What are the steps in a response?
What are neurones?
* Highly specialised cells that are able to generate and transmit nerve impulses
What is the cell body? (Neurones)
Contains nucleus, nucleolus and other organelles (including ribosomes - neurotransmitters and mitochondria - Na+/K+ pump
What is a dendrite? (Neurones)
What is an axon? (Neurones)
What are Schwann cells? (Neurones)
* Results in several layers of fatty myelin surrounding axon
What are the nodes of Ranvier? (Neurones)
* Here, axon is exposed - no myelin
What is the effect of the myelin sheath?
Increases the rate of transmission of impulses along the axon
What is the difference between sensory and motor neurones?
* Motor - one long axon taking information away
What is the spinal cord?
A hollow tube running from the base of the brain to the end of the spine
What is grey matter? (Spinal cord)
* Contains cell bodies of relay and motor neurones
What is white matter? (Spinal cord)
* Contains myelinated axons which run up and down the spinal cord, to and from the brain
What is the spinal canal? (Spinal cord)
* Nutritive cerebrospinal fluid circulates through this
What is the dorsal root ganglion? (Spinal cord)
* Concentration of their cell bodies forms a swelling
What is the ventral root? (Spinal cord)
Motor neurones leave via ventral root
What is a reflex?
* The neurones that are involved in making a reflex occur make up a reflex arc
How is the resting potential generated?
•In a resting axon: -high conc. of Na+ outside -high conc. of K+ inside •Membrane is polarised •Net effect - inside is negative compared to outside giving the resting potential •K+ leakage channels - K+ leaks out •Na+/K+ pump - 3Na+ out, 2K+ in •Negative particles within axon
What is meant by threshold intensity?
What is the membrane potential difference at resting potential? (mV)
-70mV
What is the link between a strong stimulus and action potentials?
A stronger stimulus produces a greater frequency of action potentials
What is the refractory period?
What is the importance of the refractory period?
•Impulses can only flow in one direction along an axon
- so the region of axon behind the impulse can’t be depolarised
•Limits the frequency at which successive impulses can pass along an axon
What are nerve impulses?
What are voltage gated proteins?
* Opened by depolarisation