Nerve Physiology
Nerve Physiology
Nerve Physiology
the following:
(synaptic transmission)
NEURON: ANATOMY
SYNAPSES
SYNAPSE MAGNIFIED
THE RESTING MEMBRANE POTENTIAL
rest
membrane.
THE RESTING MEMBRANE POTENTIAL
time.
flow across it
At rest,
equilibrium potential.
This creates a greater driving force for Na (Na wants to flow into
pore, within the membrane that allow ions to flow from one
Ion channel pores are usually selective for one or more types
of ions
MECHANISMS RESPONSIBLE FOR GENERATION OF
THE RMP
Na+/K+ ATPase
Moves 3 Na+ ions out & moves 2 K+ ions in
Results in the removal of one charge carrier from the
intracellular space
Establishes the [ ] gradients of Na+ & K+ ions
Selective permeability of the cell membrane for the
different ions
Most cells have K+ selective ion channels that remain open
all the time
Net efflux of K+ ions resulting in accumulation of xss
negative charge inside of the cell
ION PERMEABILITY OF THE MEMBRANE
(delayed rectifier)
ION CHANNELS IN THE MEMBRANE
receptors
nerve impulse.
channels on it.
Since an action potential will only occur when the membrane potential is
reached, an action potential can be described as an all or none response.
& this can mean the difference between life & death
terminal.
POSTSYNAPTIC POTENTIALS
TYPES OF SUMMATION
• 2 types of summation:
i. Spatial summation
The Na-K-ATPase pump exports 3Na for every 2K imported into the
cell powered by ATP hydrolysis
50% of the ATP consumed by the brain goes towards powering the Na-
K-ATPase pump
CLINICAL CORRELATIONS
potential
CLINICAL CORRELATIONS
paralysis)
spinal reflexes.
neurons
INTRODUCTION TO SYNAPTIC TRANSMISSION
potential
ROLE OF CA IN THE STAGES OF VESICULAR
TRANSMITTER RELEASE
At rest, synaptic vesicles are bound to cytoskeletal elements or to
each other by synapsin I (an integral vesicular membrane protein)
Ca entering the cytosol binds to calmodulin (a cytosolic Ca-
sensing protein)
The Ca-calmodulin complex then activates an enzyme that
modifies synapsin I causing detachment/mobilization of the
vesicles
Synaptic vesicles can now approach the synaptic bouton
membrane
ROLE OF CA IN THE STAGES OF VESICULAR
TRANSMITTER RELEASE
Synaptobrevin (vesicle-associated membrane protein
[VAMP]) complexes with synaptosomal-associated protein
(SNAP-25 or syntaxin) on the bouton membrane.
Results in docking (anchoring) of the vesicle to the internal
face of the bouton membrane. (This stage is Ca-independent)
The membrane of the docked vesicle fuses with the bouton
membrane (fusion)
Expulsion of the neurotransmitter into the synaptic cleft by
exocytosis (this stage is Ca-dependent)
ROLE OF CA IN THE STAGES OF VESICULAR
TRANSMITTER RELEASE
terminal.
neuron terminal:
the terminal
CLINICAL CORRELATIONS
syntaxin
CLINICAL
CORRELATIONS
Anatoxin-a (very fast death factor” )– cyanotoxin
produced by cyanobacteria found in algal bloom.
The toxin binds the nicotinic Ach receptor
permanently causing a permanent contraction.
Death results from dissociation of the brain &
musculature leading to suffocation
CLINICAL CORRELATIONS
• Organophosphate poisoning