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CSU BMS 300 Walrond
Human Physiology Unit 6: Nervous System Set 2
55
Physiology
Undergraduate 1
03/01/2013

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Term
What is the basis for electrical signaling in the nervous system?
Definition
The ability of the plasma membrane to generate an electron potential
Term
What are the molecules that carry negative charges and are confined within the cell?
Definition
Anions. Generally nucleic acids and proteins.
Term
What are cell membrane channels that are always open known as?
Definition
Leak channels.
Term
What is the electrical potential where equilibrium is reached called?
Definition
Equilibrium potential.
Term
What is the resting membrane potential for most cells?
Definition
About -70 millivolts.
Term
Are there normally more negative charges inside or outside a cell?
Definition
Inside.
Term
Where is NA+ in high concentration?
Definition
Outside the cell.
Term
Where is K+ in high concentration?
Definition
Inside the cell.
Term
What determines the resting membrane potential?
Definition
Leak channels for K+.
Term
What causes Na+ channels to open?
Definition
Increased positive charge in the local environment.
Term
What are channels that respond to increased positive charge in the local environment called?
Definition
Voltage-gated.
Term
What is the electrical mechanism for carrying signals along membranes rapidly and for long distances?
Definition
Action potential.
Term
What is action potential?
Definition
All or nothing signal that transmits information for long distances.
Term
Where do action potential signals propagate?
Definition
Along the conductile region of neurons in the CNS and PNS and in skeletal muscle fibers.
Term
What inactivates the NA+ voltage-gated channels?
Definition
The movement of the "ball and chain" into the mouth of the channel.
Term
What are K+ voltage-gated channels known as?
Definition
Delayed rectifier channels.
Term
In myelinated axons, what are the only sites where the plasma membrane directly contacts the extracellular fluid?
Definition
Nodes of Ranvier.
Term
What are the sections between the nodes of Ranvier known as?
Definition
Internodal regions.
Term
What are internodal regions?
Definition
The regions between the nodes of Ranvier that are wrapped in layers of myelin.
Term
Where are Na+ and K+ voltage-gated channels found in myelinated axons?
Definition
In the plasma membrane of the nodes.
Term
Why is myelin important in myelinated axons?
Definition
It provides a high resistance pathway between the neuronal cytoplasm and the extracellular space.
Term
What is the saltatory conduction? What does the "saltatory" root mean?
Definition
Action potential propagation. Latin for "to hop."
Term
What can action potential propagation velocities reach with saltatory conduction? Nonmyelinated neurons?
Definition
110 m/s. 1-2 m/s.
Term
In an electric wire, current is carried by electrons. What is it carried by in biological systems?
Definition
Ions.
Term
What can the plasma membrane be thought of in reference to action potential?
Definition
A resistor. It prevents the passage of ions unless channels are open.
Term
What lays down myelin wrap?
Definition
Oligdendrocytes in the CNS and Schwann cells in the PNS.
Term
What does the influx of Na+ at one node do to the membrane at the next node?
Definition
Depolarizes it.
Term
In what kind of neurons is the membrane depolarized by opening stretch-activated channels?
Definition
Sensory neurons in the periphery.
Term
What varies the amplitude of generator potentials?
Definition
The intensity of the stimulus.
Term
What is generator potential said to be?
Definition
Graded with the strength of the stimulus. (The stronger the stimulus, the larger the graded potential.)
Term
How do receptor potentials decay?
Definition
Passively- the size of the potential becomes smaller and smaller the farther it spreads from the site of initiation.
Term
When is action potential initiated?
Definition
When the graded potential depolarizes the membrane to the point that threshold is reached.
Term
How many action potentials can be propagated along the axon every second?
Definition
100.
Term
What do the roots in synapse mean?
Definition
Syn- together, haptein- to clasp.
Term
In what terms are excitation and inhibition defined?
Definition
Whether the membrane potential is driven toward threshold or away from threshold.
Term
What is a site where one neuron communicates to another neuron?
Definition
Synapse.
Term
What type of synapses are formed by gap junctions?
Definition
Electrical.
Term
What type of synapses of the CNS are the vast majority?
Definition
Chemical.
Term
What neuron are neurotransmitters released from?
Definition
Presynaptic neuron.
Term
What neuron are neurtransmitters bound?
Definition
Post synaptic membrane.
Term
What are the purposes of neurotransmitters?
Definition
Excite the cell by admitting cations or inhibit the cell by admitting CL-
Term
What are seven excitatory neurotransmitters?
Definition
Acetylcholine, glutamate, serotonin, epinepherine, norepinepherine, dopamine, and peptides such as endorphins.
Term
What are the two inhibitory neurotransmitters?
Definition
Gamma amino butyric acid (GABA) and glycine.
Term
What is EPSP?
Definition
Excitatory postsynaptic potential.
Term
Where is action potential initiated?
Definition
Trigger zone.
Term
What happens when an action potential arrives at an axon terminal?
Definition
Depolarization opens V-gated CA2+ channels which leads to the fusion of a synaptic vesicle with the plasma membrane.
Term
What are the two main groups of receptors that respond to transmitters (ligand-gated channels)?
Definition
Directly gated channels and second messenger mediated channels.
Term
What does the most common directly gated channel in the CNS respond to?
Definition
The amino acid glutamate.
Term
What channels must bind two molecules of neurotransmitter before the channel can open?
Definition
Directly gated channels.
Term
What is a characteristic of the directly gated channels?
Definition
They respond quickly; within a matter of a millisecond or less.
Term
What do excitatory neurotransmitters allow through by opening directly gated channels?
Definition
NA+
Term
What do inhibitory transmitters allow through by opening directly gated channels?
Definition
Cl-
Term
What does the influx of NA+ produce?
Definition
Depolarizing potentials.
Term
What does the influx of CA- produce?
Definition
Inhibitory potentials.
Term
What determines the type of response to a transmitter?
Definition
The type of receptor that is incorporated into the post synaptic membrane.
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