Nervous System
The nervous system detects environmental
changes that impact the
body, then works
in tandem with the endocrine system
to
respond to such events.
– It is responsible for all our
behaviors,
memories, and movement.
• It is able to
accomplish all these functions because
of the excitable
characteristic of nervous tissue,
which allows for the generation
of nerve impulses
(called action potentials).
Everything done in the nervous system involves
3 fundamental steps
A sensory function detects internal and
external
stimuli.
2. An interpretation is made
(analysis).
3. A motor response occurs (reaction)
Sensory system (PNS)
input; sense changes in the
internal and external environment
through sensory
receptors
sensory neurons serve this function
Interpretation system (CNS)
process; interpret the
sensory information, store some aspects,
and make
decisions association or interneurons serve this function
Motor response (PNS)
output; respond to the stimuli by
initiating the appropriate
action in effectors (muscles and
glands)
motor neurons
serve this function
CNS
Most signals that stimulate muscles to contract and
glands to
secrete originate in
PNS is further divided into
A somatic nervous
system (SNS)
– An autonomic
nervous
system
(ANS)
– An enteric nervous
system (ENS)
SNS consists of
Somatic sensory (afferent) neurons that convey
information from
sensory receptors in the head, body
wall and limbs towards the
CNS.
– Somatic motor (efferent) neurons that
conduct
impulses away from the CNS towards the
skeletal
muscles under voluntary control in the periphery.
–
Interneurons are any neurons that conduct impulses
between
afferent and efferent neurons within the
CNS.
The ANS consists of
Sensory neurons that convey information from autonomic
sensory
receptors located primarily in visceral organs like
the stomach
or lungs to the CNS.
2. Motor neurons under involuntary control
conduct nerve
impulses from the CNS to smooth muscle, cardiac
muscle,
and glands. The motor part of the ANS consists of
two
branches which usually have opposing actions:
• the
sympathetic division
• the parasympathetic division
Enteric Nervous System (ENS)
The operation of the ENS, the “brain of the
gut”, involuntarily
controls GI propulsion,
and acid and hormonal secretions.
•
Once considered part of the ANS, the ENS
consists of over 100
million neurons in
enteric plexuses that extend most of
the
length of the GI tract.
2 Main Types of Nerve Cells
Neuron – specialized cells of the nervous system that
transmit
signals throughout the body;
“thinking” cells of brain
has property of electrical excitability
(the ability to respond
to a stimulus)
Neuroglia (glial cells) - play a major role in
support and
nutrition of the brain, but they do not
manipulate
information
maintain the internal environment so
that neurons can
do their jobs
Dendrites
Receiving end of neuron
Short, highly branched structures that
receive
signals and conduct these impulses toward the
cell
body Contain
numerous
receptor sites for binding chemical
messengers from other cells
Cell Body / Soma / Perikaryon
Nucleus surrounded by cytoplasm
Contains organelles such as
lysosomes, mitochondria,
Golgi complexes, and Nissl bodies
Nissl bodies = membranous sacs of rough ER of a neuron
they are
the primary site of protein synthesis
Neurofibrils form
the
cytoskeleton
No mitotic apparatus is
present (what
does this infer?)
Axon
Conducts Impulses AWAY from Cell Body to Other
Cells
axon hillock
where axon joins cell body
initial segment
beginning
of the axon
trigger zone
junction
between axon hillock and
initial segment Axon
starts off
as a single fiber
but may branch
off into
Axon Terminals
Fine processes or divisions at end of axon.
Highly branched -
interact with the dendritic tree
of neurons
“downstream”
Axon Terminals
Some axon terminals
swell
into bulb shaped
structures = synaptic
end bulbs
Structural Classification
Based on the number of processes (axons or dendrites)
extending
from the cell body
Multipolar neurons
have several dendrites and
only one axon and are located
throughout
the brain and spinal cord.
– The vast majority of
the
neurons in the human body
are multipolar
Bipolar neurons
have one main dendrite and
one axon.
– They are used to
convey the special senses of sight,
smell, hearing and
balance.
As such, they are found
in the retina of the eye,
the
inner ear, and the olfactory
(olfact = to smell) area
of
the brain
Unipolar (pseudounipolar) neurons
contain one
process which extends from the body
and divides
into a central
branch that functions as an axon
and as a
dendritic root.
