Synaptic transmission Flashcards
Define a synapse
junctions between a neurone and a:
- neurone to trigger an action potential
- muscle cell to trigger a contraction
- gland cell to cause a hormone to be secreted
Explain the sequence of events during synaptic transmission
- action potential arrives at axon terminal, pre-synaptic membrane becomes more permeable to Ca2+ due to depolarisation so Ca2+ voltage gated channels open so Ca2+ enter by diffusion.
- synaptic vesicles fuse with pre-synaptic membrane.
- neurotransmitter ACh released by exocytosis and diffuses across synaptic cleft.
- ACh binds to receptors on post-synaptic membrane causing Na+ channels to open.
- Na+diffuses in through channels and depolarises post-synaptic membrane. With sufficient depolarisation above the threshold, action potential/impulse is generated.
- ACh broken down by enzyme AChE and reabsorbed into presynaptic neurone later resynthesised (needs ATP)
Explain what a neuromuscular junction is
synapse between motor neurone and muscle cell and is a special type of excitatory cholinergic synapse (receptors called nicotinic cholinergic receptors)
post-synaptic membrane has more ACh receptors so higher chance of Na+ channels opening causing depolarisation + has lots of fold which store AChE
State similarities between neuromuscular junctions and cholinergic synapses
- neurotransmitters diffuse across cleft
- neurotransmitters bind to receptors on post-synaptic membrane causing Na+ to diffuse in
- neurotransmitters broken down by enzymes in cleft
- axon returns to resting potential due to Na/K pump
State difference between neuromuscular junctions and cholinergic synapses
- NM excitatory, CS both inhibitory and excitatory
- NM neurones to muscles, CS neurones to other neurones or to effectors
- NM action potential ends here, CS action potential could be generated across a different neurone
- NM only motor neurones, CS intermediate, sensory or motor neurones involved
- NM ACh binds to receptors on post-synaptic membrane of muscle fibre, CS ACh binds to receptors on membrane of post-synaptic neurone
Define unidirectionality of synapses
impulse travels in one direction only+one way transmission (neurotransmitter presynaptic knob but receptors on post-synaptic neurone only)
Define spatial summation
several impulses from different pre-synaptic neurones arrive together to reach threshold potential.
Define temporal summation
ACh breaks down in few ms so several impulses needed an quick succession to reach threshold potential
Explain inhibition at synapses
- some neurotransmitters released to stop impulses e.g. K+ channels stimulated to open so K+ flows out hyperpolarising neurone
- post-synaptic neurone may have excitatory or inhibitory presynaptic neurons so end result depends on which one is stimulated