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Bio 321 Neuroanatomy Dr. M. Yu

Bio 321 Neuroanatomy Dr. M. Yu. Nervous System Introduction. Bio 321 Neuroanatomy. Medical Significance. The brain and nervous system control all other functions of the body.

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Bio 321 Neuroanatomy Dr. M. Yu

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  1. Bio 321 Neuroanatomy Dr. M. Yu

  2. Nervous System Introduction Bio 321 Neuroanatomy

  3. Medical Significance • The brain and nervous system control all other functions of the body. • The extreme importance of the nervous system in medicine is based on the serious nature of the many disorders affecting its structures (more than 1000 disorders). • Causes more hospitalization than any other diseases, including heart diseases and cancers. • Neurological diseases affect 50 million Americans and costs us about $400 billions annually

  4. Introduction • In this country alone, the numbers are overwhelming: • 1. Cerebrovascular Disease - is the 3rd ranking cause of death - vascular conditions of brain & spinal cord annually kill ~500,000 • 2. Epileptics seizures ~ 1,500,000 • 3. Movement disorders affect another one million people • 4. There are ~ 2 million totally blind individuals; & over 13 million with visual impairments • 5. There are ~ 17 million totally or partially deaf persons

  5. Introduction • 6. Over 3 million people are afflicted with Alzheimer’s disease • 7. At least 700,000 have cerebral palsy • 8. More than 250,000 have multiple sclerosis • 9. In addition, there are over 500,000 accidental head and spine injuries annually; fortunately only a minority of which actually injure the brain or spinal cord • 10. Acute head injury is the leading cause of death or disability between ages 2 & 40 (as of 1995)

  6. Cellular Components of the Nervous System • Neurons - the primary functional cells in the nervous system (- approx. 100 Billion in CNS) • 1. responsible for initiating & conducting electrical signals by which nervous system communicates • 2. size & shape varies greatly between regions of the nervous system & with respective functions • 3. mature neurons do NOT divide or replicate, do NOT regenerate following injury

  7. Anatomic features (common to all neurons) • 1. Soma - cell body • metabolic center of cell • typical cellular organelles: large clear nucleus, nucleolus, mitochondria, ER, Golgi Apparatus, lysosomes • 2. endoplasmic reticulum - a characteristic feature of neurons: - high concentration of RER (granules, form Nissl substance, stain basic)

  8. Neurons • 3. Cytoplasmic fibrils - another distinguishing feature of neurons, make up cytoskeleton • a. Neurofilaments: intermediate cytoskeletal filaments - abundant, found throughout soma & along processes (10 nm in diameter) – a principle support system component • b. Neurotubules (Microtubules): especially abundant in dendrites - found in cytoplasmic, axonal transport, movement of organelles throughout cell - (20-30 nm in diameter) = microtubules, oriented lengthwise • c. Microfilaments: thinnest, associated with external membrane & dendritic spines - anchor membrane constituents, hold Receptors in place - (5 nm in diameter) = microfilaments in other cells Processes of neurons

  9. Dendrites • Dendrites - number, length, degree of ramification varies between neuronal types • a. usually many per neuron, typically branch extensively • b. carry incoming signals toward soma • c. neuron signal receptors (the dendritic field of a cell = its receptive field)

  10. Axon • Axon - one per neuron • a. conducting process - carries info away from soma, toward other neurons or effectors • b. length varies greatly, can be very long - sciatic axons > 1 meter (spine -> foot) • c. no ribosomes, no protein synthesis, depend on axonal cytoplasmic transport from soma • d. collaterals = branches of axon, degree of branching varies greatly

  11. Axon • Axon Hillock = Initial segment (of axon) • a. base of axon as it leaves soma - looks pale (no Nissl staining) • b. specialized segment of membrane for action potential initiation due to lower threshold than rest of cell • c. also has an extremely high concentration of voltage-gated ion channels • d. allows action potential conduction to travel in ONE direction

  12. Terms • 1. Nucleus - a group of neuronal cell bodies within the central nervous system, eg lateral geniculate nucleus • 2. Ganglion (ganglia, pl) - group of cell bodies in peripheral nervous system • 3. Nerve - collection of axons in the PNS (tract, fasciculus = a bundle of nerve fibers) • 4. White matter - axons, myelinated • 5. Gray matter - concentrations of cell bodies and unmyelinated dendrites

