Neurons Nervous
Neurons Nervous
Chapter 37
1. Comparative study shows the evolutionary steps leading to the centralized nervous system of
vertebrates.
2. Even primitive sponges, with only a cellular level of organization, respond by closing the osculum.
3. Hydra (cnidarians) possesses two cell layers separated by mesoglea.
a. The hydra can contract, extend, and move tentacles to capture prey and even turn
somersaults.
b. A simple nerve net extends throughout the hydra body within the mesoglea.
c. The hydra nerve net is composed of neurons in contact with one another and with
contractile epitheliomuscular cells.
d. The more complex cnidaria (sea anemones and jellyfish) may have two nerve nets.
1) A fast-acting nerve net enables major responses, particularly in times of danger.
2) Another nerve net coordinates slower and more delicate movements.
4. The planarian nervous system is bilaterally symmetrical.
a. It has two lateral nerve cords that allow rapid transfer of information from anterior to
posterior.
b. The nervous system of planarians is called a ladderlike nervous system.
c. The nervous system of planarians exhibits cephalization; at their anterior end, planarians
have a simple brain composed of a cluster of neurons or ganglia.
d. Cerebral ganglia receive input from photoreceptors in eyespots and sensory cells in auricles.
e. The transverse nerve fibers between the sides of the ladderlike nerve cords keep the
movement on both sides of a planarian body coordinated.
f. Bilateral symmetry plus cephalization are important trends in nervous system development.
g. The organization of the planarian nervous system foreshadows both the central and
peripheral system of vertebrates.
5. The annelids, arthropods, and mollusks are complex animals with true nervous systems.
a. The nerve cord has a ganglion in each segment of the body that controls muscles of that
segment.
b. The brain still receives sensory information and controls the activity of the ganglia so the
entire animal is coordinated.
c. The presence of a brain and other ganglia indicate an increased number of neurons among
invertebrates.
B. Vertebrate Nervous-System Organization
1. Vertebrate nervous systems exhibit cephalization and bilateral symmetry.
a. The vertebrate nervous system is composed of both central and peripheral nervous systems.
1) The central nervous system (CNS) develops a brain and spinal cord from the embryonic
dorsal nerve cord.
2) The peripheral nervous system (PNS) consists of paired cranial and spinal nerves.
b. Paired eyes, ears, and olfactory structures gather information from the environment.
c. A vast increase in number of neurons accompanied evolution of the vertebrate nervous
system; an insect may have one million neurons while vertebrates may contain a thousand
to a billion times more.
C. The Mammalian Nervous System
1. Mammal forebrains are larger than other vertebrates because the forebrain includes a
neocortex.
a.The functions of the neocortex are processing special reasoning, conscious thought, and
language.
37.2 Nervous Tissue
Nervous tissue is made up of neurons (nerve cells) and neuroglia (which support and nourish the
neurons).
A. Neurons and Neuroglia
1. Neurons vary in appearance, depending on their function and location, but they all have three
parts.
a. The cell body contains the nucleus and other organelles.
b. Dendrites receive information and conduct impulses toward the cell body.
c. A single axon conducts impulses away from the cell body to stimulate or inhibit a neuron,
muscle, or gland.
1) A long axon is called a nerve fiber.
2) The long axons are covered by a white myelin sheath.
2. The types of neuroglia in the CNS are:
a. Microglia, which are phagocytic cells that help remove bacteria and debris,
b. Astrocytes provide metabolic and structural support to the neurons,
c. Oligodendrocytes form the myelin sheath.
3. In the PNS Schwann cells form the myelin sheath.
a. The gaps in the PNS myelin sheath are called nodes of Ranvier.
4. Types of Neurons
a. Motor (efferent) neurons have many dendrites and a single axon; they conduct impulses
from the CNS to muscles or glands.
b. Sensory (afferent) neurons are unipolar; they conduct impulses from the periphery toward
the CNS.
1) The process that extends from the cell body divides into two processes, one going to the
CNS and one to periphery.
c. Interneurons are multipolar.
1) They have highly-branched dendrites within the CNS.
2) Interneurons convey messages between the various parts of the CNS.
3) They form complex brain pathways accounting for thinking, memory, language, etc.
B. Transmission of Nerve Impulses
1. Julius Bernstein (early 1900s) proposed that the nerve impulse is the movement of unequally
distributed ions on either side of an axonal membrane, the plasma membrane of an axon.
2. A. L. Hodgkin and A. F. Huxley later confirmed this theory.
a. They and other researchers inserted a tiny electrode into the giant axon of a squid.
b. The electrode was attached to a voltmeter and an oscilloscope to trace a change in voltage
over time.
c. The voltage measured the difference in the electrical potential between the inside and
outside of the membrane.
d. An oscilloscope indicated any changes in polarity.
