Nervous Co-ordination
- Neurones reach all parts of the body to coordinate responses
- Each neurone is made up of the following key components:
- The axon is the long fibre which transmits electrical impulses away from the cell body
- Axons are adapted to ensure fast transmission of the electrical impulse:
- A fatty layer called the myelin sheath may cover the axon to insulate it and increase the speed of the impulse
- Some axons are very long (more than a metre in length) this reduces the number of synapses, and speeds up transmission
- Branched endings called dendrites, create links between neurones
- One neurone can link with many other neurones which increases the response from a stimulus
A neurone is a nerve cell
Synapses
- A synapse is a gap between two neurones found between the terminal end of the axon of one neurone and the membrane of a dendrite of another
- Electrical impulses cannot cross synapses, instead chemicals called neurotransmitters (such as dopamine and serotonin) transmit the impulse from one neurone to the next
- This is the only part of the nervous system where messages are chemical as opposed to electrical
- Neurotransmitters diffuse across the synapse which slows down the transmission of electrical impulses
- Synapses ensure that impulses only travel in one direction
A synapse is a gap between two neurones
- The electrical impulse travels along the first axon
- When an electrical impulse arrives at the terminal end of the axon on the presynaptic neurone, chemical messengers called neurotransmitters are released from vesicles
- The neurotransmitters diffuse across the synaptic gap and bind with receptor molecules on the membrane on the dendrite of the second neurone (known as the postsynaptic membrane)
- This stimulates the second neurone to generate an electrical impulse that travels down the second axon
- The neurotransmitters are then destroyed or recycled to prevent continued stimulation of the second neurone which would cause repeated impulses to be sent
Diffusion of neurotransmitter across the synaptic cleft