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Bio 111 Lecture 13

Nervous system is

master controlling and communicating
system of body

• Cells communicate via electrical and chemical signals – Rapid and specific

– Usually cause almost immediate responses

Nervous system has three overlapping functions

1.Sensory input
Information gathered by sensory receptors about internal and external changes

2.Integration

Processing and interpretation of sensory input

3. Motor output

Activation of effector organs (muscles and glands) produces a response

Nervous system is divided into two principal parts:

– Central nervous system (CNS)
Brain and spinal cord of dorsal body cavity § Integration and control center

– Interprets sensory input and dictates motor output


– Peripheral nervous system (PNS)

The portion of nervous system outside CNS

Consists mainly of nerves that extend from brain and spinal cord

– Spinal nerves to and from spinal cord – Cranial nerves to and from brain

Peripheral nervous system (PNS) has two functional divisions

– Sensory (afferent) division
§ Somatic sensory fibers: convey impulses from skin, skeletal muscles, and joints to CNS

§ Visceral sensory fibers: convey impulses from visceral organs to CNS


– Motor (efferent) division

§ Transmits impulses from CNS to effector organs

– Muscles and glands § Two sub-divisions

– Somatic nervous system

– Autonomic nervous system

Motor (Efferent) Divisions

Somatic nervous system
– Somatic motor nerve fibers conduct impulses from CNS to skeletal muscle

– Voluntary nervous system

Conscious control of skeletal muscles


• Autonomic nervous system

– Consists of visceral motor nerve fibers

– Regulates smooth muscle, cardiac muscle, and glands – Involuntary nervous system

– Two functional subdivisions

Sympathetic

Parasympathetic

Work in opposition to each other

6

look at pg

#7 in notes

Nervous Tissue Cells

Nervous tissue consists of two principal cell types
– Neuroglia (glial cells): small cells that surround and wrap

delicate neurons

– Neurons (nerve cells): excitable cells that transmit electrical signals

Four main neuroglia support CNS neurons

– Astrocytes
– Microglial cells

– Ependymal cells

– Oligodendrocytes

Neuroglia of the CNS

Astrocytes
– Most abundant, versatile, and highly branched of glial cells – Cling to neurons, synaptic endings, and capillaries

– Functions include:

- Support and brace neurons

- Play role in exchanges between capillaries and neurons

- Control chemical environment around neurons

- Respond to nerve impulses and neurotransmitters

- Influence neuronal functioning

- Participate in information processing in brain

Microglial cells

– Small, ovoid cells with thorny processes that touch and
monitor neurons

– Migrate toward injured neurons

– Can transform to phagocytize microorganisms and neuronal debris

Ependymal cells

– May be ciliated
Cilia beat to circulate CSF

– Line the central cavities of the brain and spinal column

– Form permeable barrier between cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in cavities and tissue fluid bathing CNS cells

Autonomic Nervous control

is unconcious control you cannot tell your heart to stop

Oligodendrocytes

– Branched cells
– Processes wrap CNS nerve fibers, forming insulating myelin sheaths in thicker nerve fibers

Neuroglia of PNS • Two major neuroglia seen in PNS

• Satellite cells
– Surround neuron cell bodies in PNS and act like astrocytes


Schwann cells (neurolemmocytes)

– Surround all peripheral nerve fibers and form myelin sheaths in thicker nerve fibers, similar in function to oligodenrocytes

– Vital to regeneration of damaged peripheral nerve fibers (axons)

Neurons

Neurons (nerve cells) are structural units of nervous system
• Large, highly specialized cells that conduct impulses

• Special characteristics

– Extreme longevity (lasts a person’s lifetime)

– Amitotic, with few exceptions

– High metabolic rate: requires continuous supply of oxygen and glucose

• All have cell body and one or more processes

Neuron Cell Body

• Biosynthetic center of neuron
– Synthesizes proteins, membranes, chemicals

– Rough ER (chromatophilic substance, or Nissl bodies)

• Contains spherical nucleus with nucleolus

• Some contain pigments

• In most, plasma membrane is part of receptive region that receives input info from other neurons

Most neuron cell bodies are located in CNS

– Nuclei: clusters of neuron cell bodies in CNS – Ganglia: clusters of neuron cell bodies in PNS

Neuron Processes

Armlike processes that extend from cell body
– CNS contains both neuron cell bodies and their processes – PNS contains chiefly neuron processes


• Tracts

– Bundles of neuron processes in CNS


• Nerves

– Bundles of neuron processes in PNS


• Two types of processes

– Dendrites

– Axon

Dendrites

• Receptive (input/afferent) region of neuron
• Convey incoming messages (from action potential-triggered neurotransmitters from other neurons)

