The Synapse Flashcards

0
Q

the synapse

A
  • action at the junction

- presynaptic cell releases NT in the Synaptic Cleft which affects the postsynaptic cell

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1
Q

Presynaptic cell

A

releases NT into Synaptic Cleft

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2
Q

Synaptic celft

A
  • tiny space (gap) between the presynaptic and postsynaptic cells
  • typically 20 - 50nm wide
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3
Q

Exocytosis

A
  • 1)the release of Vesicles (packets) of NT from Presynaptic Terminal
  • 2) when membrane depolarization reaches the axon’s Terminal, voltage-dependent Ca++ gates open,
  • 3) extracellular Ca++ rushes into Terminal (per Electrical and Concentration Gradients) causing release of NT’s
  • NT PASSIVELY FLOWS (DIFFUSES) across Synaptic Cleft
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4
Q

NT binds to….

A
  • … NT-specific Receptor Site on (usually) DENDRITES of Postsynaptic cell
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5
Q

this prevents NT from continuing to affect Postsynaptic cell after message has been “sent”

A

NT is often then deactivated by enzymes or Glia in the cleft

- i.e. NT broken down, carried off, re-uptaken by presynaptic cell, etc.

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5
Q

NT soon DETACHES from…

A

…Receptor Site and again floats in Cleft (most NT’s do NOT enter Postsynaptic Cell)

  • NT binds to the post but doesn’t go in, floats back home to be used again
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7
Q

binding to Receptor site triggers…

A

…reaction in Postsynaptic cell, which may lead to it firing its NT, etc.

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8
Q

Exitatory

A
  • Sodium gate
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9
Q

Inhibitory NT

A
  • Cl enter the cell

- polarity greater

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10
Q

NT can have two basic types of effects on the POLARITY of the Postsynaptic cell:

A

EPSP & IPSP

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11
Q

EPSP

A
  • Excitatory Post-Synaptic Potential
  • an increase that cell’s likelihood of releasing NT
  • Post-Syn cell becomes HYPO-POLARIZED (less polarized, less difference between inside and out) and thus closer to its threshold for firing
    - excited when you say “O”
  • Using a function of Na+ entering the cell
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12
Q

IPSP

A
  • Inhibitory Post-Synaptic Potential
  • a decrease in the cell’s likelihood of releasing NT
  • Post-Syn cell becomes Hyper-Polarized (more polarized, greater difference between inside and out) and thus farther from its firing threshold
    • when your inhibited you say “errr”
  • usually a function of K+ exiting and Cl- entering the cell
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13
Q

Spontaneous Activity

A
  • absence of input, yet still firing
  • firing at a base rate
  • some Neurons show this spontaneous firing, in the ABSENCE OF INCOMING NT!
  • these are usually graded potentials that release variable amounts of NT
  • converging NTs increase or decrease such cell’s activity, modifying how much NT they will then release
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14
Q

Summation

A
  • The response of a given Neuron is nearly always the product of a SUMMATION OF EPSPs and/or IPSPs
  • a neuron virtually never receives input from only one other cell, and can receive from 1000s of others
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15
Q

Mechanisms

A

NT affects the Postsynaptic cells via one of two types of mechanisms:

Ionotropic and Metabotropic

16
Q

Ionotropic

A

DIRECTLY effects ion gates

e.g. NT binds to receptor site&raquo_space; opens nearby Na+ gates

effects are RAPID, short-lived, esp good for conveying info about rapidly changing events

17
Q

Metabotropic

A

triggers METABOLIC CHANGES in Postsynaptic cell

e. g. NT alters receptor, releases G-Protein&raquo_space; activates Second Messenger in cell&raquo_space; may open ion gates, alter protein production, activate genes, etc.
- complex chain reaction requires ENERGY - Effects are SLOWER, longer lasting (up to hours!)
- typical of “Neuromodulators”

18
Q

TEMPORAL Summation

A

when one (or more) cells repeatedly stimulate another in rapid succession

19
Q

SPATIAL Summation

A

when multiple cells converge on a single cell at the same time

20
Q
  • often both excitatory and inhibitory NTs simultaneously converge on a cell,…
A

…this summates their +/- effects

- if effects reach or exceed cell’s Threshold of Firing, triggering an Action Potential (in cells that have APs)