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Synaptic and Junctional Transmission
Transmission of impulses between nerves or nerves and muscle or
gland
Types of transmission:
- Electrical synapse or Gap junction - action potential passes
directly from cell to cell, connexon proteins form tunnel that connects cells'
cytoplasm, 2-way transmission, allows for synchronization of activity, faster
than chemical, occurs in smooth and cardiac muscle
- Chemical synapse - action potential produces a chemical
signal that crosses the space and produces a new action potential, 1-way,
allows for modification
Chemical Synapse
Transmission is not jumping of action potential but a
complex chemical process permitting grading and modulation (frequency change)
of neural activity
Components of chemical synapse:
- Presynaptic neuron - neuron sending the impulse
- Axon of presynaptic neuron terminates on the soma or
dendritic region of the postsynaptic neuron
- Axon ends in terminal branches with synaptic knobs that
contain many mitochondria and vesicles of a chemical neurotransmitter
- Number of knobs per cell varies, (1-40,000)
- Synaptic cleft - space between cells across which an
impulse must be transmitted
- No direct connection, about 20-50 nm space between
presynaptic and postsynaptic
- Postsynaptic neuron - neuron receiving impulse
- Neurotransmitter produces the action potential
- Divergence - axon divides into many terminal branches and
projects to many postsynaptic neurons
- Convergence - neuron may receive input from thousands of
other neurons
- Oscillating
circuit - neuron provides positive feedback to presynaptic neurons, prolongs
response to stimulus
Transmission process
- Presynaptic action potential causes voltage-gated
Ca+2 channels to open in synaptic knobs
- Ca+2 diffuses in along its
concentration gradient
- Ca+2 stimulates exocytosis of vesicles and
releases neurotransmitter into the cleft
- Transmitter diffuses across cleft
- Synaptic delay (0.2-0.5 msec) - time between presynaptic
action potential and PSP
- Fewer synapses produce shorter delay
- Transmitter binds to receptor sites on postsynaptic and
causes Na+ channels to open
- Ligand-activated receptors specific for
neurotransmitter
- Influx of Na+ produces a graded postsynaptic
potential (PSP)
- PSP can be depolarizing (excitatory) or hyperpolarizing
(inhibitory)
- Transmitter removed from cleft
- By diffusion, enzymatic degradation (e.g. cholinesterase)
or cellular uptake (monoamines by synaptic knobs)
- Na+ channels close
- Synaptic fatigue - no neurotransmitter remaining in
presynaptic knobs
Integration and modulation at synapse
- Presynaptic output - by modifying the quantity of
neurotransmitter released
- Facilitation - axon of a 2nd neuron synapses
with the presynaptic axon
- 2nd neuron releases excitatory
neurotransmitter that increases number of presynaptic vesicles of
1st neuron to exocytose
- enhances and prolongs effects on postsynaptic
neuron, ex. Serotonin
- Inhibition - axon of a 2nd neuron synapses
with the presynaptic axon
- 2nd neuron releases inhibitory
neurotransmitter that decreases transmitter released by 1st
neuron
- Postsynaptic input: by summation of PSPs, additive effect
- Neurotransmitter released from 1 synaptic knob produces
a small PSP at one location, insufficient to produce action potential and
gradually decays
- Depolarizing PSP is called an Excitatory
Postsynaptic Potential or EPSP, result of chemical-gated Na+
channels opening, lasts about 20 msec
- Hyperpolarizing PSP is called an Inhibitory
Postsynaptic Potential or IPSP, result of chemical-gated K+ or
Cl -channels
- Summation effects
- If the sum of EPSPs minus the sum of IPSPs exceeds
stimulus threshold then action potentials will be generated at the initial
segment of the axon as long as the sum is above threshold
- Subthreshold EPSPs and IPSPs decay
- If IPSPs are greater, neuron is unable to generate
any action potentials
- Types of summation
- Spatial - large number presynaptic terminals fire at
same time
- Temporal - same presynaptic terminals fire in rapid
succession
- Types of neurotransmitters
- Acetylcholine - ACh, is excitatory at skeletal
neuromuscular junction, is inhibitory in vagus nerve to the cardiac muscle
- Catecholamines\monoamines - epinephrine, norepinephrine
and dopamine can be excitatory or inhibitory depending on the receptors
- Amino acids - GABA and glycine are inhibitory in the
brain. Glutamate and aspartate are excitatory
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