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Topic 3.5Biology SL79 flashcards

Neural signalling

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Card 1 of 793.5.1
3.5.1
Question

What is a neuron?

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All Flashcards in Topic 3.5

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3.5.112 cards

Card 1definition
Question

What is a neuron?

Answer

A **nerve cell** — the cell specialised to carry **electrical impulses** around the body.

Card 2concept
Question

In what order does a nerve impulse travel through a neuron?

Answer

**Dendrites → cell body → axon → axon terminals** (always one direction).

Card 3definition
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What is the job of the dendrites?

Answer

They **receive incoming signals** and carry them towards the cell body.

Card 4definition
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What does the axon do?

Answer

It carries the **nerve impulse away from the cell body** towards the axon terminals.

Card 5concept
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What does the myelin sheath do?

Answer

It is a **fatty layer** that **insulates the axon** and **speeds up** the nerve impulse.

Card 6definition
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What are the nodes of Ranvier?

Answer

The **gaps between segments of the myelin sheath**, where the impulse 'jumps' so it travels faster.

Card 7concept
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What is the function of a sensory neuron?

Answer

It carries impulses **from receptors TOWARDS the CNS** (it brings information in from the senses).

Card 8concept
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What is the function of a motor neuron?

Answer

It carries impulses **from the CNS TO effectors** (muscles and glands), producing a response.

Card 9concept
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What is the simplest way to tell sensory and motor neurons apart?

Answer

By **direction**: sensory carry impulses **TO** the CNS, motor carry impulses **FROM** the CNS.

Card 10definition
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What is an effector?

Answer

A **muscle or gland** that carries out a response (by contracting or by releasing a secretion).

Card 11concept
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What are the two components of the central nervous system (CNS)?

Answer

The **brain** and the **spinal cord**.

Card 12definition
Question

What is the peripheral nervous system (PNS)?

Answer

**All the nerves outside the brain and spinal cord**, connecting the CNS to the rest of the body.

3.5.213 cards

Card 13definition
Question

What is the resting potential of a neuron?

Answer

The voltage across the membrane of a neuron that is **not** conducting an impulse — the inside is about **−70 mV** (negative) relative to the outside.

Card 14concept
Question

Roughly what value is the resting potential?

Answer

About **−70 mV** (the inside is negative relative to the outside).

Card 15concept
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Is the inside of a resting neuron positive or negative?

Answer

**Negative** — about −70 mV compared with the outside.

Card 16definition
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What is the sodium-potassium pump?

Answer

A membrane protein that uses **ATP** to move **Na⁺ out** of the neuron and **K⁺ in**, against their concentration gradients.

Card 17concept
Question

How many of each ion does the pump move per cycle?

Answer

**3 sodium ions (Na⁺) out** and **2 potassium ions (K⁺) in**.

Card 18concept
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Why does the inside of the neuron become negative?

Answer

The pump moves **3 positive ions out for every 2 in**, so more positive charge leaves than enters; **K⁺ leaking back out** makes it more negative still.

Card 19concept
Question

Why does the sodium-potassium pump need ATP?

Answer

It moves ions **against their concentration gradients** — this is **active transport**, which requires energy from ATP.

Card 20concept
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Where does the ATP for the pump come from?

Answer

From **cell respiration** (in the neuron's mitochondria).

Card 21definition
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What is active transport?

Answer

Movement of a substance across a membrane **against** its concentration gradient, requiring energy from **ATP**.

Card 22concept
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What happens to the resting potential if a neuron cannot respire?

Answer

It is **lost** — no respiration → no ATP → the pump stops → the ion gradients run down.

Card 23concept
Question

What does potassium do after the pump builds it up inside?

Answer

Some **K⁺ leaks back out** down its concentration gradient, making the inside **more negative**.

Card 24concept
Question

In a resting axon, where is sodium more concentrated?

Answer

**Outside** the axon (the pump keeps Na⁺ high outside and low inside).

Card 25concept
Question

In a resting axon, where is potassium more concentrated?

Answer

**Inside** the axon (the pump keeps K⁺ high inside and low outside).

3.5.314 cards

Card 26concept
Question

What is the resting potential of a neuron?

Answer

About **−70 mV**, with the inside of the axon **negative** compared with the outside.

Card 27definition
Question

Define an action potential.

Answer

A rapid, temporary **reversal of the membrane potential** (from about −70 mV up to +40 mV and back) that travels along the axon as a nerve impulse.