3. Resting Potential
a. When an axon is not conducting an impulse, an oscilloscope records a membrane potential
equal to negative 70 mV, indicating that the inside of the neuron is more negative than the
outside.
b. This is the resting potential because the axon is not conducting an impulse.
c. This polarity is due to the difference in electrical charge on either side of the axonal
membrane.
1) The inside of the plasma membrane is more negatively charged than the outside.
2) Although there is a higher concentration of K+ ions inside the axon, there is a much
higher concentration of Na+ ions outside the axon.
3) The plasma membrane is more permeable to K+ ions, so this gradient is less and the K+
ion potential is less.
4) The sodium-potassium pump maintains this unequal distribution of Na+ and K+ ions.
d. The sodium-potassium (Na+-K+) pump is an active transport system that moves Na+ ions out
and K+ ions into the axon.
e. The pump is always working because the membrane is permeable to these ions and they
tend to diffuse toward the lesser concentration.
f. Since the plasma membrane is more permeable to potassium ions than to sodium ions,
there are always more positive ions outside; this accounts for some polarity.
g. The large negatively charged proteins in the cytoplasm of the axon also contribute to the
resting potential of – 70 mV.
4. Action Potential
a. When an axon conducts a nerve impulse, the rapid change in the membrane potential is the
action potential.
b. Protein-lined channels in the axonal membrane open to allow either sodium or potassium
ions to pass; these are sodium and potassium gated ion channels.
c. The oscilloscope goes from –70 mV to +40 mV in a depolarization phase, indicating the
cytoplasm is now more positive than the tissue fluid.
d. The trace returns to –70 mV again in the repolarization phase, indicating the inside of the
axon is negative again.
5. Propagation of Action Potentials
a. If an axon is nonmyelinated, an action potential stimulates an adjacent axonal membrane to
produce an action potential.
b. In myelinated fibers, the action potential at one neurofibril node causes action potential at
the next node.
1) The myelinated sheath has neurofibril nodes, gaps where one neurolemmocyte ends
and the next begins.
2) The action potential “leaps” from one neurofibril node to another—this is called
saltatory conduction.
3) Saltatory conduction may reach rates of over 200 meters/second, compared to 1
meter/second without it.
c. As each impulse passes, the membrane undergoes a short refractory period before it can
open the sodium gates again; this ensures a one-way direction to the impulse.
C. Transmission Across a Synapse
1. The minute space between the axon bulb and the cell body of the next neuron is the synapse.
2. A synapse consists of a presynaptic membrane, a synaptic cleft, and the postsynaptic membrane.
a. Synaptic vesicles store neurotransmitters that diffuse across the synapse.
b. When the action potential arrives at the presynaptic axon bulb, synaptic vesicles merge with
the presynaptic membrane.
c. When vesicles merge with the membrane, neurotransmitters are discharged into the
synaptic cleft.
d. The neurotransmitter molecules diffuse across the synaptic cleft to the postsynaptic
membrane where they bind with specific receptors.
e. The type of neurotransmitter and/or receptor determines if the response is excitation or
inhibition.
f. Excitatory neurotransmitters use gated ion channels and are fast acting.
g. Other neurotransmitters affect the metabolism of the postsynaptic cells and are slower.
3. Neurotransmitters
a. At least 100 different neurotransmitters have been identified.
b. Acetylcholine (ACh) and norepinephrine (NE), dopamine, and serotonin are present in both
the CNS and the PNS.
1) ACh can have either an excitatory or an inhibitory effect, depending on the tissue.
2) NE is important to dreaming, waking, and mood.
3) Dopamine is involved in emotions, learning, and attention.
4) Serotonin is involved in thermoregulation, emotions, and perception.
c. Once a neurotransmitter is released into a synaptic cleft, it initiates a response and is then
removed from the cleft.
d. In some synapses, the postsynaptic membrane contains enzymes that rapidly inactivate the
neurotransmitter.
e. Acetylcholinesterase (AChe) breaks down acetylcholine.
f. In other synapses, the presynaptic membrane reabsorbs the neurotransmitter for
repackaging in synaptic vesicles or for molecular breakdown.
g. The short existence of neurotransmitters in a synapse prevents continuous stimulation (or
inhibition) of postsynaptic membranes.
h. Many drugs that affect the nervous system act by interfering with or potentiating the action
of neurotransmitters.
D. Synaptic Integration
1. A neuron has many dendrites and may have one to ten thousand synapses with other neurons.
2. A neuron receives many excitatory and inhibitory signals.
3. Excitatory neurotransmitters produce a potential change (signal) that drives the neuron closer to
an action potential; inhibitory signals produce a signal that drives the neuron further from an
action potential.
4. Thus, excitatory signals have a depolarizing effect and inhibitory signals have a hyperpolarizing
effect.
5. Integration is the summing up of excitatory and inhibitory signals.
a. If a neuron receives many excitatory signals, or at a rapid rate from one synapse, the axon
will probably transmit a nerve impulse.
b. If both positive and inhibitory signals are received, the summing may prohibit the axon from
firing.
37.3 The Central Nervous System