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Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner [email protected]

Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner [email protected]

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Page 1: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Nervous System Structure & FunctionDr. Frank [email protected]

Page 2: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Organization of the Nervous System• 1) Central nervous system (CNS)

– Brain– Spinal cord

• 2) Peripheral nervous system (PNS)– Cranial nerves– Spinal nerves– Autonomic nerves

Page 3: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu
Page 4: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu
Page 5: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

1) Central nervous system

The CNS is involved in:• Transmission of information

(signals)• Memory • Problem-solving • Input-output capability

Page 6: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

The Central Nervous System (CNS)

Brain Spinal

Cord

Page 7: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

2) Peripheral nervous system

PNS function is:• Transmission of nerve impulses

Page 8: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

The Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) PNS = only nerves, NOT spinal cord and brain

Peripheral Nerves

Cranial Nerves

Page 9: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

The Peripheral Nervous System is only involved in:

A. Transmission of information (signals)

B. Memory C. Problem-solving D. Input-output capability  

Page 10: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu
Page 11: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Positron Emission Tomography (PET) Bright spots highlight metabolically active sections of the brain during a language task. The back lights up when the person reads, the middle during active speech and the front when reasoning about the meaning of a word

Page 12: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu
Page 13: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

The Brain

Five divisions:• Telencephalon (cerebral hemispheres)• Dienencephalon (thalamus,

hypothalamus)• Mesencephalon (reflex centers)• Metencephalon (cerebellum, pons)• Myelencephalon (medulla oblongata)

Page 14: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Divisions of the CNS

Page 15: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Which of the following are not a division of the brain?

A. Telencephalon B. BenencephalonC. MesencephalonD. Metencephalon E. Myelencephalon

Page 16: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu
Page 17: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Lobes of the Brain

• Frontal lobe: reasoning• Parietal lobe: seat of sensory and

motor cortex• Temporal lobe: hearing• Occipital lobe: vision

Page 18: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

The Basal Ganglia

Page 19: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

The Limbic System

Page 20: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Which of the following is the seat of sensory and motor cortex?

A. Frontal lobeB. Parietal lobeC. Temporal lobeD. Occipital lobe

Page 21: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Properties of the Nervous System

• Nerve function is generally very similar among all mamalian species

• All neurons (nerve cells) make up the nervous system

• Neuron membranes are electrically excitable (receive and send electrical signals)

• The function of the nervous system is: a) to collect information (signals), b) to process those information, c) to generate responses to control behavior

Page 22: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Nerve Cell Terminology• The neuron (nerve cell) consists of the

soma (cell body) and all its processes (dendrites and axons)

• A dendrite is a process that conducts impulses toward the cell body

• An axon (also called nerve fiber) conducts impulses away from the cell body

• The axon is covered by a membrane, called axolemma

Page 23: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu
Page 24: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu
Page 25: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Which of the following is the typical direction of flow of information through a cortical neuron?

A. axon; dendrite; cell body; synaptic terminalB. synaptic terminal; dendrite; cell body; axonC. dendrite; cell body; synaptic terminal; axonD. synaptic terminal; cell body; axon; dendriteE. dendrite; cell body; axon; synaptic terminal

Page 26: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Three Types of Neurons

1) Sensory neurons: transmit information of an internal or external stimulus to CNS (pain, temperature, touch…)

2) Interneurons: connect neurons inside the CNS

3) Motor neurons: carry signals from CNS to effector organs like e.g., muscles, or glands

Page 27: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Nerve(bundles of axons)

Page 28: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Spinal Cord

Page 29: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Reflex Arc

Page 30: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

The axon can also be surrounded by supporting glial cells (white lipid structure), called myelin sheath. This myelin sheath is interrupted by regular spaced myelin-free gaps, called nodes of Ranvier.

Myelin Sheath

Nodes of Ranvier

Page 31: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Myelin Sheath

• Myelin is a white lipid substance that forms a sheath around the axon

• Serves as an electrical insulator• Nerve cells in the gray matter of

the CNS are not myelinated but the white matter is myelinated

Page 32: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Myelinated Axon

Page 33: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Which of the following is NOT a function of glial cells?

A. Provision of nutrition to the brainB. Insulation of a nerve cell from other

nerve cellsC. The conduction of action potentialsD. Removal of physical debris from the

brainE. Physical support of neurons

Page 34: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Axon Terminal and Synapse• The end of the axon is called axon terminals

• Continuity from one neuron to the next is

provided by the synapse • There is no physical contact between

neurons. They are separated by a gap• This gap between two neurons is called the

synaptic gap or synapse• Signals between two neurons are conducted

by chemical means through the synapse

Page 35: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Synapse and Axon Terminals

Axon Terminals

Synapse

Myelinated Axon

Page 36: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu
Page 37: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu
Page 38: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu
Page 39: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu
Page 40: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu
Page 41: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu
Page 42: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu
Page 43: Nervous System Structure & Function Dr. Frank Mitloehner fmmitloehner@ucdavis.edu

Questions?