Card 28concept
Question

What happens during depolarisation?

Answer

Voltage-gated **Na⁺ channels open** and **Na⁺ ions rush IN**, so the inside becomes positive and the membrane potential rises to about +40 mV.

Card 29concept
Question

What happens during repolarisation?

Answer

**K⁺ channels open** and **K⁺ ions move OUT**, so the inside becomes negative again and the membrane potential falls back towards −70 mV.

Card 30concept
Question

Which ion drives depolarisation, and in which direction?

Answer

**Sodium (Na⁺)**, moving **INTO** the axon.

Card 31concept
Question

Which ion drives repolarisation, and in which direction?

Answer

**Potassium (K⁺)**, moving **OUT of** the axon.

Card 32definition
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What is the threshold?

Answer

The membrane potential a stimulus must reach to trigger an action potential. Below it nothing fires; at or above it a full action potential fires.

Card 33concept
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What does the all-or-none principle mean?

Answer

An action potential fires **fully or not at all** — every one is the **same size**, regardless of how strong the stimulus is.

Card 34concept
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How does a stronger stimulus affect the response of a neuron?

Answer

It makes the neuron fire action potentials **more frequently** — it does **not** make each action potential bigger.

Card 35concept
Question

How does an action potential travel along an axon?

Answer

Each region **depolarises the next region**, regenerating the impulse so it stays the **same size** all the way along.

Card 36concept
Question

Why does a nerve impulse travel in only one direction?

Answer

The region just behind the impulse is briefly **recovering (refractory)** and cannot fire again straight away, so the impulse moves forward only.

Card 37concept
Question

On an action-potential trace, what does the rising part show?

Answer

**Depolarisation** — Na⁺ ions entering the axon (membrane potential rising towards +40 mV).

Card 38concept
Question

On an action-potential trace, what does the falling part show?

Answer

**Repolarisation** — K⁺ ions leaving the axon (membrane potential falling towards −70 mV).

Card 39concept
Question

What restores the resting potential after an action potential?

Answer

The **Na⁺/K⁺ pump**, which pumps Na⁺ out and K⁺ in to re-establish the resting ion balance.

3.5.412 cards

Card 40concept
Question

What three factors mainly determine the speed of a nerve impulse?

Answer

**Myelination**, **saltatory conduction** (nodes of Ranvier), and **axon diameter**.

Card 41definition
Question

What is the myelin sheath?

Answer

A **fatty insulating layer** that wraps around the axon of some neurons.

Card 42definition
Question

What is a node of Ranvier?

Answer

A **gap in the myelin sheath** where the axon membrane is exposed and the action potential is regenerated.

Card 43definition
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What is saltatory conduction?

Answer

Conduction in which the impulse **'jumps' from one node of Ranvier to the next**, instead of moving continuously along the membrane.

Card 44concept
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Why does myelination speed up conduction?

Answer

The myelin **insulates** the axon, so the impulse only forms at the nodes and **jumps** between them — much faster than continuous conduction.

Card 45concept
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Where does depolarization occur on a myelinated axon?

Answer

**Only at the nodes of Ranvier** — the gaps in the myelin; the sheath insulates the rest of the axon.

Card 46concept
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How does axon diameter affect conduction speed?

Answer

A **wider** axon conducts **faster** because it has **less internal resistance** to the flow of charge.

Card 47concept
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Which conducts faster: a myelinated or an unmyelinated axon?

Answer

A **myelinated** axon — it uses fast saltatory conduction; an unmyelinated axon conducts slowly and continuously.

Card 48concept
Question

Of four axons, which conducts a nerve impulse most slowly?

Answer

The **thin, unmyelinated** one — no saltatory conduction and high internal resistance.

Card 49concept
Question

Of four axons, which conducts a nerve impulse fastest?

Answer

The **wide, myelinated** one — saltatory conduction plus low internal resistance.

Card 50concept
Question

What does the word 'saltatory' mean, and why is it apt?

Answer

It comes from the Latin for **'to jump'** — the impulse leaps from node to node.

Card 51concept
Question

Why is a myelinated axon described as 'insulated'?

Answer

The fatty myelin sheath acts like the plastic coating on a wire, **insulating** the axon so the impulse only forms at the bare nodes.

3.5.513 cards

Card 52definition
Question

What is a synapse?

Answer

The **junction (gap)** between two neurons, where a signal passes from one to the next using a **chemical** (neurotransmitter).

