The Role of Neurones and Glia Flashcards
Name the glial cells located within the CNS
- Astrocytes
- Oligodendrocytes
- Microglia
State the actions of astrocytes
- Structural support
- Help to provide nutrition for neurones
- Remove neurotransmitters
- Maintain ionic environment (K+ buffering)
- Help to form blood brain barrier
Explain how and why astrocytes provide nutrition for neurones
- Neurones have high energy demands
- Glucose is transported through GLUT3 into the neurons from the blood
- Neurones do not store or produce glycogen
- Astrocytes produce lactate which can be transferred to neurones
- Supplements their supply of glucose if glucose transport not enough
- Glucose lactate shuttle moves lactate into the neuron to produce energy
- However lactate is only a limited store - only 10-15 min supply of glucose
Outline how astrocytes remove neurotransmitters
- Control concentration of neurotransmitters
- Astrocytes have transporters for transmitters which re-uptake them
- Glutamate needs to be controlled to stop postsynaptic response, stop spread to other areas and to reduce concentration as glutamate is toxic
- Glutamate is re-uptaken by astrocytes and converted to glutamine, which is then transported back into vesicles for synaptic transmission
Outline how and why astrocytes maintain ionic environment of CNS
- High levels of neuronal activity could lead to arise in [K+] in brain ECF
- When many action potentials fire, Na enters neurons and K exits through Na/K ATPase
- Leads to a rise in [K+] in the brain ECF, which can cause further neurones to depolarise or inappropriate action potential firing leading to epilepsy
- Astrocyte take up K+ to prevent this
- Low concentration of K inside astrocyte, so K enters through K channels and transporters
State the action of oligodendrocytes
- Responsible for myelinating axons in CNS
- Myelin sheath targeted by antibodies in multiple sclerosis
State the action of microglia
- Immunocompetent cells which recognize foreign material and become activated
- When activated, it changes shape and processes to becomes phagocytic
- Also act as antigen presenting cells to T-cells
Outline the purpose of the blood brain barrier
- Maintains the correct environment for neurones
- Limits diffusion of substances from the blood to the brain extracellular fluid
- K entering due to high plasma concentration can affect depolarisation of neurones
- Amino acids entering after a meal can act as neurotransmitter
Describe the structure of the blood brain barrier
- Brain capillaries have tight junctions between endothelial cells
- Basement membrane surrounds brain capillary
- End feet of astrocyte processes surround capillaries, which promote tight junctions to form
State how substances are transported across the blood brain barrier
- Substances such as glucose, amino acids and ions are transported across the blood brain barrier
- Glucose transported through GLUT1
- Water, CO2 and oxygen can freely move between the blood brain barrier
Describe what immune privilege is
- Normal inflammatory response not ideal within the CNS as skull is rigid and will not tolerate volume expansion
- Microglia act as antigen presenting cells
- T-cells can enter the CNS
- However CNS inhibits the initiation of the pro-inflammatory T-cell response
Describe how signals are transmitted through a synapse
- Depolarisation in the presynaptic terminal opens voltage gated Ca2+ channels, allowing Ca2+ ions to enter the terminal
- Allows vesicles containing neurotransmitter to fuse with the presynaptic terminal membrane and release transmitter
- Neurotransmitter diffuses across the synaptic cleft and binds to receptors on the postsynaptic membrane
State the main excitatory and inhibitory amino acid neurotransmitters
- Excitatory - glutamate
- Inhibitory - GABA, glycine
Describe the types of glutamate receptors
- Glutamate receptors can be ionotropic (ligand gated ion channel) or metabotropic (G-protein)
- Ionotropic receptors include AMPA receptors NMDA receptors
- AMPA receptors are permeable to Na and K
- NMDA receptors permeable to Na, K and Ca
- Metabotropic receptors linked to either changes in IP3 and Ca mobilisation or inhibition of adenylyl cyclase and decreased cAMP levels
Explain excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP)
- Fast excitatory neurotransmitters cause depolarisation of the postsynaptic cell by acting on ligand-gated ion channels
- Excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP) - depolarisation causes more action potentials