The axon Structure

– Each neuron has one axon that starts at
cone-shaped area called axon hillock

– Long axons are called nerve fibers

– Axons have occasional branches called axon collaterals

– Axons branch profusely at their end (terminus)

– Distal endings are called axon terminals and will release neurotransmitters

The axon: functional characteristics

– Axon is the conducting region of neuron

– Generates nerve impulses and transmits them along axolemma (neuron cell membrane) to axon terminal


Terminal: region that secretes neurotransmitters, which are released into extracellular space next to target cells (other neurons or muscle/gland cells)

Can excite or inhibit other neurons it contacts by making synapses with their dendrites


– Carries on many conversations with different neurons at same time

– Axons rely on cell bodies to renew proteins and membranes

– Axons quickly decay if cut or damaged

Myelin sheath

– Composed of myelin, a whitish, protein-lipid substance – Function of myelin
Protect and electrically insulate axon

Increase speed of nerve impulse transmission

– Myelinated Fibers

Segmented sheath surrounds most long
or large-diameter axons

Myelination in the PNS

– Myelin sheath gaps
Gaps between adjacent Schwann

cells (nodes of Ranvier)

Sites where axon collaterals can emerge

Nonmyelinated fibers

Thin fibers not wrapped in myelin; surrounded by Schwann cells but no myelin sheath

Myelin sheaths in the CNS

– Formed by processes of oligodendrocytes, not whole cells
– Each cell can wrap up to 60 axons at once

– Myelin sheath gap is present

– No outer collar of perinuclear cytoplasm

– Thinnest fibers are unmyelinated, but covered by long extensions of adjacent neuroglia

What is White Matter and What is Gray Matter?

– White matter: regions of brain and spinal cord with dense collections of myelinated fibers
Usually fiber tracts


– Gray matter: mostly neuron cell bodies and nonmyelinated

fibers

Classification of Neurons
Structural classification

– Three types grouped by number of processes

– Three types grouped by number of processes

1.Multipolar: three or more processes (1 axon, other processes are dendrites)

– Most common and major neuron type in CNS


2.Bipolar: two processes (one axon, one dendrite)

– Rare (ex: retina and olfactory mucosa)


3. Unipolar: one T-like process (two ‘axons’)

– Also called pseudounipolar

– Peripheral (distal) process: associated with sensory

receptor

– Proximal (central) process: enters CNS

Look At pg

#23 In Notes

Functional classification of neurons

– Three types of neurons grouped by direction in which nerve
impulse travels relative to CNS


1. Sensory

– Transmit impulses from sensory receptors toward CNS (afferent) – Almost all are unipolar

– Cell bodies are located in ganglia in PNS


2. Motor

– Carry impulses from CNS to effectors (efferent) – Multipolar

– Most cell bodies are located in CNS


3.

Interneurons (association neurons)

– Lie between motor and sensory neurons – Shuttle signals through CNS pathways

– Most are entirely within CNS

Membrane Potentials

Like all cells, neurons have a resting membrane potential (RMP) (required reading Section 11.4)

Changing the Resting Membrane Potential

• Membrane potential changes when:

– Concentrations of ions across membrane change – Membrane permeability to ions changes

• Changes produce two types of signals – Graded potentials

• Incoming signals operating over short distances – Action potentials

• Long-distance signals of axons

• Changes in membrane potential are used as signals to receive,

integrate, and send information

Changing the Resting Membrane Potential Cont’d

Terms describing membrane potential changes relative to resting membrane potential

– Depolarization: decrease in membrane potential (moves toward zero and above eg. From rmp of -70mV to -55mV)

• Inside of membrane becomes less negative than resting membrane potential

• Probability of producing action potential increases


– Hyperpolarization: increase in membrane potential (away

from zero eg -55mV to -70mV)

• Inside of membrane becomes more negative than resting membrane potential

• Probability of producing action potential decreases

Look at pg

#27 in Notes

Graded Potentials

Short-lived, localized changes in membrane potential
– The stronger the stimulus, the more voltage changes and

the farther current flows


• Triggered by stimulus that opens gated ion channels

– Results in depolarization or sometimes hyperpolarization

• Named according to location and function


– Receptor potential (generator potential): graded potentials

in receptors of sensory neurons


– Postsynaptic potential: neuron graded potential

• Once gated ion channel opens, depolarization spreads from one area of membrane to next

• Current flows but dissipates quickly and decays

– Graded potentials are signals only over short distances

Look at pg

#29 In Notes

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