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Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the...

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Ionotropic Receptors
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Page 1: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Ionotropic Receptors

Page 2: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.
Page 3: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Postsynaptic potentials

Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized or hyperpolarized.

Ions will tend to follow the concentration gradient from high to low concentration, and the electrostatic gradient towards the opposite charge.

Page 4: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs)

Opening of ion channels which leads to depolarization makes an action potential more likely, hence “excitatory PSPs”: EPSPs. Inside of post-synaptic cell becomes less negative. Na+ channels (NB remember the action potential) Ca2+ . (Also activates structural intracellular changes ->

learning.)

inside

outsideNa+ Ca2+

+

-

Page 5: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs)

Opening of ion channels which leads to hyperpolarization makes an action potential less likely, hence “inhibitory PSPs”: IPSPs. Inside of post-synaptic cell becomes more negative. K+ (NB remember termination of the action potential) Cl- (if already depolarized)

K+

Cl- +

- inside

outside

Page 6: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Postsynaptic Ion motion

Page 7: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Neuronal firing: the action potential The action potential is a rapid

depolarization of the membrane. It starts at the axon hillock and passes

quickly along the axon. The membrane is quickly repolarized to

allow subsequent firing.

Page 8: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Requirements at the synapse

For the synapse to work properly, six basic events need to happen: Production of the Neurotransmitters

Synaptic vesicles (SV) Storage of Neurotransmitters

SV Release of Neurotransmitters Binding of Neurotransmitters

Lock and key Generation of a New Action Potential Removal of Neurotransmitters from the Synapse

reuptake

Page 9: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Overview

Course introduction Neural Processing: Basic Issues Neural Communication: Basics Vision, Motor Control: Models

Page 10: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.
Page 11: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Motor Control Basics

• Reflex Circuits– Usually Brain-stem, spinal cord based– Interneurons control reflex behavior– Central Pattern Generators

• Cortical Control

Page 12: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.
Page 13: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Hierarchical Organization of Motor System

• Primary Motor Cortex and Premotor Areas

Page 14: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Primary motor cortex (M1)

Foot

Hip

Trunk

Arm

Hand

Face

Tongue

Larynx

Page 15: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

postsynapticneuron

science-education.nih.gov

Page 16: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Flexor-Crossed ExtensorReflex(Sheridan 1900)

Painful Stimulus

Reflex CircuitsWith Inter-neurons

Page 17: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.
Page 18: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.
Page 19: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Gaits of the cat: an informal computational model

Page 20: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Vision and Action

Page 21: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

The discovery of mirror neurons in the frontal lobes of monkeys, and their potential relevance to human brain evolution — which I speculate on in this essay — is the single most important "unreported" (or at least, unpublicized) story of the decade. I predict that mirror neurons will do for psychology what DNA did for biology: they will provide a unifying framework and help explain a host of mental abilities that have hitherto remained mysterious and inaccessible to experiments.

Ramachandran, Reality Club Lecture 2001

Page 22: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

1. What are mirror neurons?

2. What is the promise? Why the excitement?

3. What challenges are faced in fulfilling that promise?

Page 23: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

F5 mirror neuronsF5 mirror neurons

Gallese et al. 1996

Action observation

Action execution

Shared goal-simulation = Action understandingShared goal-simulation = Action understanding

Page 24: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.
Page 25: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Representations in the premotor cortex (Rizzolatti et al).

Shift from thinking about movement representations to action representations.

Neurons in F4, F5 coding action primitives such as grasping, pinching, pulling

Page 26: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

AA Grasping with the mouth

BB Grasping with the cl. hand

CC Grasping with the ipsil. hand

Goal-related neuron in area F5Goal-related neuron in area F5

(Rizzolatti et al. 1988)

Page 27: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

90’s: Shift to perceptual responses of F5 neurons

Three classes of neurons

1. movement/action neurons

Respond only when animal moves

2. “canonical” neurons

Respond when object is presented alone

3. mirror neurons

Respond when observing action towards object.

Same neurons activated during production and perception of an action.

Page 28: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

F5 Mirror NeuronsF5 Mirror Neurons

A: Effective Action

B:Mimicked Action

C: Action with tool

Gallese et al. Brain 1996

Page 29: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Umiltà et al. Neuron 2001

A: Full vision to A: Full vision to objectobject

B: Hand fadesB: Hand fades

C: Full vision, no C: Full vision, no objectobject

D: Hand fades, no D: Hand fades, no objectobject

Page 30: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Audio-Visual Mirror NeuronsAudio-Visual Mirror Neurons

Kohler et al. Science (2002)

Vision+Sound

Vision alone

Sound alone

Movement

Page 31: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Murata et al. J Neurophysiol. 78: 2226-2230, 1997

F5 Canonical NeuronsF5 Canonical Neurons

Page 32: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Rizzolatti et al. 1998

A New PictureA New Picture

Page 33: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

The fronto-parietal networks

Rizzolatti et al. 1998

Page 34: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

F5c-PFF5c-PF

Rizzolatti et al. 1998

Page 35: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

The F5c-PF circuit

Links premotor area F5c and parietal area PF (or 7b).

Contains mirror neurons.

Mirror neurons discharge when:

Subject (a monkey) performs various types of goal-related hand actions

and when:

Subject observes another individual performing similar kinds of actions

Page 36: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Somatotopy of Action ObservationSomatotopy of Action Observation

Foot ActionFoot Action

Hand ActionHand Action

Mouth ActionMouth Action

Buccino et al. Eur J Neurosci 2001

Page 37: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

MEG study comparing pianists and non-pianists.

Pianists show activation in primary motor cortex when listening to piano.

Activation is specific to fingers used to play the notes.

Colored region: MEG signal for pianists minus non-pianists.

Page 38: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Vision

Page 39: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Overview of the Visual System

Page 40: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.
Page 41: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.
Page 42: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.
Page 43: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

Physiology of Color Vision

© Stephen E. Palmer, 2002

Cones cone-shaped less sensitive operate in high light color vision

Rods rod-shaped highly sensitive operate at night gray-scale vision

Two types of light-sensitive receptors

cone

rod

Page 44: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

The Microscopic View

Page 45: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.
Page 46: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.
Page 47: Ionotropic Receptors Postsynaptic potentials Depending on the type of ion channel which opens, the postsynaptic cell membrane becomes either depolarized.

How They Fire

• No stimuli: – both fire at base rate

• Stimuli in center: – ON-center-OFF-surround

fires rapidly– OFF-center-ON-surround

doesn’t fire• Stimuli in surround:

– OFF-center-ON-surround fires rapidly

– ON-center-OFF-surround doesn’t fire

• Stimuli in both regions:– both fire slowly


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