S'identifier

Neurons communicate at synapses, or junctions, to excite or inhibit the activity of other neurons or target cells, such as muscles. Synapses may be chemical or electrical.

Most synapses are chemical, meaning an electrical impulse or action potential spurs the release of chemical messengers called neurotransmitters. The neuron sending the signal is called the presynaptic neuron, and the neuron receiving the signal is the postsynaptic neuron.

The presynaptic neuron fires an action potential that travels through its axon. The end of the axon, or the axon terminal, contains neurotransmitter-filled vesicles. The action potential opens voltage-gated calcium ion channels in the axon terminal membrane. Ca2+ rapidly enters the presynaptic cell (due to the higher external Ca2+ concentration), enabling the vesicles to fuse with the terminal membrane and release neurotransmitters.

The space between presynaptic and postsynaptic cells is called the synaptic cleft. Neurotransmitters released from the presynaptic cell rapidly populate the synaptic cleft and bind to receptors on the postsynaptic neuron. The binding of neurotransmitters instigates chemical changes in the postsynaptic neuron, such as opening or closing of ion channels. This, in turn, alters the membrane potential of the postsynaptic cell, enabling it to fire an action potential.

To end the synaptic signaling, neurotransmitters in the synapse are degraded by enzymes, reabsorbed by the presynaptic cell, diffused away, or cleared by glial cells.

Electrical synapses are present in the nervous system of both invertebrates and vertebrates. They are narrower than their chemical counterparts and transfer ions directly between neurons, allowing faster signal transmission. However, unlike chemical synapses, electrical synapses cannot amplify or transform presynaptic signals. Electrical synapses synchronize neuronal activity, which is favorable for controlling rapid, invariable signals, such as the danger escape in squids.

Neurons can send signals to, and receive them from, many other neurons. The integration of numerous inputs received by postsynaptic cells ultimately determines their action potential firing patterns.

Tags
Synaptic SignalingSynapseNeuronsTarget CellsChemical SynapsesElectrical SynapsesNeurotransmittersPresynaptic NeuronPostsynaptic NeuronAction PotentialAxon TerminalVesiclesCalcium Ion ChannelsSynaptic CleftReceptorsIon ChannelsMembrane PotentialEnzymatic Degradation

Du chapitre 18:

article

Now Playing

18.17 : Synaptic Signaling

Endocytose et exocytose

5.3K Vues

article

18.1 : Endocytose

Endocytose et exocytose

8.1K Vues

article

18.2 : Phagocytose

Endocytose et exocytose

5.7K Vues

article

18.3 : Pinocytose

Endocytose et exocytose

3.1K Vues

article

18.4 : Endocytose à récepteur

Endocytose et exocytose

5.7K Vues

article

18.5 : Endosome précoce : endocytose de la transferrine

Endocytose et exocytose

3.2K Vues

article

18.6 : Maturation des endosomes

Endocytose et exocytose

4.0K Vues

article

18.7 : Vésicules intra-luminales et corps multi-vésiculaires

Endocytose et exocytose

3.2K Vues

article

18.8 : Régulation négative des récepteurs dans les corps multi-vésiculaires

Endocytose et exocytose

2.0K Vues

article

18.9 : Vue d'ensemble des exosomes

Endocytose et exocytose

2.6K Vues

article

18.10 : Endosomes de recyclage et transcytose

Endocytose et exocytose

2.5K Vues

article

18.11 : Transcytose des IgG

Endocytose et exocytose

2.6K Vues

article

18.12 : Exocytose

Endocytose et exocytose

6.1K Vues

article

18.13 : Vue d'ensemble des vésicules sécrétoires

Endocytose et exocytose

6.0K Vues

article

18.14 : Vésicules sécrétoires pour la libération de l'insuline

Endocytose et exocytose

4.7K Vues

See More

JoVE Logo

Confidentialité

Conditions d'utilisation

Politiques

Recherche

Enseignement

À PROPOS DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tous droits réservés.