What are the three components of the nervous system?
How is the nervous system anatomically subdivided?
CNS: brain +spinal cord - integrates sensory information, evaluates and sends outgoing response
PNS: (peripheral areas of the body)
cranial nerves - originates form brain
spinal nerves - originate from spinal cord
How can the nervous be subdivided by the organs they innervate?
SNS - somatic
-motor division carries division to somatic effectors
-sensory division carries feedback to somatic integration centres (relays PNS to CNS)
ANS - (autonomic) no voluntary control
-afferent division: incoming msgs from visceral receptors
-efferent division: outgoing of ANS to visceral effectors (smooth and cardiac muscles and glands)
How can the ANS efferent pathway be further categorized?
The EFFERENT pathway can be subcategorized by:
How does the sympathetic system control heart rate?
Where there is greater need for blood flow:
What is the parasympathetic control over the stomach?
-the presence of food triggers parasympathetic reflexes via distension of stomach (outward expansion)
-more gastric juices are secreted
How?
-in response to amino acids, parasympathetic :
causes gastrin (digestive hormone secreted by mucosa in the presence of food) to increase secretion of gastric juice.
What are the two major cell types in the nervous system? Please describe them.
neurons: excitable cells that conduct electrical impulse, required for all nervous system activities
glial cells: do not conduct information but support the function of neurons
Describe the nervous structure (the structure of a nerve cell).
input of signal= structure: dendrites (receive incoming signals)
integration= structure: cell body, axons carry outgoing information
output of signal= structure: axon terminal
The (presynaptic) axon terminal is in contact with the post synaptic dendrites/neuron, the space in between is called the synaptic cleft. All three structures compose the synapse.
Describe the basic nervous structure (the structure of a nerve cell).
input of signal= structure: dendrites (receive incoming signals)
integration= structure: cell body, axons carry outgoing information
output of signal= structure: axon terminal
The (presynaptic) axon terminal is in contact with the post synaptic dendrites/neuron, the space in between is called the synaptic cleft. All three structures compose the synapse.
Describe the transport structures within the neuron.
cytoskeleton: microtubules, microfilaments and neurofibrils -allow rapid transport of small organelles
- vesicles contain the neurotransmitters and mitochondria (both are motor molecules that shuttle organelles to and from the extremities of the neuron)
How does it work within the axon?
Motor molecules move proteins on the cytoskeleton on the highway to be released at the synaptic knobs.
What are the five major types of glial cells?
Which types are part of the CNS and which are part of the PNS?
Only the schwann cells are part of the PNS.
What is the purpose for astrocytes?
What does the blood brain barrier do? And how is it achieved?
This can be achieved due to 2 specializations:
1. BBB capillaries are held together by tight junctions (which act as a barrier against molecules as they cannot permeate the cracks between cells like glue)
2. involved the feet of the astrocytes = forms a web of tight sheets around
=> the 2 specializations make the DOUBLE barrier of astrocyte feet + endothelial cells of the capillary walls
What can/not cross the barrier?
What is the function of microglia?
It is like the macrophage of the brain.
What are ependymal cells for?
They are like epithelial cells.
What are oligodendrocytes used for?
Which glial cells are in the spinal cord?
microglia, ependymal cells, oligodendrocytes and astrocytes.
Multiple sclerosis is a disorder of?
oligodendrocytes. A common CNS disease characterized by myelin loss and destruction. -plaque like lesions form -nerve conduction fails -communication is interrupted
What are the glial cells in the PNS?
2. satellite cells (still a type of schwann cell)
What do schwann cells do?
Satellite cells:
What are grey fibres and white fibres?
Grey fibres: solely support, do NOT form myelin sheath (like a connective tissue between nerve fibres)
White fibres: form myelin sheaths that wraps around the nerve fibre forming many layers of plasma membrane made of myelin (phospholipid)
How do PNS schwann cells form?
A schwann cell envelops an axon.
What is the node of ranvier?
It is a section on the axon membrane that is unmyelinated.
Between two schwann cells.
1 axon = 1 schwann cell (that formed the myelin)