Card 53definition
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What is the synaptic cleft?

Answer

The **narrow gap** between the two neurons that the neurotransmitter **diffuses across**.

Card 54definition
Question

What is a neurotransmitter?

Answer

The **chemical messenger** released into the synaptic cleft that carries the signal across the gap.

Card 55concept
Question

What is stored in synaptic vesicles?

Answer

**Neurotransmitter** — ready to be released from the presynaptic neuron.

Card 56concept
Question

Why is the signal carried by a chemical at a synapse, not electricity?

Answer

The two neurons are separated by the cleft; electricity cannot cross the gap, so a **neurotransmitter** bridges it.

Card 57concept
Question

What triggers vesicles to fuse with the presynaptic membrane?

Answer

**Calcium ions (Ca²⁺) entering** the presynaptic neuron when the impulse arrives.

Card 58concept
Question

How is neurotransmitter released into the cleft?

Answer

By **exocytosis** — vesicles fuse with the presynaptic membrane and empty their contents into the cleft.

Card 59concept
Question

Describe the release of neurotransmitter (3 steps).

Answer

**Ca²⁺ enters** → **vesicles fuse** with the presynaptic membrane → neurotransmitter **released by exocytosis** into the cleft.

Card 60concept
Question

What happens when neurotransmitter binds the postsynaptic receptors?

Answer

**Ion channels open**, **Na⁺ enters**, and the postsynaptic membrane **depolarises** (an EPSP).

Card 61definition
Question

What is an excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP)?

Answer

A **depolarisation** of the postsynaptic membrane caused by neurotransmitter binding — it makes a new impulse **more likely**.

Card 62concept
Question

Distinguish the presynaptic from the postsynaptic membrane.

Answer

**Presynaptic** = holds vesicles and **releases** neurotransmitter; **postsynaptic** = carries receptors and **receives** it.

Card 63concept
Question

Why is it an advantage that the synaptic cleft is narrow?

Answer

It gives a **short diffusion distance**, so the neurotransmitter crosses **quickly** and transmission is **fast**.

Card 64concept
Question

Which ion enters the POSTsynaptic neuron to depolarise it?

Answer

**Sodium (Na⁺)** — it enters through channels opened by the neurotransmitter.

3.5.615 cards

Card 65definition
Question

What is a reflex?

Answer

A **fast, automatic response** to a stimulus that needs **no conscious thought**.

Card 66definition
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What is a reflex arc?

Answer

The fixed nerve pathway a reflex follows: **stimulus -> receptor -> sensory neuron -> relay neuron (CNS) -> motor neuron -> effector -> response**.

Card 67concept
Question

Why are reflexes so fast?

Answer

The signal takes a **short cut through the spinal cord** instead of travelling to the brain and back.

Card 68concept
Question

What does a receptor do in a reflex arc?

Answer

It **detects the stimulus** and starts a nerve impulse (e.g. a sensory nerve ending in the skin).

Card 69definition
Question

What is the effector in a reflex arc?

Answer

A **muscle or gland** that carries out the response (e.g. a muscle that contracts).

Card 70concept
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In a pain reflex, what is the receptor?

Answer

A **sensory nerve ending** in the skin.

Card 71concept
Question

In a pain reflex, what is the effector?

Answer

A **muscle** that contracts to pull the body part away.

Card 72concept
Question

Where are the synapses in a reflex arc located?

Answer

**Inside the CNS** — in the grey matter of the **spinal cord**.

Card 73concept
Question

Which neuron carries the impulse INTO the CNS?

Answer

The **sensory neuron** (S = sending in).

Card 74concept
Question

Which neuron carries the impulse OUT of the CNS?

Answer

The **motor neuron** (M = moving out).

Card 75concept
Question

What does a mechanoreceptor detect?

Answer

**Touch, pressure, texture, stretch or vibration.**

Card 76concept
Question

What does a thermoreceptor detect?

Answer

**Temperature** (heat and cold).

Card 77concept
Question

What does a chemoreceptor detect?

Answer

**Chemicals** — this is how **taste and smell** work.

Card 78concept
Question

What does a photoreceptor detect?

Answer

**Light** (e.g. the brightness of light entering the eye).

Card 79concept
Question

In the pupil reflex, what is the effector and what does it do?

Answer

The **iris muscles** — they **contract to make the pupil smaller**, reducing the light entering the eye.

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