Neuroethology - Biology 419/580 |
Bowling Green State University, Spring 2004 |
Chemical synapses: A one-directional connection made between nerve or muscle cells where the signal leads to the release of a neurotransmitter from the presynaptic terminal, diffusion across the synaptic cleft, and binding to receptors in the postsynaptic membrane. Receptors: ionotropic or metabotropic. Binding alters ion conductances at the postsynaptic cell membrane (e.g., increase in Na+ conductance is excitatory, CL- is inhibitory). Excitatory, the postsynaptic cell is depolarized with an excitatory post-synaptic potential (EPSP) and an action potential is elicited if the threshold is reached; inhibitory, the postsynaptic cell is hyperpolarized with an inhibitory post-synaptic potential (IPSP) and it will thus be harder for other inputs to drive the cell towards an action potential. A single input is rarely sufficient to lead to an action potential in the post-synaptic cell. Multiple EPSPs may add and reach the threshold when a series of action potentials arrive at high rate . Chemical synapses are capable of integrating a complex scenario of inputs:
Spatial and Temporal Summation of EPSPs, e.g. excitation from several neurons has to arrive concurrently for an activation of the crayfish lateral giant interneuron
<Neurotransmitter> refers to a compound that is released at a synapse and diffuses across the synaptic cleft to act on a receptor located on the membrane of a postsynaptic cell, which may be another neurone, a muscle cell or a specialized gland cell. It is released from nerve endings by nerve impulse activity at morphologically distinguishable synaptic junctions producing suitable changes in the excitability of the postsynaptic membrane. Ca2+ influx at the axon terminus is required for synaptic release.
<Neuromodulator> refers to a compound that is released within a localized region of CNS, the receptor for which is not necessarily sited on an anatomically apposed postsynaptic cell. Thus a neuromodulator may affect several postsynaptic cells with specificity conferred mainly by the distribution of receptors. Main action is on second messenger systems, eg. cAMP or inositole triphosphate, presumably affecting protein phosphorylation
Sometimes the same neurochemical may have rapid transmitter type effects, followed by longer modulatory influences. This suggests that neurotransmitter and neuromodulator effects may be most effectively classified at the receptor level. Activation of receptors on a protein structure directly incorporating an ion channel (a ionophore) are defined as neurotransmission while activation of receptors coupled indirectly to ion channels (eg. via second messanger systems) are defined as neuromodulation (Hasselmo, 1995).