– Unipolar structure is often
employed for
sensory
neurons that convey touch
and stretching
information
from the extremities
functional classification
based
on electrophysiological properties (excitatory
or
inhibitory) and the direction in which the AP is
conveyed
with respect to the CNS.
Sensory or afferent neurons
convey APs into the CNS
through cranial or spinal nerves. Most
are unipolar.
Responsible for sensing a stimulus and sending information about the stimulus to the CNS Information about vision, sound, touch, pain, smell, temperature, position,& pressure
– Motor or efferent neurons
convey APs away from
the CNS to effectors (muscles and glands)
to initiate
an action (motor
output)
Most are
multipolar
Convey APs away from
CNS to Effectors
Interneurons or Association Neurons
A neuron which forms a connection between
two or more
neurons
Mainly located within the CNS
between sensory and
motor neurons
Integrate (process) incoming
sensory
information from sensory neurons and
then elicit a
motor response by
activating the appropriate
motor
neurons
Most are multipolar
Most abundant
type of neuron in
our bodies
electrochemical impulses (brain cells)
Within individual neurons,
messages are sent relying
on
electrical charges from ions such
as Na+, K+, and others.
Between
neurons, messages are relayed
using chemical transmitters
Synapse
Site of communication between two neurons or
between a neuron
and another effector cell
Synaptic cleft
the gap
between the pre and post-
synaptic cells
Synaptic End Bulbs Contain
Synaptic vesicles - tiny membrane-
enclosed sacs that store
packets of
neurotransmitters
May contain two or even three
types
of neurotransmitters, each with
different effects on
the postsynaptic
cell
Neurotransmitters
signaling molecules used at
synapses to pass an
excitatory
or inhibitory signal
from a neuron to its target
Synaptic Transmission
Electrical impulses or action potentials (AP)
cannot propagate
across a synaptic cleft.
Instead, neurotransmitters are used
to
communicate
at the synapse, and re-establish the AP in
the postsynaptic cell.
Neuron Transport
Substances synthesized or recycled in the
neuron cell body are
needed in the axon or at
the axon terminals. Two types of
transport
systems carry materials from the cell body to
the
axon terminals and back
Slow axonal transport
Always anterograde
o Moves enzymes, cytoskeletal components, and
new
axoplasm down the axon during repair and regeneration
of
damaged axons
o Damaged nerve fibers regenerate at a speed
governed
by slow axonal transport
Fast axonal transport
Fast anterograde transport
o Organelles, enzymes, synaptic
vesicles and small
molecules
o Fast retrograde
transport
o For recycled materials and pathogens -rabies,
herpes
simplex, tetanus, polio viruses
Neuroglia / glial cells
Do not generate nerve impulses Glial cells function to
serve,
protect, and
support neurons!
Oligodendrocytes
Creates myelin
sheaths around the
axons of neurons
in
the CNS Provide a structural
framework
Microglial Cell
Removes cell debris,
wastes, and pathogens
by phagocytosis
Promote repair in the
CNS
Ependymal Cells
Ciliated cells which line
the ventricles in the brain
and
the central canal of
spinal cord
Form a structure
called
the “choroid plexus”
Assist in
producing,
circulating, and monitoring
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)
Satellite Cells
Surround neuron cell bodies
in ganglia
Regulate exchange
of
materials (O2, CO2, and
nutrients) between
neuronal
cell bodies and ISF
Regulate
neurotransmitter
levels around neurons in
ganglia
Schwann Cells
Produce myelin
Surround axons in PNS and
myelinate
them
Begin formation of myelin
sheath during fetal
development
Participate in repair process after
injury
Myelination
Process of forming a myelin sheath which...
electrically
insulates
the axon
increases the speed of
electric
conduction,
thereby enabling nerves
to receive and
interpret
messages from the brain
at maximum speed
formed by oligodendrocytes in CNS
Demyelination
Loss of Myelin
Damaged regions of myelin become
hardened
scars called “scleroses” that
interfere with the transmission
of
nerve impulses.
Due to scleroses, messages
are
passed along at less than normal
speeds.
