)
- It consists of the nerve cell bodies, axon, terminal, non myelinated axons and neuroganglia (support cells)
White matter:
- Central in brain, peripheral in spinal cord
- It consists of myelinated material
Describe the structure of a cross-section of the spinal cord
- The central grey matter roughly forms a butterfly shape with each prong forming the ventral and dorsal horn respectively. Each side is connected by the grey commissure
- The white matter forms ascending and descending tracts (myelinated)
What are the 4 types of neurons?
- Motor: CNS to periphery, that send signals to effector tissue. (large motor neurons, pre/post-synaptic autonomic neurones)
- Sensory: Periphery towards the CNS, sends signals to integrative center (pseudo unipolar neuron, bipolar neuron)
- Integrative: CNS, collate all information (pyramidal, interneurons, purkinje cells)
- Anaxonic: Retina, act as relays
Describe the different types of neuron structure
Multipolar Neuron:
- one axon and multiple dendrites
- most common
- most neurons in the brain and spinal cord
Dipolar Neuron:
- One axon and one dendrite
- Olfactory (smell) cells. retina, inner ear
Unipolar neuron:
- Single process leading away from the soma
- Sensory from skin to organs to spinal cord
Anaxonic Neuron:
- Many dendrites but no axon
- Help in visual processes
Describe the process of neurotransmitter synthesis
Most of the cell machinery (Golgi, ER etc.) is found in the cell body away from the axon terminal. As such it must be transported to the terminal.
1) Neurotransmitter synthesised and then packaged into an anterograde vesicle
2) Vesicle transported down axon via microtubules
3) Release of neurotransmitter when stimulated
4) Inactivated neurotransmitter is resorbed
5) Retrograde vesicle transported back up axon to the cell body
What are the 5 main types of synapse?
1) Axosomatic - directly to the plasma membrane of nerve or cell
2) Axodendritic - Axon terminal synapses with a dendritic spike
3) Axoaxonic - Synapse at the axonic bouton my enhance or inhibit the action at the synapse
4) Dendodrendritic - Dendrite to dendrite
5) Axo-axonal - Axon on the axon usually inhibits inputs
Neurons are bundled into groups separated by connective tissue. How is this done?
Endoneurium: - Loose connective tissue - Surrounds single nerve cells Perineurium: - Loose connective tissue - Maintains ionic composition - Surrounds clusters of axons (fascicle) Epineurium: - Dense irregular connective tissue - Separates different types of nerves and fills spaces between fascicles Paraneurium: - Fascia that separates nerves from surrounding structures (often contains lots of adipose tissue)
How does myelination occur?
1) The axon sitting in a groove is surrounded by a Schwann cell
2) The mesaxon membrane initiates myelination by surrounding the embedded axon.
3) A sheet-like extension of the mesaxon membrane then wraps around the axon, forming multiple membrane layers
4) Cytoplasm is extruded from between 2 opposing plasma membranes of the Schwann cell, which then becomes compacted to form myelin (19-20 rounds)
Describe the structure of an unmyelinated nerve cell
The individual axons (multiple per Schwann cell) are engulfed by the cytoplasm of a Schwann cell. This surrounds the axon apart from a small gap, called a mesaxon allowing for (slower) continuous conduction
Name some of the Glia (support) cells in the CNS
- Oligodendrocytes (like Schwann cells for the CNS)
- Astrocyte
- Satellite cells
- Microglial cells
- Ependymal cells
What is the role of an oligodendrocyte?
Same role as Schwann cell only each cell wraps around more than one axon simultaneously
What is the role of an astrocyte?
- They have on on capillaries (perivascular) and on nerves (perineural) that contain gap junctions. This allows for the transport of nutrients from blood to nerve cells.
- They can also regulate nerve impulses, by the release of GABA (inhibitory neurotransmitter) near nodes of Ranvier
- Contribute to blood-brain barrier
What is the role of a microglial cell?
- Act as resident macrophage, immune response, remove damaged nerve cells, sense increased K+ ions (as damaged nerves release K+ ions)
What is the role of a satellite cell?
1) only found on sensory neuron cell bodies
2) only in dorsal root ganglion
3) cover almost the entire surface
4) may have similar functions to an astrocyte