Announcements

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Announcements • Mid term room assignments posted to webpage A – Ho S361 (Pavilion) Hoang – Lischka S309 Lishingham - Ngui S143 Nguyen – Seguin S128 Lecture 01

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Announcements. Mid term room assignments posted to webpage. Lecture 01. A. Excitor. B. Inhibitor. Record voltage. Simple case:. Threshold. A. B. Vm. hyperpolarizing  inhibitory IPSP. Depolarizing  excitatory EPSP. Threshold. A+B=smaller. Vm. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Announcements

Page 1: Announcements

Announcements• Mid term room assignments posted to

webpage

A – Ho S361 (Pavilion)

Hoang – Lischka S309

Lishingham - Ngui S143

Nguyen – Seguin S128

Sek – Zia H305

Lecture 02 S319

Lecture 01

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A. Excitor B. Inhibitor

Record voltage

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Simple case:

Vm

Threshold

Depolarizing excitatoryEPSP

hyperpolarizing inhibitoryIPSP

Vm

ThresholdBA

A+B=smaller

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How to get hyperpolarizing potential?

• Neurotransmitter receptor is permeable to an ion whose Eion is more negative than resting membrane potential

• usually Cl- or K+

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++ -80 mV

+60 mV

0 mV

Hyperpolarizing Synaptic Potential

K+

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More complex case:

Vm

Depolarizing excitatory Depolarizing

ThresholdBA

Threshold

Vm

A+B=smaller

inhibitory

Why???

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Reversal Potential

• Membrane potential at which there is no net synaptic current

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eg. Frog NMJ

Control resting membrane potential

Current source

stimulus

-100

-50

0

+25

Measuring Reversal Potential

Reversal potential

Record membrane potential

Stimulate nerve

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• Many neurotransmitter receptors are permeable to more than one ion– Non-selective

• The reversal potential depends on the equilibrium potential and permeability of each ion– It will usually be between the equilibrium

potential of the permeable ions

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eg. Acetylcholine channel

• Permeable to both K+ and Na+

• For Frog muscle:• EK = -90 mV

• ENa = +60 mV

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Vm=Erev

Erev>Vm>EK

VmEK

Na+

VmENa

K+

EK = -90 mV

Neurotransmitterreceptor

-90

ENa = +60 mV

-50

0

+25

Reversal potential

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How can depolarizing potential be inhibitory?

• Excitatory synapses have a reversal potential more positive than threshold

• Inhibitory synapses have a reversal potential more negative than threshold

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How can depolarizing potential be inhibitory?

Vm

ThresholdBA

Erev

Erev

Example: Cl- permeable receptorin a cell whose Vthresh >ECl- > Vm

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Inhibition

• Channels of inhibitory synapses ‘short-circuit’ excitatory synapses

• Because neurotransmitter channels will drive the membrane potential toward their reversal potential

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• Neurotransmitters and receptors

• Synaptic Integration

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Types of Receptors1. Ligand-gated ion channels

• Neurotransmitter binding to receptor opens an ion channel

• Directly changes the membrane potential of the postsynaptic cell

• Also known as ‘fast’ synaptic transmission

2. G-Protein Coupled Receptors• Transmitter binds to receptor which activates

intracellular molecules• Can directly or indirectly change the membrane

potential• Also known as ‘slow’ synaptic transmission

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Neurotransmitter Receptors

Ligand-gated ion channels

Acetylcholine(Nicotinic)

Excitatory

Glutamate(AMPA, NMDA)

Excitatory

Serotonin(5-HT3)

Excitatory

GABAA Inhibitory

Glycine Inhibitory

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Neurotransmitter Receptors

G-Protein coupled receptors

Acetylcholine(muscarinic)

Usually excitatory

Glutamate(metabotropic)

Variable effects

Serotonin(5-HT1-7)

Variable effects

GABABinhibitory

Same neurotransmitter, different receptors

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Activate intracellular molecules

Open or close ion channeldirect effect

G-protein coupled receptor

Regulate other cellular functionseg gene expression

GTPGDP

receptor

G-proteins

indirect effect

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What happens to neurotransmitter after it is secreted?

• Acetylcholine– Broken down by Acetylcholinesterase into

Choline and Acetate– Choline transported back into nerve terminal

and resynthesized into Acetylcholine

• Glutamate– Transported into glia or the nerve terminal

and converted to glutamine

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• Serotonin– A neurotransmitter used in the emotional

centres of the brain

– Prozac is a drug that inhibits the reuptake of serotonin

– Therefore, Prozac makes serotonin remain in synaptic cleft longer

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Synaptic Integration

The sum of all excitatory and inhibitory inputs to a cell.

1. Spatial Summation

2. Temporal Summation

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Spatial Summation• The addition of several inputs onto one

cellA B

B

A

A+B

B

A

A+B

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Temporal Summation

AStim once

Stim twice

Stim twice

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Synaptic Integration

Soma and dendritesSynaptic inputs Axon Hillock

Passive current flow

Above threshold?

Yes No

Action Potential Passive CurrentDecays to zero

Summation

Conducts down axon

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Summary

• Excitation and inhibition in relation to the reversal potential

• Fate of neurotransmitters after release

• Types of transmitters and their receptors

• Synaptic integration leading to action potentials