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neuron
specialized cell directly involved in the conduction and transmission of nerve impulses
cell body
portion of a nerve cell that contains the nucleus and other organelles and has extensions called axons and dendrites projecting from it
dendrite
extension of a nerve cell that receives impulses and transmits them inward toward the cell body
myelin sheath
concentric layers of membrane that surround an axon and serve as electrical insulation that allows rapid transmission of nerve impulses
node of ranvier
small segment of bare axon between successive segments of myelin sheath
nerve
a tissue composed of bundles of axons
synaptic bouton
region near the end of an axon where neurotransmitter molecules are stored for use in transmitting signals across the synapse
synapse
tiny gap between a neuron and another cell, across which the nerve impulse is transferred by direct electrical connection or by neurotransmitters
resting membrane potential
electrical potential (voltage) across the plasma membrane of an unstimulated nerve cell
current
movement of positive or negative ions
electroneutrality
principle that positively and negatively charged ions balance one another in solution
squid giant axon
an exceptionally large axon emerging from certain squid nerve; wide diameter makes it relatively easy to insert microelectrodes that can measure and control electrical potentials and ionic currents
electrical excitability
ability to respond to certain types of stimuli with a rapid series of changes in membrane potential known as an action potential
leak channel
non-gated ion channel that helps to maintain steady-state ion concentrations of cells at electrochemical equilibrium, including potassium and sodium ions
depolarization
change in membrane potential to a less-negative value
patch clamping
technique in which a tiny micropipette placed on the surface of a cell is used to measure the movement of ions through individual ion channels
voltage-gated ion channel
an integral membrane protein that forms an ion-conducting pore whose permeability is regulated by changes in the membrane potential
ligand-gated ion channel
an integral membrane protein that forms an ion-conducting pore that opens when a specific molecule binds to the channel
channel gating
closing of a membrane ion channel in such a way that it can reopen immediately in response to an appropriate stimulus
voltage sensor
amino acid segment of a voltage-gated ion channel that makes the channel responsive to changes in membrane potential
channel inactivation
closing of a membrane ion channel in such a way that it cannot reopen immediately
threshold potential
value of the membrane potential that must be reached before an action potential is triggered
action potential
brief change in membrane potential involving an initial depolarization followed by a rapid return to the normal resting potential; caused by the inward movement of Na+ followed by the subsequent outward movement of K+; serves as the means of transmission of a nerve impulse
propagation
movement of an action potential along a membrane away from the site of origin
hyperpolarization (undershoot)
transient hyperpolarization that occurs at the end of an action potential during which the membrane potential briefly becomes even more negative than it normally is at rest; due to the transient increase in potassium permeability
absolute refractory period
brief time during which the sodium channels of a nerve cell are inactivated and cannot be opened by depolarization
relative refractory period
time during the hyperpolarization phase of an action potential when the sodium channels of a nerve cell are capable of opening again, but it is difficult to trigger an action potential because Na+ currents are opposed by larger K+ currents
passive spread of depolarization
process in which cations move away from the site of membrane depolarization to regions of membrane where the potential is more negative
axon hillock
region at the base of an axon where action potentials are initiated most easily
nerve impulse
signal transmitted along nerve cells by a wave of depolarization-repolarization events propagated along the axonal membrane
oligodendrocyte
cell type in the central nervous system that forms the myelin sheath around nerve axons
schwann cell
cell type in the peripheral nervous system that forms the myelin sheath around nerve axons
electrical synapse
junction between two nerve cells where nerve impulses are transmitted by direct movement of ions through gap junctions without the involvement of chemical neurotransmitters
presynaptic neuron
a neuron that transmits a signal to another neuron through a synapse
postsynaptic neuron
a neuron that receives a signal from another neuron through a synapse
chemical synapse
junction between two nerve cells where a nerve impulse is transmitted between the cells by neurotransmitters that diffuse across the synaptic cleft from the presynaptic cell to the postsynaptic cell
synaptic cleft
gap between the presynaptic and postsynaptic membranes at the junction between two nerve cells
neurotransmitter
chemical released by a neuron that transmits nerve impulses across a synapse
acetylcholine
the most common excitatory neurotransmitter used at synapses between neurons outside the central nervous system
cholinergic synapse
a synapse that uses acetylcholine as the neurotransmitter
voltage-gated calcium channel
an integral membrane protein in the terminal bulb of presynaptic neurons that forms a calcium ion conducting pore whose permeability is regulated by the membrane potential
neurosecretory vesicle
a small vesicle containing neurotransmitter molecules; located in terminal bulb of an axon
active zone
region of the presynaptic membrane of an axon where neurosecretory vesicles dock
acetylcholinesterase
an enzyme that hydrolyzes acetylcholine into acetic acid and choline to restore the membrane to its polarized state
neurotransmitter reuptake
mechanism for removing neurotransmitters from the synaptic cleft by pumping them back into the presynaptic axon terminals or nearby support cells
EPSP
small depolarization of the postsynaptic membrane triggered by binding of an excitatory neurotransmitter to its receptor; can trigger an action potential if it exceeds its threshold level
IPSP
small hyperpolarization of the postsynaptic membrane triggered by binding of an inhibitory neurotransmitter to its receptor, thereby reducing the amplitude of subsequent EPSP and possibly preventing the firing of an action potential