1 / 35

Welcome to 632

Welcome to 632. Nerve Muscle and Movement Chris Elliott - cje2@york.ac.uk Sean Sweeney sts1@york.ac.uk John Sparrow - jcs1@york.ac.uk Web page: http://biolpc22.york.ac.uk/632/. Course Overview. Lectures Chris 2 : Nerve and Synapse Sean 2: Synapse development Chris 2: Channels

raya-berg
Download Presentation

Welcome to 632

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Welcome to 632 Nerve Muscle and Movement Chris Elliott - cje2@york.ac.uk Sean Sweeney sts1@york.ac.uk John Sparrow - jcs1@york.ac.uk Web page: http://biolpc22.york.ac.uk/632/

  2. Course Overview • Lectures • Chris 2 : Nerve and Synapse • Sean 2: Synapse development • Chris 2: Channels • John 4: Muscle • Chris 4: Movement

  3. Nerve & brain lectures • In B006 • Nerve 1 Ionic basis of Resting and Action potentials 2 Mechanism of synaptic actions and neuromodulation 3 The Patch clamp approach to Neurobiology 4 Effect of Insecticides on Neural function

  4. Movement lectures • Neural Control of singing and hearing in insects • Locomotion • Types & Principles of locomotion • Walking running & jumping • Swimming • floating • Flying – birds, bats & insects

  5. Not only lectures… • Practicals - No • Group Case Study 30% • Exam • 70% paragraph answers; paper criticism

  6. Case Study • group of 4 - 7 • work on problem together • submit single report • choice of 4 Studies • Group list: Wednesday 3 May 1115 • e-mail appointment; or come Wed 31 May • deadline : Friday 2 June

  7. Books, etc • Purves, D (et al) (2001) Neuroscience Sinauer • Simmons PJ and Young D (1999) Nerve Cells and Animal Behaviour CUP • McNeill - Alexander R. How Animals Move [CD Rom borrow in teaching]

  8. Other books on nerve • Shepherd, G. M. (1994) Neurobiology. OUP An excellent text • Nicholls, J et al (2002) From Neuron to Brain (4th ed) • Robinson, D. Neurobiology (ISBN 3-540-63778-8): (1998)

  9. What needs explaining? • what are nerve cells like? • what happens at rest ? • Resting potentials • dynamic equilibrium • what happens when activated? • Action potentials • All-or-none • speed • comparative differences

  10. Mammalian cells • Brain has • neurons 109 • glia 3 • 109 • blood vessels • Parts of a neuron • dendrite • soma • axon

  11. Identifying cells • silver staining • fluorescent dyes • antisera

  12. Invertebrate cells • Ganglion • 400 to 106 cells • nerve or neuron?

  13. Summary so Far • Brains made of neurons and glia

  14. Contract mantle as fast as possible Big axon (250µM) insert electrodes replace contents Squid neurobiology

  15. Cells are all negative contain K+ outside Na+ anions e.g. Cl- have semi-permeable membranes Squid giant axon Resting potential

  16. Bezanilla http://pb010.anes.ucla.edu/ Animations of resting potential

  17. Balance between diffusion and electrical force? Use Nernst Equation to test this out Conclusion: passive balance is OK for squids Resting potential

  18. Summary so Far • Brains made of neurons and glia • All cells have resting potentials • Normally maintained passively by balance of diffusion and electrical forces

  19. membrane becomes permeable to Na+ Na+ floods in diffusion electrical K+ still goes out Squid giant axon Action potential

  20. Action potential • Two crucial properties of the Na+ current • starts at a voltage threshold • stops itself • Arise from Na+ channel • channel is voltage sensitive and opens • closes with a second mechanism 1ms -30mV open closed inactivated -70mV

  21. How do we know ? (i) • Hodgkin & Katz replaced Na+ in the seawater

  22. Hodgkin & Huxley devised the voltage clamp experiment separates the ionic and capacitative currents use replace ions to determine role of each How do we know ? (ii)

  23.  V  R I  Interlude • What is resistance ? • Write it down now • Rule (Ohm’s law) • V = IR • What are current and voltage? • Write it down now • Use V for voltage • use I for current

  24.  V  R I  - + C Interlude • What is capacitance? • Write it down now • Resistance Rule (Ohm’s law) • V = IR • Rule • Q=CV • dQ/dt = CdV/dt • I = dQ/dt = CdV/dt

  25. H&H Experiment • Step the clamp from -70mV to different voltages Voltage Current

  26. H &H (ii) • Add • tetrodotoxin and block Na+ current • tetra-ethyl-ammonium and block K+ current

  27. H&H reconstruction • H&H measured the kinetics of the currents • used this to postulated the kinetics of channels • used this to build a mathematical model • Animations of H&H model • Bezanilla • see http://biolpc22.york.ac.uk/632

  28. Summary so Far • Brains made of neurons and glia • All cells have resting potentials • Normally maintained passively by balance of diffusion and electrical forces • Properties of Na and K channels determine action potential

  29. How does it spread? • electrostatically

  30. How fast is the action potential? • Up to 100m/s • major component of latency to respond • for 2m high human, 2/100*1000 = 20ms • for a 40m dinosaur... • slowed by capacitance

  31. How do we know? • Myelinated axons run faster, • capacitance is reduced • channels only at Nodes of Ranvier

  32. Myelination • Schwann cell (blue) grows round axon (orange) • In Multiple sclerosis (MS) myelin sheath is disrupted

  33. Comparative neurobiology • Action potentials are not all the same • in vertebrates K+ current is very small • in molluscs, Ca++ current supplements the Na+ • only vertebrates have myelination, but all animals have glia • protozoa have action potentials too

  34. A word of caution • students often write conductance when they mean conduction • conductance is a measure of permeability • how easy it is for ions to cross the membrane • conduction is the process of movement along the axon • e.g. conduction velocity

  35. Final Summary • Brains made of neurons and glia • All cells have resting potentials • Normally maintained passively by balance of diffusion and electrical forces • Properties of Na and K channels determine action potential • Capacitance (myelination) determines speed • Web page: http://biolpc22.york.ac.uk/632/

More Related