6: Nervous Coordination Flashcards

Explain how neurons transmit impulses and coordinate responses. (53 cards)

1
Q

In a motor neurone, what is the long extension that carries electrical impulses away from the cell body towards an effector?

A

Axon

Motor neurones transmit impulses from the CNS to muscles or glands. The axon conducts the action potential along the neurone.

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2
Q

What insulating structure surrounds many motor neurone axons and increases the speed of impulse transmission?

A

Myelin sheath

The myelin sheath is formed by Schwann cells and allows impulses to travel faster via saltatory conduction.

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3
Q

Fill in the blanks:

The electrical charge difference across the membrane of an unstimulated neurone is known as the ______ ______.

A

resting potential

Typically about −70 mV. It exists because of ion distribution and membrane permeability differences.

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4
Q

During the resting state, which ion has a higher concentration outside the neurone than inside?

A

Sodium ions

Na⁺ concentration is higher outside the axon, while K⁺ concentration is higher inside.

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5
Q

Which ion is at a higher concentration inside the neurone compared with outside during the resting state?

A

Potassium ions

Maintained by selective permeability and the sodium–potassium pump.

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6
Q

True or False:

At resting potential, the neurone membrane is more permeable to potassium ions than to sodium ions.

A

True

K⁺ leak channels allow potassium ions to diffuse out more readily than Na⁺ diffuses in.

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7
Q

What is the rapid reversal of membrane potential caused by increased sodium ion permeability called?

A

Depolarisation

Voltage-gated Na⁺ channels open, allowing Na⁺ to diffuse into the neurone.

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8
Q

What name is given to the electrical change that travels along the axon of a neurone?

A

Action potential

The action potential propagates along the axon and forms the basis of nerve impulses.

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9
Q

True or False:

The strength of an action potential varies depending on stimulus intensity.

A

False

Action potentials follow the all-or-nothing principle; they occur fully or not at all.

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10
Q

What principle states that once threshold is reached, an action potential occurs at full size?

A

All-or-nothing principle

A stimulus below threshold produces no action potential; above threshold produces a full response.

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11
Q

Fill in the blank:

The jumping movement of impulses between nodes of Ranvier in myelinated neurones is called ______ conduction.

A

saltatory

Saltatory conduction greatly increases conduction speed because depolarisation only occurs at nodes.

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12
Q

What term describes the short period after an action potential when another cannot be generated?

A

Refractory period

Ensures impulses are discrete and limits the maximum frequency of nerve impulse transmission.

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13
Q

True or False:

Increasing axon diameter generally increases the speed of nerve impulse conduction.

A

True

Larger diameters reduce internal resistance to ion flow.

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14
Q

What physical factor, related to kinetic energy of ions, can increase the speed of nerve impulse transmission when it rises?

A

Temperature

Higher temperatures increase ion movement, speeding up depolarisation and conduction.

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15
Q

What narrow gap separates the presynaptic neurone from the postsynaptic cell at a synapse?

A

Synaptic cleft

The synaptic cleft is the small space across which neurotransmitter diffuses.

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16
Q

Which part of the presynaptic neurone contains synaptic vesicles filled with neurotransmitter?

A

Synaptic knob

The synaptic knob is the swollen ending of the presynaptic neurone.

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17
Q

What structure in the postsynaptic membrane contains receptors that bind acetylcholine?

A

Ligand-gated sodium ion channels

Acetylcholine binds to receptors associated with sodium ion channels in a cholinergic synapse.

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18
Q

Which ion entering the presynaptic knob triggers synaptic vesicles to move to and fuse with the presynaptic membrane?

A

Calcium ions

Arrival of an action potential opens voltage-gated calcium ion channels.

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19
Q

What happens first when an action potential reaches the presynaptic membrane?

A

Depolarisation of the presynaptic membrane

This depolarisation opens voltage-gated calcium ion channels.

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20
Q

After calcium ions enter the synaptic knob, what process releases acetylcholine into the synaptic cleft?

A

Exocytosis

Synaptic vesicles fuse with the presynaptic membrane and release neurotransmitter.

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21
Q

Once released, how does acetylcholine cross the synaptic cleft?

A

Diffusion

Acetylcholine moves down its concentration gradient to the postsynaptic membrane.

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22
Q

What immediate effect does acetylcholine binding have on the postsynaptic membrane?

A

Sodium ion channels open

Sodium ions diffuse in, causing depolarisation of the postsynaptic membrane.

23
Q

What name is given to the depolarisation produced in the postsynaptic membrane when neurotransmitter binds?

A

Excitatory postsynaptic potential

An excitatory postsynaptic potential makes the postsynaptic neurone more likely to fire.

24
Q

What enzyme rapidly breaks down acetylcholine in the synaptic cleft?

A

Acetylcholinesterase

This prevents continuous stimulation of the postsynaptic membrane.

