Synaptic transmission

Cards (4)

  • How does synaptic transmission occur?
    1. The arrival of an action potential at the axon terminal causes the voltage gated Ca2+ channels to open. Ca2+ move into the axon terminal by facilitated diffusion.
    2. Synaptic vesicles containing the neurotransmitter acetylcholine move towards and fuse with the pre-synaptic membrane
    3. Acetylcholine is released by exocytosis and it diffuses across the synaptic cleft
    4. Acetylcholine binds to the binding site of a receptor protein on the post-synaptic membrane
  • How does synaptic transmission occur 2?
    5. This bind stimulates the opening of Na+ channels, so Na+ moves into the post-synaptic neurone by facilitated diffusion.
    6.If threshold is achieved (as sufficient Na+ enters), an action potential will be generated in the post-synaptic neurone
    7. Acetylcholine is broken down by acetylcholinesterase by hydrolysis, so it changes shape and can no longer bind to the receptor proteins
  • How does synaptic transmission occur 3?
    8. Na+ channels close
    9. There is reuptake of acetyl and choline into the synaptic bulb. Acetylcholine is resynthesised and repackaged into vesicles. All of this requires ATP.
  • Label this diagram of a synapse
    A) pre-synaptic neurone
    B) synaptic bulb
    C) synaptic cleft/space
    D) post-synaptic neurone
    E) Ca2+ channel
    F) synaptic vesicle containing acetylcholine
    G) pre-synaptic membrane
    H) post-synaptic membrane
    I) protein receptor
    J) ion channel