The Synapse Flashcards
the synapse
- action at the junction
- presynaptic cell releases NT in the Synaptic Cleft which affects the postsynaptic cell
Presynaptic cell
releases NT into Synaptic Cleft
Synaptic celft
- tiny space (gap) between the presynaptic and postsynaptic cells
- typically 20 - 50nm wide
Exocytosis
- 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
NT binds to….
- … NT-specific Receptor Site on (usually) DENDRITES of Postsynaptic cell
this prevents NT from continuing to affect Postsynaptic cell after message has been “sent”
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.
NT soon DETACHES from…
…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
binding to Receptor site triggers…
…reaction in Postsynaptic cell, which may lead to it firing its NT, etc.
Exitatory
- Sodium gate
Inhibitory NT
- Cl enter the cell
- polarity greater
NT can have two basic types of effects on the POLARITY of the Postsynaptic cell:
EPSP & IPSP
EPSP
- 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
IPSP
- 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
Spontaneous Activity
- 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
Summation
- 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