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ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

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Page 1: ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS

The Nervous System

Page 2: ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

The nervous system

Composed of neurons 2 main systems:

Central nervous system(CNS) ________________________________

Peripheral nervous system (PNS) ________________________________

Page 3: ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

Neurons

Sensory neurons – ______________________ Motor neurons – _______________________ Connector neurons (interneurons) –

__________________________________________________________________________________

Lots and lots of neurons in body and these can differ in shape and size.

Page 4: ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

Cell structure of Neurons

Cell Body _______– contains nucleus Dendrites – ____________________________ Axon – ________________________________

Synapse – ________________________

Page 5: ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

Electrical Impulse

Electrical transmission down axon Cell membrane of axon is _____________(diff

charge between inside and outside of cell) Axon not firing = _____________charged inside

and _____________ on outside – called resting potential.

___________________________ in membrane pumps Na ions (NA+) out and K ions (K+)in.

If 2 K+ ions are pumped in, 3 Na+ ions get pumped out build up of Na+ outside and K+ inside more of a negative charge inside.

Page 6: ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

When a neuron fires

Na+ diffuse in quickly in changing the resting potential.

Depolarises membrane Inside of cell is now _____________ charged,

called action potential. Very quick As soon as the Na+ rush in the cell begins to

pump out the K+ . – Sodium-Potassium Pump Na+ then gets pumped out and K+ in bringing

the cell back to the resting potential.

Page 7: ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

Transferring a message

Depolarisation moves progressively down the axon.

Speed depends on: type of animal, size and length of axon, type of neuron.

Thicker the neuron – ______________________ Myelin sheath –

Covers axon. Made up of Schwann cells - insulates speeds up message/electrical impulse

Animals that have no myelin sheath move slowly and/or have very thick axons.

Page 8: ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

Transmission animation

One of the best animations you’ll ever see on this!!

http://outreach.mcb.harvard.edu/animations/actionpotential.swf

Page 9: ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

Neurotransmitters

Travel across the synapse Neurons don’t actually touch Chemical messages travel through, called neurotransmitters. Synaptic knobs at end of axon & contains lots of mitochondria

and secretory vesicles that release neurotransmitters. When impulse arrives, C+ diffuse in from surrounding tissue

secretory vesicles moving towards presynaptic membrane merge and release contents into synapse through exocytosis.

Neurotransmitters then diffuse across the synapse and bind with receptor proteins protein channels opening up in the membrane of the dendrites Na+ diffuse into post synaptic neuron partial depolarisation.

If lots of channels open then action potential initiated. Important that it can be stopped – done by enzymes in

synapse.

Page 10: ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

Neurotransmitters coordinating responses Lots of synapses need to fire together to

coordinate a response and initiate an action potential.

Some neurotransmitters hinder the transmission of impulses. Some cause inside on the postsynaptic membrane to become more negative than usual and harder for it to become depolarised changes in responses by nervous system. E.g. stimulations and inhibiting.

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Types of neurotransmitters

Acetylcholine Found in synapses and nerve-muscle junctions

in the voluntary NS

Decativated by enzyme _____________________

Muscle cells receive continuous signals spasms.

Found in insecticides, nerve gas etc

Page 12: ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

Nerve Gas – How it works

Symptoms Initially – runny nose, tightness in the chest and constriction of the pupils

Soon after - have difficulty breathing, and will experience nausea and drooling• The victim continues to lose control of his or her bodily functions, he or she will involuntarily salivate, urinate, defecate, and experience

gastrointestinal pain.

This phase is followed by twitching and jerking, and ultimately the victim will become comatose and suffocate as a consequence of convulsive spasms

Effects of Nerve Agents Very long lasting and cumulative (increased successive exposures).

Survivors of nerve agent poisoning almost invariably suffer chronic neurological damage.

Mechanism of Action When a normally functioning motor nerve is stimulated it releases the neurotransmitter acetylcholine, which transmits the impulse to

a muscle or organ. Once the impulse is sent, the enzyme acetylcholine esterase immediately breaks down the acetylcholine in order to allow the muscle or organ to relax.

Nerve agents disrupt the nervous system by inhibiting the enzyme acetylcholine esterase by forming a covalent bond with the site of the enzyme where acetylcholine normally undergoes hydrolysis (breaks down). The result is that acetylcholine builds up and continues to act so that any nerve impulses are continually transmitted, and muscle contractions do not stop.

This same action also occurs at the gland and organ levels, resulting in uncontrolled drooling, tearing of the eyes (lacrimation), and excess production of mucous from the nose (rhinorrhea).

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Drugs and the nervous system Recreational drugs affect signal transmission Caffeine, amphetamines, ecstasy & cocain

promote the release of noradrenaline (released in response to stress) stimulants.

Opiates (heroin, morphine, codeine) block nerve transmission in the sensory pathways of the CNS that signal pain. They are used as pain killers. Inhibit centers in brain that control coughing,

breathing and digestion. Psychedelic drugs (LSD & mescaline) block

reabsorbtion of neurotransmitter dopamine increased dopamine in brain hallucinations.

Page 14: ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

Natural drugs and the nervous system Endorphins

Relieve pain Bring on feelings of euphoria Lock onto same receptors in brain as do

those of morphine. Released when brain experiences pain as

well as other things. E.g. acupuncture, chilli, chocolate etc.

Page 15: ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

Differences/Similarities between neurotransmitter and hormone?Neurotransmitter Hormone

Only affect cells in their area Paracrine hormones

Noradrenaline very similar & respond to stress

Adrenaline & responds to stress

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When transmission fails

You can get sick and die! E.g. Multiple sclerosis –

______________________________________________________________________

Poisons or venoms interfere with neurotransmitters. They block postsynaptic receptors between effector neurons and skeletal muscles which prevents the muscles contracting ______________.

Parkinson’s disease – secretion of ____________ is disrupted.

Page 17: ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

Transferring signals between organisms Visual signals

Light energy photoreceptors (rods & cones)converted into an action potential that travel along neurons to brain.

Olfactory signalling (smell) Detected by specific olfactory receptor neurons

lining the nose. Olfactory signal relayed through the neurone

using cyclic AMP as a second messenger ion channels opening in cell membrane increase in Na+ depolarisation of olfactory receptor neurons & initiates a nerve impulse that travels to the brain.

Can be used to detect pheromones.

Page 18: ELECTRICAL COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS The Nervous System

Pheromones

Chemicals emitted by living organisms to send messages to individuals of the same species.

Social pheromones When fear some animals will release pheromones

that can be detected by others near by for assistance.

Sexual pheromones Attractants

Mammals E.g. dog’s marking territory with sniffing Women and menstrual cycles.