  13. Classification of neurons • A. based on processes: • 1. Unipolar neurons a. • a single primary process extends from soma, which can branch into dendrites & axon • b. the principle neuronal cell type of invertebrates • c. Pseudounipolar neurons, e.g. dorsal root ganglion cells, appear unipolar, in embryo are actually bipolar; axon & dendrite extensions fuse • 2. Bipolar neurons - e.g. bipolar cells in retina • - axon & dendrite both extend from soma, from opposite ends • 3. Multipolar neurons • a. multiple dendritic branches from all parts of soma, & one axon • b. many variations due to length, number of dendrites, length of axon • c. e.g. pyramidal neuron, spinal motor neuron, purkinje neuron

  14. Classification of neurons • B. Based on functions • Sensory neurons: carry sensory information from • Motor neurons: carry motor information to muscle sand glands • Interneurons: in between sensory and motor • Projection neuron / relay neuron: has long fibers and project information from on region to another

  15. Classification of neurons • C. Based on orientation • 1. Afferent - refers to the neuron or process extending toward the cell in question • 2. Efferent - refers to the neuron or process extending away from the cell in question

  16. Neuroglial (Glia) • supporting cells - Do not conduct action potential, body has 10-15 times more glia cells than neurons (about one trillion) • Derived from Neuroectodermal and mesodermal origin

  17. Neuroectodermal origin: #1-4 • 1. Schwann cells • - form myelin sheath which insulates an axon in peripheral nerves • - cell winds around axon, inside its own layers, piling up layers of lipid/protein cell membranes • - one Schwann cell associates with and myelinates a segment of only one axon • - Schwann cell, myelin, axon are all surrounded by a basement membrane (covers whole unit) • - help to buffer excess extracellular K+ (prevent rampant depolarization) • - myelin sheath insulation greatly speeds conduction

  18. 2. Oligodendroglia • same function as Schwann cells, but for axons of neurons in central nervous system • have small, round, dense nuclei • unlike Schwann cells, can myelinate a segment of several axons • no basement membrane surrounds the axon like Schwann cells do in PNS • these features affect ability of CNS cells to regenerate following injury (vs. PNS)

  19. 3. Astrocytes • named from ‘star’ appearance of processes radiating out from soma • oval nuclei (larger & much less dense than oligodendroglia)

  20. Function of Astrocytes • i. nutritive: form significant portion of brain blood barrier (BBB), surrounding CNS vasculature • thought to be important communicators between neurons and capillaries • transport nutrients, ions, molecules from capillary to neurons • ii. healing: act as scavengers, remove neuronal debris, seal off area for healing • iii. buffers excess extracellular K+ , preventing excess depolarization • iv. remove chemical neurotransmitters from synaptic clefts - high affinity for specific neurotransmitters • v. support: provide structure, stability, act similarly to connective tissues • vi. in development: act as guides for outgrowth & migration in the developing NS

  21. Types of astrocytes • Distinguished by localization, not on any functional difference • i. fibrous astrocytes - name for those in, around white matter (areas rich in axons) • ii. protoplasmic astrocytes - those in gray matter, near synapses, dendrites

  22. 4. Ependymal cells • layer of ciliated columnar epithelial cells with tight junctions which line cavities of the neural tube (cerebral ventricles, spinal cord central canal) • a. this layer forms a selective barrier between nervous tissue & ventricular fluid • b. also forms choroid plexus - produces cerebral spinal fluid by filtering its components from blood

  23. Glial cells of mesodermal origin • Microglia • - cells from mesoderm which migrate into CNS • - normally in small numbers, proliferate as needed • - become macrophages in response to injury or damage, • - act as scavengers, have a phagocytic role in removing debris, damaged cells

  24. Synapse • A. Chemical synapse • Presynaptic membrane, postsynaptic membrane, and synaptic cleft • can also be classified as: axodendritic, axosomatic, axoaxonal, and dendrodendritic • neurotransmitter (adrenaline, acetylcholine, dopamine, serotonin, glutamic acid…) • neuro-modulators (excitable or inhibitive neurotransmitters) • B. Electrical synapse • neuron close together, rare in mammalian nervous system

  25. Meninges • There is very little connective tissue in brain tissue, except in linings of vasculature • A. CNS = meninges: Connective tissue membranes surrounding the NS • 1. pia mater - immediately next to the nervous tissue, thin & delicate • 2. arachnoid - middle layer • 3. dura mater - outermost meninges, thicker & very tough

  26. PNS: • 1. endoneurium: thin collagenous layer, immediately surrounds a myelinated nerve fiber • 2. perineurium: Connective tissue covering surrounding a fascicle of nerve fibers • 3. epineurium: thick connective tissue layer surrounding many fascicles which make up a nerve trunk • * the 3 CNS meningial layers are continuous with the connective tissue layers around PNS nerves

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