Fisiologi Manusia: DR Mellova Amir MSC
Fisiologi Manusia: DR Mellova Amir MSC
Fisiologi Manusia: DR Mellova Amir MSC
1. Sensation
• Monitors changes/events occurring in and outside the body.
Such changes are known as stimuli and the cells that monit
or them are receptors.
2. Integration
• The parallel processing and interpretation of sensory infor
mation to determine the appropriate response
3. Reaction
• Motor output.
– The activation of muscles or glands (typically via the release o
f neurotransmitters (NTs))
Nervous vs. Endocrine System
• Similarities:
– They both monitor stimuli and react so as to
maintain homeostasis.
• Differences:
– The NS is a rapid, fast-acting system whose e
ffects do not always persevere.
– The ES acts slower (via blood-borne chemical
signals called H _ _ _ _ _ _ _) and its actions
are usually much longer lasting.
Organization of the Ne
rvous System
• Highly cellular
– How does this compare
to the other 3 tissue typ
es?
• 2 cell types
1. Neurons
2.
• Functional, signal condu
cting cells
2. Neuroglia
• Supporting cells
Neuroglia
• Outnumber neurons by about
10 to 1 (the guy on the right had an in
ordinate amount of them).
• 6 types of supporting cells
– 4 are found in the CNS:
1. Astrocytes
• Star-shaped, abundant, and versa
tile
• Guide the migration of developing
neurons
• Act as K+ and NT buffers
• Involved in the formation of the bl
ood brain barrier
• Function in nutrient transfer
Neuroglia
2. Microglia
• Specialized immune cells that act
as the macrophages of the CNS
• Why is it important for the CNS to
have its own army of immune cell
s?
3. Ependymal Cells
• Low columnar epithelial-esque ce
lls that line the ventricles of the br
ain and the central canal of the s
pinal cord
• Some are ciliated which facilitate
s the movement of cerebrospinal
fluid
Neuroglia
4. Oligodendrocytes
• Produce the
myelin she
ath which pr
ovides the el
ectrical insul
ation for cert
ain neurons
in the CNS
Neuroglia
• 2 types of glia in the PN
S
1. Satellite cells
• Surround clusters of neuron
al cell bodies in the PNS
• Unknown function
2. Schwann cells
• Form myelin sheaths aroun
d the larger nerve fibers in t
he PNS.
• Vital to neuronal regenerati
on
• The functional and structural unit Neurons
of the nervous system
• Specialized to conduct information from one part of the bod
y to another
• There are many, many different types of neurons but most
have certain structural and functional characteristics in com
mon:
- Cell body (soma)
- One or more specializ
ed, slender processes
(axons/dendrites)
- An input region (dend
rites/soma)
- A conducting compon
ent (axon)
- A secretory (output) r
egion (axon terminal)
Soma
• Contains nucleus plus most norm
al organelles.
• Biosynthetic center of the neuron.
• Contains a very active and develo
ped rough endoplasmic reticulum
which is responsible for the synth
esis of ________.
In the soma above, notice the small bl
– The neuronal rough ER is referre
d to as the Nissl body. ack circle. It is the nucleolus, the site o
f ribosome synthesis. The light circular
• Contains many bundles of protein area around it is the nucleus. The mot
filaments (neurofibrils) which hel tled dark areas found throughout the c
p maintain the shape, structure, a ytoplasm are the Nissl substance.
nd integrity of the cell.
Somata
• Groups of fibers
are bound togeth
er into bundles (f
ascicles) by a pe
rineurium (red arr
ow).
• All the fascicles o
f a nerve are encl
osed by a epineu
rium (black arro
w).
Communication
4 5
Absolute Refractory Period
When you pull the handle, water floods the bowl. This event takes a
couple of seconds and you cannot stop it in the middle. Once the bo
wl empties, the flush is complete. Now the upper tank is empty. If yo
u try pulling the handle at this point, nothing happens (absolute refra
ctory). Wait for the upper tank to begin refilling. You can now flush a
gain, but the intensity of the flushes increases as the upper tank refill
s (relative refractory)
In this figure, what do the red
and blue box represent?
VM
TIME
Some Action Potential Questions
The answer to #2 is an axon with a large diameter. If you can’t see why, then a
nswer this question: could you move faster if you walked through a hallway that
was 6ft wide or if you walked through a hallway that was 1ft wide?
Types of Nerve Fibers
1. Group A
– Axons of the somatic sensory neurons and motor neurons serv
ing the skin, skeletal muscles, and joints.
– Large diameters and thick myelin sheaths.
• How does this influence their AP conduction?
2. Group B
– Type B are lightly myelinated and of intermediate diameter.
3. Group C
– Type C are unmyelinated and have the smallest diameter.
– Autonomic nervous system fibers serving the visceral organs,
visceral sensory fibers, and small somatic sensory fibers are T
ype B and Type C fibers.
Now we know how signals get from one end of an axon to the
other, but how exactly do APs send information?
– Info can’t be encoded in AP size, since they’re “all or none.”
In the diagram on
the right, notice t
he effect that the
size of the grade
d potential has o
n the frequency o
f AP’s and on the
quantity of NT rel
eased. The wea
k stimulus resulte
d in a small amt o
f NT release com
pared to the stron
g stimulus.
Chemical Signals
• One neuron will transmit info to another neuron or to a muscle o
r gland cell by releasing chemicals called neurotransmitters.
• The site of this chemical interplay is known as the synapse.
– An axon terminal (synaptic knob) will abut another cell, a neuron, muscle
fiber, or gland cell.
– This is the site of transduction – the conversion of an electrical signal into
a chemical signal.
Synaptic Tran
smission
• An AP reaches the axo
n terminal of the presy
naptic cell and causes
V-gated Ca2+ channels
to open.
• Ca2+ rushes in, binds t
o regulatory proteins &
initiates NT exocytosis.
• NTs diffuse across the
synaptic cleft and then
bind to receptors on th
e postsynaptic membra
ne and initiate some so
rt of response on the p
ostsynaptic cell.
Effects of the Neurotransmitter