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Nervous System II. SBI4U. Synaptic Transmission. Synaptic Transmission. 2 types of synapses: Chemical & Electrical Neurotransmitter-Receptor vs. Gap junctions. Electrical signals & electical synapse. Plasma membrane of presynaptic and postsynaptic cell are in direct contact.
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Nervous System II SBI4U
Synaptic Transmission • 2 types of synapses: Chemical & Electrical • Neurotransmitter-Receptor vs. Gap junctions
Electrical signals & electical synapse • Plasma membrane of presynaptic and postsynaptic cell are in direct contact. • Current flows directly (unbroken transmission of electrical signal) • Faster neural transmission than chemical synapse
Resting membrane potential Membrane potential: imbalance between charges outside and inside the membrane that causes an electrical (electrical difference between Na+ and K+) - 3 Na+ for every 2K+ ions pumped in(Na+/K+ active transport pump) - An unstimulated neuron has a resting membrane potential where the voltage difference in the nerve cell is – 70mV
Action potential • Membrane potential changes during an electrical impulse. • All or nothing principle : frequency of AP not magnitude (a greater stimulus faster AP not bigger)
Activity-Questions • What is all-or-none response? • What is the difference between chemical and electrical synapse? • Which area of the graph indicates the opening of Na+ channels and their diffusion into nerve cells? And when does repolarisation occur ?explain
Answers • 1. A certain threshold stimulus is required to trigger an AP along a nerve. However, once the threshold has been reached further increase in stimulus will not increase nerve response. It is all-or-none response. A nerve or muscle fibre responds completely to a stimulus or it does not at all. • 2- Electrical transmission faster, diminish as it travels, and uses excitation energy to push elecrons. • Chemical: slower, impulse remain strong, uses cellular energy to generate current
3. During depolarization of the membrane . As it is depolarized the sodium ions rush into the cell causing the membrane potential to increase. Repolarisation occurs when K+ ions diffuses out of the axon. This diffusion lowers the membrane potential of the nerve cell.