Lecture 2 (Neurons)
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Transcript Lecture 2 (Neurons)
BIO 132
Neurophysiology
Lecture 2
Neurons
Lecture Goals:
Understanding the basic function of the
nervous system.
Understanding the parts of a neuron.
Neuron – A specialized cell of the body that can
communicate information quickly by using ionic
currents and chemical signals called
neurotransmitters.
Nerve - Many neurons that are bundled
together and covered by a connective tissue
sheath.
Nervous System – The entire network of
interconnecting neurons.
Overall function of the nervous system:
To control motor output of the body based on
sensory information it detects from both the
internal and external environments of the body.
There are ~100 billion neurons in the brain.
(Current population is less than 7 billion people.)
Each neuron can make one to thousands of
connections with other neurons.
Glial cells are support cells of the nervous
system
There are ~10 times as many glial cells as there are
neurons.
Used to nourish, insulate, direct growth of neurons.
Neuron Morphology
Parts of a typical neuron:
Dendrites
Cell body
Axon
Axon terminal
Cell Body (soma)
Contains most of the cellular machinery of the neuron (nucleus,
ER, mitochondria, golgi complex, etc).
Is where most the synthesis of new cellular products occurs.
Cell body
Dendrites
Means “tree” in Latin.
Main site where input is received from other neurons.
Dendrites
Axon
Long projection from cell body that carries an ionic signal, called
an action potential, to other neurons.
Can be very short or very long (up to 6 feet in humans).
Can send off many branches (collaterals).
Axon
Axon Terminal
Is at the end of each axon.
Contains vesicles filled with neurotransmitter.
Forms a connection with another neuron, called a synapse.
Axon terminal
Classifying Neurons
There are several conventions for classifying neurons:
By neurites (projections from the cell body).
By dendrite shape.
By connections.
By neurotransmitter released
Classification By Neurites
Unipolar neuron - A single neurite (projection from
cell body:
Bipolar – Two neurites (both part of the axon)
Multipolar – Many neurites (usually one axon and many
denrites)
Classification By Connections
Primary sensory – dendrites detect external stimuli.
Stimuli
Motor - makes a direct connection with skeletal muscle.
Interneuron - only makes connections with other
neurons. (Most numerous type)
Classification By Neurotransmitter
Based on the type of neurotransmitter released.
Examples:
Cholinergic
Acetylcholine (ACh)
Noradrenergic
Norepinephrine (NE)
GABAergic
GABA
Glutamatergic
Glutamate (Glu)
Dopaminergic
Dopamine (DA)
Classifying Glia
Astrocytes
Most numerous
Fill the space between neurons
Envelope synapses to limit the spread of neurotransmitters
Regulate chemical content of extracellular fluid
Remove neurotransmitters from synapse
Myelinating glia – insulate axons from ion leakage
Oligodentrites
Found in Central NS and spinal cord
Can wrap around several axons
Schwann cells
Found in peripheral NS
Wrap around a single axon