Neuroscience
Neuroscience
The study of how the brain and nervous system affect processes and behaviour is called neuroscience.
Communication in the Brain
The brain communicates with itself and the rest of the body over networks of specialized information
carrying cells called neurons. Neurons use a sophisticated communication system to conduct signals
across these neural networks, enabling us to control our bodies. For example, when you touch a hot stove,
neurons in your fingers tip sends information up your arm to your spinal column. In response to this
possible threat, signals are sent back out from the spine to the muscles in your arm. The result, a quick,
reflexive jerking of your arm away from the hot stove.
The brain may roughly contain 86 billion neurons and similar numbers of another type of cell called glia
cells. Glia cells are brain cells that provide important support functions for the neurons and are involved
in the formation of myelin (support include providing nutrients and waste removal). When specialized
glia cells wrap around a neuron they form myelin, resulting in a whitish, fatty, waxy coating that serves to
protect the neuron and speed up the neural signals it sends.
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is one disease that attacks and destroy the myelin insulation on neurons. People
with MS have difficulty controlling the actions of their body and have sensory problems including
numbers and vision loss. When myelin breaks down neural signals are greatly slowed or halted altogether.
Initially, movement becomes difficult; as disease progresses, voluntary movement of some muscle may
become difficult. Sensory systems like vision may also fall because incoming signals from the eye do not
reach the vision-processing parts of the brain. Life becomes difficult as ‘orders’ sent to the brain are
delayed or lost along the way.
Anatomy of the Neuron
The neuron has a cell body that contains a
nucleus. The cell body is somewhat similar
in shape to a fried egg, with nucleus being
in the yolk. Like the nucleus of any cell,
the neuron contains DNA
(deoxyribonucleic acid), the chemical that
contains the genetic blueprint that directs
neuron development. Growing out of the
cell body are branchlike structures called
dendrites (Greek word for tree branch).
The dendrites (head) receive incoming
signals from other neurons.
Growing out of the other end of the cell
body is a long tail-like structure called an
axon (tail), which carries signals away from the cell body; when a neuron is insulated with myelin, it is
the axon that is covered or myelinated. Axons vary in length from a few hundred micrometers to many
centimeters, depending on its location in the nervous system.
The tail end of the axon splits into separate branches. At the end of each branch is an axon bulb that
contains small storage pouches called vesicles that hold neurotransmitters, the chemical messengers that
carry signals across the synapse. A synapse is the junction between two neurons where the axon bulb of
one neuron comes into proximity with specialized receptor sites on another neuron.
The neuron that is sending the signal at a synapse in the nervous system is called presynaptic neuron
whereas the neuron that is receiving the signal at a synapse in the nervous system is called postsynaptic
neuron.
Signals in the Brain: How Neurons Fire Up
Neural signals underlie much of the action in our bodies – breathing, movement, using our senses. To
understand how these neural signals are generated within a neuron, understanding the chemical
environment of it, is important since the brain uses electrochemical energy that is produced by charged
particles called ions to send neural signals. Brain tissue is made up of packed neurons and glia cells.
Brain tissue is made up of many ions, some positively charged, others negatively charged. Sodium (Na+)
and potassium (K+) ions are found in the human body fluids and play an important role in allowing
neurons to send signals.
Neuron at Rest: The Resting Potential
When a neuron is at rest, or not actively conducting a signal there is an imbalance in the types of ions
found inside and outside the cell walls of the neuron. This imbalance exists because openings in the axon,
called ion channels allow only some ions to pass into and out of the neuron.
At rest, these ion channels disallow sodium to enter neuron resulting in an imbalance found both inside
and outside neuron. The charge inside the neuron is more negative than outside. The difference in the
charges found inside and outside is called the neuron’s resting potential.
Neuron in Action: Firing an Action Potential
When a neuron receives input from other neurons, these incoming signals enter at the dendrites and travel
across the cell body to the axon. These signals can make cell inside more positive or more negative. If
more positive, it will be positive enough to reach the neuron’s threshold of excitation. When the threshold
of excitation is reached the ion channels along the axon opens and allows Na+ ions to enter cell. As Na+
ions flood into the cell the neuron’s inside become more and more positive. This is how a neuron fires.
These firing is called action potential.
A neuron firing an action potential is like flipping a standard light switch. All action potentials are strong,
once fired, they reach the synapse. These action potentials are said to fire in an all-or-none fashion.
Returning to the Resting Potential: The Refractory Period
As the action potential travels to the end of the axon, Na+ floods into the neuron and the axon’s insides
become positive. As the neuron returns to its resting potential it will experience a brief refractory period
during which it cannot fire another action potential.
Excitation and Inhibition
Excitation occurs when the neurotransmitter makes the postsynaptic cell more likely to fire an action
potential. It ensures that messages will continue to the nervous system.
However, sometimes the message needs to be stopped from continuing onward. This is called inhibition.
This occurs when the neurotransmitter makes the postsynaptic cell less likely to fire an action potential.
Neurotransmitter and Neuromodulators: Chemical Messengers in the Brain
Neuromodulators are substances that affect neural signaling without directly changing the resting
potential of the postsynaptic cell. They affect neural signaling in less direct ways than neurotransmitters
do, such as by protecting neurons from harmful substances.