Transcript Neurons
Neurons and
Neurotransmitters
Nervous System
– Central nervous system (CNS):
• Brain
• Spinal cord
– Peripheral nervous system (PNS):
• Sensory neurons
• Motor neurons (somatic and
autonomic)
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
The Nervous System
The Nervous System
Central Nervous System (CNS)
Brain
Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)
Spinal Cord
•
Motor Neurons
Somatic Nervous System
voluntary movements via
skeletal muscles
Sympathetic
- “Fight-or-Flight” responses
•
Sensory Neurons
Autonomic Nervous System
organs, smooth muscles
Parasympathetic
- maintenance
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Divisions of the autonomic nervous system
The Nervous System
• A physical organ system like any other
• 2 main kinds of cells
– Neurons
– Glia
Neurons
Basic units of the nervous system
Receive, integrate, and transmit
information
Operate through electrical impulses
Communicate with other neurons
through chemical signals
Glial cells
• 100 billion neurons
• 10x more glial cells
• Glial cells
– Support neurons (literally, provide physical
support, as well as nutrients)
– Cover neurons with myelin
– Clean up debris
– “Housewives”
Three main types of neurons
• Sensory Neurons
• Interneurons
• Motor Neurons
Types of neurons
• Sensory
Carries information from
sensory organs to CNS (through
somatic system)
• Motor
Carries information from CNS to
muscles and glands (somatic &
autonomic systems)
Connect neurons to other
• Inter (relay) neurons (lots of these in the
CNS)
Sensory (Afferent) vs. Motor (Efferent)
sensory (afferent) nerve
e.g., skin
Neurons that send signals from the senses,
skin, muscles, and internal organs to the CNS
motor (efferent) nerve
Neurons that transmit commands from the
CNS to the muscles, glands, and organs
e.g., muscle
The Withdrawal Reflex
Neuron Anatomy and Neural
Communication
A neuron
Neurons
Dendrites
Cell Body
Myelin
Sheath
Axon of another
neuron
Axon
Dendrites of
another neuron
Source: science photo library
Neurons
Neuronal cell
bodies
Axons
Synapses occur
at the junctions
Neural Anatomy
Dendrite
the bushy, branching extensions of a
neuron that receive messages and
conduct impulses toward the cell body
Axon
the extension of a neuron, ending in
branching terminal fibers, through which
messages are sent to other neurons or to
muscles or glands
Neural Anatomy and
communication
Synapse
junction between the axon tip of the sending
neuron and the dendrite or cell body of the
receiving neuron
tiny gap at this junction is called the synaptic
gap or cleft
Synapse movie
Relay Race
• Action Potential starts at dendrite
– Through cell body
– Down Axon
– Axon Terminals
• How does it get to the next cell’s dendrites?
• Neurons don’t touch
– Synapse = millionth inch gap
– In synapse = vesicles w/ neurotransmitters
» Chemical messengers that transmit info
Myelin Sheath
– Fatty material made by glial cells
– Insulates the axon
– Allows for rapid movement of
electrical impulses along axon
– Nodes of Ranvier: gaps in myelin sheath
where action potentials are transmitted
– Multiple sclerosis is a breakdown of
myelin sheath
– Speed of neural impulse Ranges from 2 –
200+ mph
Neurotransmitters
chemical messengers that traverse the
synaptic gaps between neurons
when released by the sending neuron,
neurotransmitters travel across the
synapse and bind to receptor sites on
the receiving neuron, thereby
influencing whether it will generate a
neural impulse
More neurotransmitters