Results
in paralysis, loss of
sensation, or loss of vision
depending
on part of NS affected
Nodes of Ranvier
Unmyelinated gaps between myelin sheaths surrounding
an
axon
Each Schwann cell wraps one axon
segment between two
nodes of Ranvier
Myelinated nodes are about 1 mm in
length
and have up to 100 layers
Amount of myelin greatly
increases
from birth to maturity
which increases the speed of
nerve conduction
Neuronal cell bodies are often grouped together in clusters called
Ganglion = cluster of neuronal body cells in PNS
Nucleus = cluster of neuronal cell bodies in the CNS
Axons of neurons are usually group together in bundles
Nerve = bundle of axons in the PNS
Tract = bundle of axons in the CNS
Nerve tissue regions
White and gray matter
White matter
Formed from aggregations of myelinated axons of many
neurons
Lipid part of myelin gives white appearance
Fiber Types
The characteristics of the neuronal axon define the
“fiber
types”
A fibers are large, fast (130 m/sec),
myelinated
neurons that carry touch and pressure
sensations;
many motor neurons are also of this
type.
B fibers are of
medium size and speed (15 m/sec)
and comprise myelinated visceral
sensory &
autonomic preganglionic neurons.
C fibers
are the smallest and slowest (2 m/sec)
and comprise unmyelinated
sensory and autonomic
motor neurons.
Neurotransmitters
Both excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters
are present in
the CNS and PNS.
The same neurotransmitter may be excitatory
in
some locations and inhibitory in others.
For example,
acetylcholine (ACh) is a
common neurotransmitter released by
many
PNS neurons (and some in the CNS). Ach is
excitatory at
the NMJ but inhibitory at other
synapses.
Neurotransmitters
Many amino acids act as neurotransmitters:
Glutamate is
released by nearly all
excitatory neurons in the brain.
GABA is an inhibitory neuro-
transmitter for 1/3 of all brain
synapses.
• Valium is a GABA agonist that enhances
GABA’s
depressive effects (causes
sedation).
Other important
small-molecule
neurotransmitters are listed.
Neurotransmitters effects can by modified by
Synthesis can be stimulated or inhibited.
Release can be
blocked or enhanced.
Removal can be stimulated or
blocked.
The receptor site can be blocked or activated.
•
An agonist is any chemical that enhances or
stimulates the
effects at a given receptor.
• An antagonist is a chemical that
blocks or
diminishes the effects at a given receptor
Postsynaptic Potentials
A neurotransmitter causes either an excitatory or
an inhibitory
graded potential:
Excitatory postsynaptic potential
(EPSP)
causes a depolarization of the postsynaptic
cell,
bringing it closer to threshold. Although a
single
EPSP normally does not initiate a nerve impulse,
the
postsynaptic cell does become more
excitable.
Inhibitory
postsynaptic potential (IPSP)
hyperpolarizes the postsynaptic
cell taking it
farther from threshold.
Postsynaptic Potentials
Spatial summation occurs when postsynaptic
potentials arrive
near the same location. Temporal
summation occurs when
postsynaptic potentials
arrive close to the same time.
Whether or not the
postsynaptic cell
reaches
threshold
depends on the
net effect after
Summation of
all
the postsynaptic
Neurotransmitter Clearance
If a neurotransmitter could linger in the synaptic
cleft, it
would influence the postsynaptic neuron,
muscle fiber, or gland
cell indefinitely – removal
of the neurotransmitter is essential
for normal
function.
Removal is accomplished by diffusion
out of the
synaptic cleft, enzymatic degradation, and
re-
uptake by cells.
• An example of a common
neurotransmitter
inactivated through enzymatic degradation
is
acetylcholine. The enzyme
Neural Circuits
\Integration is the process accomplished by the
post-synaptic
neuron when it combines all
excitatory and inhibitory inputs and
responds
accordingly.
This process occurs over
and
over as interneurons
are activated in higher
parts of the
brain (such
as the thalamus and
cerebral cortex
A neuronal network may contain
thousands or
even millions of neurons.
Types of circuits
include diverging, converging,
reverberating, and parallel after-discharge.
Neural circuit -diverging circuit
a small number of neurons in
the brain stimulate a much larger
number of neurons
in the spinal cord. A converging circuit is the
opposite
Neural circuit - reverberating circuit
impulses are sent back
through the circuit time and time again –
used in
breathing, coordinated muscular activities, waking
up,
and short-term memory
Parallel after-discharge circuits
involve a single
presynaptic cell that stimulates a group of
neurons,
which then synapse with a common postsynaptic cell
–
used in precise activities such as mathematical
calculations.