Synapse 1 & 2: Communication Between Cells Flashcards
What is a synapse?
Defined as: a junction between two cells where electrical changes in one cell cause a signal to be passed to another, usually via a chemical NT
+ Majority are chemical synapses, but some are electrical
Define pre-synaptic:
+ Relating to or denoting a nerve cell that releases a transmitter substance into a synapse during transmission of an impulse
+ Pre-synaptic neuron is the neuron before the synapse, delivering the “message” across the synapse to the postsynaptic neuron
Define post-synaptic
+ A neuron to the cell body or dendrite of which an electrical impulse is transmitted across a synaptic cleft by the release of a chemical neurotransmitter from the axon terminal of a presynaptic neuron.
+ Post-synaptic neuron is the “receiver” of the neurotransmitter “message”.
What are the features of the synapse in pre-synaptic cells?
+ Axon of pre-synaptic neuron
+ Axon terminal
+ Synaptic vesicles (contain NT molecules)
+ NT
What are the features of the synapse in post-synaptic cells?
\+ Post-synaptic neuron \+ Synaptic cleft \+ Receptor sites \+ Post-synaptic membrane \+ NT
What are the 3 categories synaptic activity can be divided into?
- Pre-synaptic activity
- Post-synaptic activity
- Nerotransmitter inactivation
What is the process of chemical neurotransmisson in a small-molecule transmitter
- Synthesis enzymes in cell body
- Slow axonal transporty if enzymes
- Synthesis and packaging of NT
- Release and diffusion
What is the process of chemical neurotransmisson in a peptide transmitter?
- Synthesis of neurotransmitter precursors and enzymes
- Transport of enzymes and pre-peptide precursors down microtubule tracks
- Enzymes modify pre-peptides to produce peptide NT
- NT diffuses away and is degraded by proteolytic enzymes