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Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiolog y
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Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

Jan 19, 2016

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Page 1: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

Biology 211Anatomy & Physiology I

Dr. Thompson

Electrophysiology

Page 2: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

Recall: A neuron carries an electrical signal produced by the movement of ions across its plasma membrane

The mechanism by which it does this should be familiar –it is very similar to how the plasma membrane of a muscle cell (its sarcolemma) generates and carries electrical signals as we have previously discussed …

Page 3: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

When resting, the plasma membraneof a neuron is polarized.

Sodium ions are concentrated on its outer surface. Potassium ions and large negative ions (proteins, phosphate, sulfate, etc) are concentrated on its inner surface.

Sodium channels and potassium channels are closed so very few ions are passing across the membrane.

Page 4: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

An action potentialbegins when theplasma membrane begins to depolarize

Sodium gates (or "gated channels") open on one sectionof the membrane. (later, we’ll discuss what causes this to happen)

Large amounts of sodium ions flow into the cell carrying their positive charges, making the inner surface of theplasma membrane more positive.

.

Page 5: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

A few millisecondslater, potassiumgates open asthe sodium gatesclose.

Potassium ions, withtheir positive charges,flow out of the cell, again making the outer surface of the plasma membrane more positive.

The plasma membrane has begun to repolarize.

Page 6: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

The potassiumgates then also close. The cell quicklypumps sodium ionsback to the outside of the membraneand potassium ionsback to the inside of the membrane.

The plasma membrane becomes fully repolarized.

Page 7: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

This depolarization / repolarization starts at one point on the membrane, then spreads to nearby regions of the membrane, causing them to depolarize / repolarize. This, in turn, stimulates regions a little further out to depolarize / repolarize, and these events spread away from the original location

Page 8: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

This movement of depolarization & repolarization Is an action potential which travels along the plasma membrane of the neuron.

Page 9: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

While some neurons use this continuous type of action potentials to carry their electrical signals, most neurons use a more efficient method of carrying action potentials called saltatory conduction.

This is much more rapid and requires much less energy.

Page 10: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

Saltatory conduction can only occur on myelinated neuron processes.

The action potential (depolarization then repolarization) occurs only at nodes of Ranvier, so the action potential skips from node to node to node .....

Page 11: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

Whether the action potential travels along an axon by continuous or saltatory conduction, it eventually spreads along telodendria and reaches the axon terminals.

From here, the signal can be passed to another cell at a synapse

Page 12: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

Two types of synapses:

a) Ions can pass directly from one neuron to another if their plasma membranes are connected by gap junctions, thus starting a new action potential on the second cell. This is an electrical synapse; it is rare.

b) The action potential can cause the axon terminal of the first neuron to release a neurotransmitter, which binds to the plasma membrane of the second cell and stimulates a new action potential on it. This is a chemical synapse; it is very common

Page 13: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

Chemical Synapse

Page 14: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

Chemical Synapse

Page 15: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

Chemical Synapse

Page 16: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

More Definitions

Presynaptic Neuron: The neuron which secretes the neurotransmitter at a synapse.

Postsynaptic Neuron: The neuron to which this neurotransmitter binds, thus creating a new action potential on its plasma membrane.

Page 17: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

Notice that the same neuron can be the postsynaptic neuron at one synapse and the presynaptic neuron at the next synapse.

Page 18: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

There are dozens of different chemicals which act as neurotransmitters, some of which are listed in this table from Saladin.

Page 19: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

However: any neuron can only secrete one type of neurotransmitter from all of its axon terminals

Page 20: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

Additionally, at each synapse there must be a perfect match between neurotransmitter and receptor:

The postsynaptic cell must have receptors which are specific for the neurotransmitter which is secreted by the presynaptic cell:

For example:

If the presynaptic neuron secretes acetylcholine, the postsynaptic neuron must have acetylcholine receptors.

If the presynaptic neuron secretes serotonin the postsynaptic neuron must have serotonin receptors

etc,

Page 21: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

Recall: When resting, the plasma membrane of a neuron is polarized because it has more positively charged ions on the outside and more negatively charged ions on the inside.

Page 22: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

This polarization of the membrane is measured as its voltage. This can be increased or decreased by changing how many ions are separated.

A voltage of “0” means that positive and negative ions are mixed together and not separated from each other…

No separation of + and - ions

Page 23: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

This polarization of the membrane is measured as its voltage. This can be increased or decreased by changing how many ions are separated.

A voltage of “0” means that positive and negative ions are mixed together and not separated from each other.

As positive and negative ions get separated from each other across the membrane, the further away from “0” the voltage will move

No separation of + and - ions

+ and – ions separated

+ and – ions separated

Page 24: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

A normal resting voltage for a neuron (that is, how much are the positive ions and negative ions separated across its plasma membrane) is between -60 and -70 millivolts.

The “ - ” means that more positive ions are on the outside and more negative ions are on the inside of the membrane.

Page 25: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

A normal resting voltage for a neuron is between -60 and -70 millivolts.

As Na+ flows into the cell (the membrane depolarizes), the voltage moves closer to “0” and will go past it (more positive ions on the inside)

As K+ flows out of the cell (the membrane repolarizes), the voltage returns toward its resting value (more positive ions on the outside)

Page 26: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

In reality, the plasma membrane of a neuron does not depolarize (lots of Na+ flowing in) as quickly as those earlier diagrams imply since not all of the sodium gated channels open at the same time.

Instead, a few Na+ gates open first, then a few more, and a few more…. Each time this raises the voltage of the membrane a little bit, until the voltage reaches a point, called the threshold voltage, which causes all of the remaining Na+ gates to open as well, causing rapid depolarization.

Page 27: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

Those small depolarizations are called Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials (EPSP)

Each of these raises the voltage of the neuron’s plasma membrane closer to its threshold voltage

If enough EPSPs occur in a short period of time, the full action potential begins.

Page 28: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

Inhibitory Postsynaptic Potentials (IPSPs) can also occur, which INCREASE in the separation of positive and negative ions across the plasma membrane of the Neuron (making it even more polarized.)

These IPSPs make it less likely that the plasma membrane of the neuron will reach threshold voltage.

Page 29: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

Remember when we discussed excitatory synapses and inhibitory synapses affecting the axon hillock?

Those synapses produce EPSPs and IPSPs.

The dendrites (and body) of every neuron are constantly receiving both stimulatory signals which move its membrane voltage closer to threshold (EPSPs), and inhibitory signals which move it membrane voltage further away from threshold (IPSPs).

Those travel along the membrane until they reach the axon hillock, and if there are enough more EPSPs than IPSPs to reach threshold voltage, it will depolarize.

Page 30: Biology 211 Anatomy & Physiology I Dr. Thompson Electrophysiology.

Inhibitory Postsynaptic Potentials can also block the synapse of a neuron.

If an action potential (depolarization/repolarization)

moving along the plasma membrane of that neuron’s axon and telodendria reaches a place where another neuron is creating an IPSP, the membrane will no longer be able to reach threshold voltage at that point.

The action potential will not reach the axon terminal, so it will not be able to release neurotransmitter.