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General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2
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General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.

Dec 19, 2015

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Page 1: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.

General Physiology

Shaul Hochstein

2

Page 2: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.

Image of the Brain

Page 3: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.
Page 4: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.

The cell membrane:conductance and capacitance,

with selective ion channels determining membrane potential

Page 5: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.

Channels lead to conductance (g = 1/R i.e. 1/Resistance).Membrane thinness allows a large capacitance (C).

Page 6: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.

Channel conductance can be changed by applied voltage (e.g. nerve fiber Action Potentials) or by stretch (e.g. mechanical sense stretch receptors) or by ligands extracellularly (e.g. chemical sense receptors) or intracellularly (e.g. synapses).

Page 7: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.

ENaEK

All nervous system – nerve cell – signals are changes in membrane channel conductance to a specific ion. Membrane potential is set as a compromise between the Potassium and the Sodium Equilibrium Potentials. Relative ion conductance determines the relative contributions to the membrane potential.

Page 8: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.

The Stretch Receptor System:example of sensory neuron,

motor neuron, and synapse between them

Page 9: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.

An invertebrate stretch receptor neuron

Page 10: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.

An invertebrate stretch receptor neuron.Besides the receptor neuron fiber (yellow) entering the central nervous system, there are motor neuron fibers (red) activating the muscle and inhibitory fibers (blue) determining the “set point” of the muscle stretch receptor.

Page 11: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.
Page 12: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.
Page 13: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.
Page 14: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.
Page 15: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.

Sensory nerve cell body is located in dorsal root ganglion (near spinal cord) with its distal (far) end, located at the muscle spindle, sensitive to stretch. Sensory signal enters spinal cord where sensory nerve terminals synapse onto dendrites of motor nerve. Motor nerve fiber sends signal to muscle where its terminals synapse onto – and activate – the muscle fibers.

The same sensory nerve terminal also branches to activate inhibitory interneurons which inhibit the activity of motor neurons that in turn reduce the activation of antagonistic muscles.

Page 16: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.
Page 17: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.

A parallel system of Golgi stretch receptors have nerve endings in the tendons. Their sensory nerve cell bodies are also located in the dorsal root ganglion. Sensory signals enter the spinal cord and the sensory nerve terminals synapse onto interneurons that inhibit the dendrites of the agonist motor nerve and activate the antagonist motor neurons.

Page 18: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.
Page 19: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.

A vertebrate stretch receptor system at the specialized intra-fusal muscle fibers.Besides the receptor neuron Group I and II fibers (green) entering the central nervous system (“afferent”), there are alpha motor neuron fibers (grey) activating the (extra-fusal) muscle fibers and gamma fibers (blue) determining the “set point” of the muscle stretch receptor.

Page 20: General Physiology Shaul Hochstein 2. Image of the Brain.

Responses in sensory neurons to stretch – following the generator potential transduction of the graded receptor potential to a burst of “all-or-none” Action Potentials. These can extend throughout the extended stretch or be curtailed in rapidly adapting receptors.