Roles of synapses

Cards (8)

  • What are the roles of synapses?
    • keeps an action potential travelling in one direction
    • filters out background stimuli
  • How do synapses keep an action potential travelling in one direction?
    • vesicles containing acetylcholine are only found in the pre-synaptic membrane
    • receptor proteins and Na+ channels are only found on the post-synaptic membrane
  • How do synapses filter out background stimuli?
    • not enough Na+ channels open
    • threshold potential isn't met in the post-synaptic neurone
    • there isn't enough depolarisation to stimulate an action potential
  • If an action potential from a pre-synaptic neurone isn't sufficient enough to generate an action potential in the post-synaptic neurone, summation (adding neurotransmitters together) can occur
  • What are the 2 types of summation?
    • temporal summation
    • spatial summation
  • What is temporal summation?
    • where sufficient acetylcholine is released over time
    • requires a high frequency of action potentials in the pre-synaptic neurone
    • otherwise acetylcholine will be hydrolysed in the synaptic cleft by acetylcholinesterase
  • What is spatial summation?
    • where there are many pre-synaptic neurones that synapse with one post-synaptic neurone
    • although the amount of acetylcholine released by each pre-synaptic neurone is small and not enough to generate an action potential, the total amount is
  • What are the uses of ATP in synaptic transmission?
    • exocytosis
    • reuptake and resynthesis of acetylcholine
    • packaging of acetylcholine into vesicles
    • protein synthesis (ion channels, transport proteins, receptor proteins)
    • active transport of Ca2+ out of the pre-synaptic bulb