Neurones and Glia MD224 PDF
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Uploaded by PrudentRainforest
University of Galway
Professor Karen Doyle
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Summary
This document presents lectures on neurones and glia covering neurophysiology. It includes diagrams and tables explaining key concepts, such as resting membrane potential, and synaptic transmission. It is intended for an undergraduate learning experience within the realm of biology courses.
Full Transcript
NEURONES AND GLIA MD224 Professor Karen Doyle Neurophysiology [email protected] Neurons Cell body Dendrites Axon Electrically excitable Ca++ Na+ Movement of ions • Diffusion through ion channels • Active transport/ facilitated diffusion ClK+ Membrane potential • Nerve an...
NEURONES AND GLIA MD224 Professor Karen Doyle Neurophysiology [email protected] Neurons Cell body Dendrites Axon Electrically excitable Ca++ Na+ Movement of ions • Diffusion through ion channels • Active transport/ facilitated diffusion ClK+ Membrane potential • Nerve and muscle cells are electrically excitable • Electrical current results from movement of ions across membrane https://opentextbc.ca/anatomyandphysiology/chapter/12-4-the-action-potential/ Membrane potential • Voltage difference across a cell membrane • At rest, called resting membrane potential » EM • Unequal distribution of ions (Na+, K+, Cl-) across cell membrane • Greater permeability to K+ than Na+ • Large anions inside cell • Na+ /K+ electrogenic pump (3 Na+ out, 2 K+ in) » Inside made negative relative to outside • Resting membrane potential generally between -60 to -80 mV Membrane potential • Voltage difference across a cell membrane • At rest, called resting membrane potential » EM • Unequal distribution of ions (Na+, K+, Cl-) across cell membrane • Greater permeability to K+ than Na+ • Large anions inside cell • Na+ /K+ electrogenic pump (3 Na+ out, 2 K+ in) » Inside made negative relative to outside • Resting membrane potential generally between -60 to -80 mV Resting membrane potential • Uneven distribution of ions at rest Extracellular Intracellular (mmol/L) Na+ ClK+ 150 110 5 15 10 150 • Concentration gradient • Electrical gradient Equilibrium potential – Unequal distribution of ions (Na+, K+ , Cl- ) across membrane » Concentration gradient » Electrical gradient • Ions diffuse along concentration gradient (e.g K+ out) • When concentration gradient for K+ = electrical gradient pulling K+ in, the result is the equilibrium potential for K+ • Equilibrium potential for all ions can be predicted using Nernst equation EK+=RT loge [K+]o zF [K+]i Membrane potential • Voltage difference across a cell membrane • At rest, called resting membrane potential » EM • Unequal distribution of ions (Na+, K+, Cl-) across cell membrane • Greater permeability to K+ than Na+ • Large anions inside cell • Na+ /K+ electrogenic pump (3 Na+ out, 2 K+ in) » Inside made negative relative to outside • Resting membrane potential generally between -60 to -80 mV Na+ /K+ electrogenic pump Ion channels • Composed of protein subunits • Voltage gated • Ligand gated • Mechanosensitive Action potential Action potential • • • • Threshold All or nothing Self-propagating Refractory period Action potential • • • • Threshold All or nothing Self-propagating Refractory period Threshold: All or nothing +15mV 99 • Voltage-gated Na+ channels • Depolarisation • Activation gate – Threshold ~ +15mV to RMP • Inactivation gate – Refractory period » Absolute » Relative – Up to x5000 increase in Na+ conductance at AP • Voltage-gated K+ channels • Repolarisation Action potential • • • • Threshold All or nothing Self-propagating Refractory period Local circuits • Adjacent areas reach threshold • Propagation of AP • Refractory period facilitates AP propagation in one direction only Refractory period X Unmyelinated axon Saltatory conduction Myelinated axon Refractory period X • Na+ influx depolarises the cell for up to 3 mm along axon • Distance between nodes of Ranvier Myelin • Glia – PNS: Schwann cells – CNS: Oligodendrocytes • Layers containing sphingomyelin • Nodes of Ranvier • 1-3mm intervals • Saltatory conduction • Current flows through extracellular fluid and axoplasm from node to node Classes of nerves • Diameter • Conduction velocity – Myelin • Myelinated • Unmyelinated – General classification • A (a, b, g, d) •B •C – Sensory nerve classification • I (A, B), II, III, IV Classes of nerves Synaptic transmission • AP propagation to axon terminal • Activation of voltage-gated Ca++ channels • Ca++ activates Ca++-calmodulin- dependent protein kinase II • Primes vesicles for mobilisation, docking to release sites on presynaptic membrane and membrane fusion • Exocytosis Synaptic transmission Axons to Dendrites • Most transmission is axodendritic Receptors • Ionotropic • Protein subunits arranged around a pore • Fast activation • Short duration of action • Metabotropic • G-protein linked • Slow activation • Long duration of action Post synaptic potentials – Excitatory neurotransmitters produce depolarisation of the postsynaptic membrane • Excitatory postsynaptic potential – An EPSP may favour an action potential, but is not in itself one • No propagation • Graded responses obtainable – Inhibitory neurotransmitters produce hyperpolarisation of the postsynaptic membrane • Inhibitory post synaptic potential • An IPSP makes it more difficult to trigger an action potential Summation of post synaptic potentials can occur at the axon hillock Spatial and temporal summation Spatial Temporal Www.cabrillo.cc.us/~dscott/bio5/lectures Glia • Greek for glue • Protectors and support cells of neurons • Heighten the functional capacity of neurons Schwann cells Oligodendrocytes Astrocytes Ependymal cells Radial glia Microglia Glial functions • Myelin • Schwann cells (PNS) • Oligodendrocytes (CNS) • Control of extracellular environment around neurons • Astrocytes • Ependymal cells • Brain development • Radial glia • Immune function • Microglia Glia • 10-50x more glia than neurons • Microglia are derived from macrophages outside of CNS • Phagocytes; activated by infection and injury • Macroglia (all other groups) are derived from neural stem cells Macroglial functions • Structural support • Insulate axons • Blood brain barrier • Release growth factors to nourish and protect neurons – Neurotrophins eg GDNF • Guide migrating neurones and axon outgrowth • Synaptogenesis • Promote efficient signaling between neurons – Clear neurotransmitter from synapses eg glutamate – Respond to neuronal signaling by releasing glial factors Macroglia have a crucial role in the anatomical development of the brain Created with BioRender.com NAdr Ach DA https://www.freepik.com/ Role of glia in synaptogenesis • Neurons migrate during development but synapse formation only occurs when astrocytes (or other macroglia) are present – Extracellular protein signals from astrocytes – Trigger synapse formation in CNS – Adult hippocampal stem cells display similar dependence on astrocytes for synapse formation • Macroglia are also necessary for synapse maintenance Macroglia • Astrocytes and other macroglia actively control synaptogenesis – Regulate synapse number – Regulate synapse stability – Regulate synapse function • Evidence that schwann cells in the periphery trigger neuromuscular junction formation Role in synaptic activity • Glia in culture sense synaptic activity – Calcium transient currents • Release gliotransmitters in response to neuronal activity