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THE NERVOUS SYSTEM 35-2 BIO 1004 Flora
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NERVOUS SYSTEM Nervous system – controls and coordinates functions throughout the body and responds to internal and external stimuli Neuron – cell that transmits electrical impulses
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NEURONS Messages carried by the nervous system are electrical signals called impulses 3 Types of Neurons Sensory Motor Interneurons
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3 TYPES OF NEURONS Sensory – carry impulses from the sense organs to the spinal cord or brain Motor – carry impulses from brain and spinal cord to muscles and glands Interneurons – connect sensory and motor neurons and carry impulses between them.
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FEATURES OF NEURONS Cell body – largest part of the neuron Contains nucleus and most of cytoplasm Metabolic activity occurs here Dendrites – carry impulses from environment or other neurons to the cell body. Axon – long fiber tat carries impulses away from the cell body. In animals, axons and dendrites are clustered into bundles called nerves.
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RESTING NEURON When at rest, the outside of the cell has a net positive charge and the inside has a net negative charge. Nerve cells pump Na + out and K + ions in. (sodium/potassium pump) More K + leak out of the cell than in, causing the cell to become negatively charged. The electrical charge across the cell membrane in its resting state is known as its resting potential.
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THE MOVING IMPULSE Neurons remain resting until they receive a stimulus large enough to create an impulse Once it begins, the stimulus travels down the axon opening protein gates allowing ions to pass in and out. At the leading edge, Na + ions flow in. When the cell membrane becomes positively charged, it is called a nerve impulse or action potential.
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THRESHOLD Strength of the impulse is always the same The minimum level of stimulus that is required to activate a neuron is called a threshold.
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THE SYNAPSE At the end of the neuron terminal, the neuron makes contact with another cell, the location at which the neuron can transfer an impulse to another cell is called a synapse. Synaptic cleft – gap that separates axon terminals and adjacent dendrites.
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SYNAPSE CONT. Axon terminals contain vesicles filled with neurotransmitters (NT) Neurotransmitters – chemicals used by neurons to transmit an impulse across the synaptic cleft. The NT will attach to receptors on the membrane of the receptive neuron causing an action potential.
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