Synapse Study Guide PDF

Summary

This document provides a summary of the synapse, including neurotransmitters, their roles, and associated behaviors. It also covers the role of adenosine and caffeine in the body. The document appears to be study material for a biology or neuroscience class.

Full Transcript

[The Synapse] What is the synapse? In the action potential the signal is (**electrical**/chemical), when it gets to the synapse it becomes (electrical/**chemical**). [Typical synaptic functioning: ] 1\. **Action Potiental** arrives at theTerminal to send message 2\. Calcium channels open and...

[The Synapse] What is the synapse? In the action potential the signal is (**electrical**/chemical), when it gets to the synapse it becomes (electrical/**chemical**). [Typical synaptic functioning: ] 1\. **Action Potiental** arrives at theTerminal to send message 2\. Calcium channels open and calcium rushes in 3\. Vessicle fuse with the membrane 4\. **Neurotransmitter** dumped into **Synapse** - - - **Excitatory (make cell more positive for action potential): Neurotransmitters that increase the likelihood of the postsynaptic neuron generating an action potential.** - **Inhibitory (make cell more negative for repolarizaion to resting potential): Decrease the likelihood of the postsynaptic neuron generating an action potential.** - 5\. **NT** binds with **Postsynaptic receptors**, causes: - - - **6. [Re-uptake/enzymatic breakdown]** of NT **- Re-uptake through NT transporter so it can be re-used** **- Destroyed by enzymes (such as Acetylcholinesterase)** What are **pleasure centers** in the brain? What is their purpose? - - 2 neurotransmitters that are commonly found in pleasure centers? What drugs are associated with them? ** Dopamine = neurotransmitter that influences behavior, mood, attention, memory** **○ What happens when we have too little? associated w/lack of motivation, depression / feel worse** **○ More dopamine? Feel better/happy** **○ What do you think many of the substances people are addicted to (sugar, smoking) do to dopamine levels? Increase // Many substances/activities people are addicted to increase dopamine** **○ Associated drug: Cocaine (due to bad luck, has the same shape to fit in the receptors)** ** Binds to re-uptake receptors (dopamine reuptake transporters) and blocks them** ** Dopamine remains in synapse and continues to attach to receptors and send feel-good signals** ** Serotonin = maintaining mood balance, also helps bodily functions, such as sleep and digestion** - - - - **[\_\_\_Caffeine\_\_]\_\_** is a drug that makes us less tired and more alert. Why do we get tired in the first place? Adenosine: **type of cellular waste product/byproduct produced when cells use energy (from ATP-primary source of fuel/energy - produced in mitochondria).** Adenosine binds to We get rid of adenosine **\_\_\_adenosine receptors\_\_\_.** **○ signals to our body that we are tired.** **○ Binding causes drowsiness by slowing down nerve cell activity** **○ When adenosine receptors are filled, the ion channels open and the cell becomes less likely to fire. ○ Reduces likelihood of action potentials** by **\_\_sleeping\_\_\_.** **○ cellular waste products such as adenosine are reabsorbed and recycled** **○ feel "refreshed" in the morning.** How does caffeine prevent us from getting tired? - - - - ** It blocks the receptors from binding to adenosine** ** Therefore, your neurons do not feel tired** - 1. a. b. c. d. e.

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