25
Why is transmission across a **cholinergic synapse** **unidirectional**?
Receptors are only on the postsynaptic membrane. ## Footnote Vesicles release acetylcholine from the presynaptic side only, so impulses pass one way.
26
Why does **breakdown of acetylcholine** matter for **repeated signalling**?
It prevents continuous depolarisation. ## Footnote The membrane can repolarise and be ready for a new signal.
27
# Fill in the blank: In a **cholinergic synapse**, acetylcholine is hydrolysed into acetate and _\_\_\_\_.
choline ## Footnote Choline is reabsorbed into the presynaptic neurone and reused to make acetylcholine.
28
What happens to **choline** after acetylcholine is broken down in the **synaptic cleft**?
It is reabsorbed into the presynaptic neurone. ## Footnote It is recycled to synthesise more acetylcholine.
29
What is **temporal summation** at a synapse?
Addition of successive impulses from one neurone. ## Footnote Rapid, repeated release of neurotransmitter can build depolarisation to threshold.
30
What is **spatial summation** at a synapse?
Addition of impulses from several neurones at once. ## Footnote Neurotransmitter released from different presynaptic neurones combines at one postsynaptic neurone.
31
Why might one **excitatory impulse** fail to trigger an **action potential** in the postsynaptic neurone?
Depolarisation does not reach threshold. ## Footnote A single excitatory postsynaptic potential may be too small on its own.
32
# True or False: **Temporal summation** depends on impulses arriving from different **presynaptic neurones** at the same time.
False ## Footnote That describes spatial summation; temporal summation is repeated impulses from one neurone.
33
# True or False: **Spatial summation** can allow a postsynaptic neurone to reach **threshold** when several excitatory synapses are active together.
True ## Footnote The combined depolarisations may be enough to trigger an action potential.
34
How do **inhibitory synapses** reduce the chance of an **action potential** being generated?
They hyperpolarise the postsynaptic membrane. ## Footnote Inhibitory neurotransmitters often cause chloride ions to enter or potassium ions to leave.
35
What is the effect of **chloride ions** entering the **postsynaptic neurone** at an inhibitory synapse?
hyperpolarisation ## Footnote The membrane potential becomes more negative and further from threshold.
36
How can an **inhibitory synapse** counteract an **excitatory synapse** on the same postsynaptic neurone?
By cancelling depolarisation ## Footnote The combined effect may prevent threshold from being reached.
37
# True or False: **Inhibitory synapses** make the inside of the postsynaptic neurone **less negative**.
False ## Footnote They usually make it more negative, moving the membrane potential away from threshold.
38
What specialised region of a **muscle fibre** acts as the **postsynaptic membrane** at a neuromuscular junction?
Sarcolemma ## Footnote The synapse is between a motor neurone and a muscle fibre rather than another neurone.
39
What is the usual effect when an **action potential** reaches a **neuromuscular junction**?
Contraction of the muscle fibre ## Footnote Neuromuscular junctions are designed to ensure a reliable response in the muscle.
40
Give one structural feature that makes a **neuromuscular junction** well adapted for **rapid transmission** to a muscle fibre.
Many folds in the postsynaptic membrane. ## Footnote These folds increase surface area for receptors and help transmission.
41
Compared with a typical **cholinergic synapse** between neurones, how does the amount of **acetylcholine released** at a neuromuscular junction differ?
More acetylcholine is released. ## Footnote This helps ensure the muscle fibre reaches threshold.
42
Compared with many neurone-to-neurone synapses, how is the **postsynaptic membrane** at a **neuromuscular junction** adapted?
More receptors ## Footnote The high receptor density increases the chance of depolarising the muscle fibre.
43
# True or False: Both **cholinergic synapses** and **neuromuscular junctions** use acetylcholine as the neurotransmitter.
True ## Footnote The difference is mainly in the type of postsynaptic cell and reliability of transmission.
44
# True or False: A **neuromuscular junction** links one neurone directly to another neurone.
False ## Footnote It links a motor neurone to a muscle fibre.
45
Why is transmission at a **neuromuscular junction** less likely to fail than at a **cholinergic synapse** between neurones?
It produces a larger end-plate potential. ## Footnote More neurotransmitter, more receptors and membrane folds make transmission highly reliable.
46
# Fill in the blank: The small depolarisation produced in the **muscle fibre membrane** at a neuromuscular junction is called an end-plate _\_\_\_\_.
potential ## Footnote If this reaches threshold, an action potential spreads across the sarcolemma.
47
What would be the effect of a drug that blocks **voltage-gated calcium ion channels** in the **presynaptic membrane**?
Less acetylcholine released. ## Footnote Without calcium ion influx, vesicles are less likely to fuse with the membrane.
48
What effect would a drug that **inhibits acetylcholinesterase** have on the **postsynaptic membrane**?
Prolonged depolarisation ## Footnote Acetylcholine would remain in the cleft longer and continue to stimulate receptors.
49
What would happen if **receptor proteins** on the **postsynaptic membrane** were blocked by a drug?
Sodium ion channels would not open. ## Footnote Acetylcholine could not trigger the usual depolarisation.
50
Predict the effect of a drug that prevents **synaptic vesicles** fusing with the **presynaptic membrane**.
Neurotransmitter would not be released. ## Footnote No acetylcholine in the cleft means no postsynaptic depolarisation.
51
What would be the likely effect of a drug that increases **chloride ion movement** into the **postsynaptic neurone**?
Inhibition would increase. ## Footnote Greater hyperpolarisation makes an action potential less likely.
52
Why can **low-frequency impulses** fail to produce a response, while **high-frequency impulses** can succeed?
Temporal summation ## Footnote Repeated impulses arriving close together build the depolarisation to threshold.
53
Why can several **weak inputs** arriving together trigger an **action potential** when each alone cannot?
Spatial summation ## Footnote Their combined excitatory effects can bring the postsynaptic membrane to threshold.