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The Nervous System & its Cells

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Page 1: The Nervous System & its Cells. Central (inside skull & spine) Brain Spinal Cord Divisions of the Nervous System Peripheral (outside skull & spine) Nerves

The Nervous System & its Cells

Page 2: The Nervous System & its Cells. Central (inside skull & spine) Brain Spinal Cord Divisions of the Nervous System Peripheral (outside skull & spine) Nerves

Central (inside skull & spine)

BrainSpinal Cord

Divisions of the Nervous System

Peripheral (outside skull & spine)

Nerves

Page 3: The Nervous System & its Cells. Central (inside skull & spine) Brain Spinal Cord Divisions of the Nervous System Peripheral (outside skull & spine) Nerves

Central Nervous System

Brain

Page 4: The Nervous System & its Cells. Central (inside skull & spine) Brain Spinal Cord Divisions of the Nervous System Peripheral (outside skull & spine) Nerves

Divisions of the human brain

Page 5: The Nervous System & its Cells. Central (inside skull & spine) Brain Spinal Cord Divisions of the Nervous System Peripheral (outside skull & spine) Nerves

Specialization of function

Different regions of the brain are associated with different function

Page 6: The Nervous System & its Cells. Central (inside skull & spine) Brain Spinal Cord Divisions of the Nervous System Peripheral (outside skull & spine) Nerves

Spinal Cord Reflex

Spinal cord lesion

Ouch! That hurts, dude!

Group activity

- Would sensation be abolished by:- a spinal cord lesion?- polio?

- Would the reflex be abolished by: - a spinal cord lesion? - polio?

Page 7: The Nervous System & its Cells. Central (inside skull & spine) Brain Spinal Cord Divisions of the Nervous System Peripheral (outside skull & spine) Nerves

Somatic System:

- controls voluntary muscle

Autonomic System:

- controls glands & internal organs- has two subcomponents

- Sympathetic (adrenaline): arousal- Parasympathetic: calm

Peripheral Nervous System

Page 8: The Nervous System & its Cells. Central (inside skull & spine) Brain Spinal Cord Divisions of the Nervous System Peripheral (outside skull & spine) Nerves

Levels of Investigation Brain Areas

(visual system)

Cells (neurons)

Molecules (neurotransmitters)

Page 9: The Nervous System & its Cells. Central (inside skull & spine) Brain Spinal Cord Divisions of the Nervous System Peripheral (outside skull & spine) Nerves

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Neurons: Its many shapes & sizes

Page 10: The Nervous System & its Cells. Central (inside skull & spine) Brain Spinal Cord Divisions of the Nervous System Peripheral (outside skull & spine) Nerves

Neuron: basic parts

Cell Body football field

Dendrite Campus

Axon wide a street

Axon long as Philly - Ohio

Cell membrane thick as pinky finger

Synaptic cleft thick as thumb

# synapses 10.000 (same number as Villanova students)

Some axons are wrapped burrito-style by fatty cells (glial cells) - increases speed at which neurons communicate)- white in color (white matter vs gray matter- is destroyed by multiple sclerosis

axon terminals

Page 11: The Nervous System & its Cells. Central (inside skull & spine) Brain Spinal Cord Divisions of the Nervous System Peripheral (outside skull & spine) Nerves

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Neuron: its physiology

What makes neurons different from other cells?

Neuron’s cell membrane is electrically charged (interior is more negative)

Neurons influence each other’s charge (‘communicate’)

Neurons process and transmit electrical impulses

Page 12: The Nervous System & its Cells. Central (inside skull & spine) Brain Spinal Cord Divisions of the Nervous System Peripheral (outside skull & spine) Nerves

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How do neurons process and transmit electrical impulses?

A. dendrites receive input from other neurons

B. axon sends neural impulse to axon terminal

C. a neurotransmitter (NT) is release and makes contact with another neuron (synapse)

Page 13: The Nervous System & its Cells. Central (inside skull & spine) Brain Spinal Cord Divisions of the Nervous System Peripheral (outside skull & spine) Nerves

Communication Steps

• NT is released from pre-synaptic neuron

• NT binds to receptors in post-synaptic neuron

• Opens Na+ channels

• Sodium rushes in (activation)

• If enough Na+ rushes in => depolarization (action potential)

• NT released by post-synaptic neuronPost-synaptic neuron

Synapse

Pre-synaptic neuron

Page 14: The Nervous System & its Cells. Central (inside skull & spine) Brain Spinal Cord Divisions of the Nervous System Peripheral (outside skull & spine) Nerves

Other important facts

Various Neurotransmitters (NT):- Dopamine

- Adrenaline

- Serotonin

- Acetylcholine

For each NT,various receptors

- nicotine & muscarine

Drugs can act by

- modifying amount of NT, or

- binding to receptor (nicotine)

The net effect on neuron could be:

- activation (action potential)

- inhibition