Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Neurons are like Power Cords

Neurons are like power cords because the work by communicating electrical signals from one place to another. 


A neuron has 3 main parts, the dendrites (B), the cell body, or soma (C), and the axon (A).
 
 The dendrites receive the input from other cells.  This input causes an electrical change in the cell, either pushing the cell's voltage upwards (exciting the cell) or downwards (inhibiting the cell).  That signal has to travel down the dendrite to the soma (C).
The dendrites act like leaky power cords, and the strength of the signal decays during its journey to the soma. 
In certain cells, the shape of the dendrite contributes to how it integrates multiple signals and how strongly it sends these signals to the soma.

The axon is responsible for sending out information from the neuron. It is usually longer that the dendrites because it often is carrying a signal from one brain region to another, from one hemisphere to the other, or even from the sensory neurons (like touch receptors) to the spinal cord.
When the axon is very long, it can't work if it is leaky. It will often have a myelin sheath that insulates* it and allows it to propagate its signal with great efficacy and speed.

Some ways that neurons are NOT like power cords are:
  1. Power cords conduct electricity through the jumping of electrons, the current in neurons is due to the movement of ions (like sodium (Na+), potassium (K+), calcium (Ca2+), and chloride (Cl-)), and is not as fast as direct electron movement.
  2. Power cords conduct huge amounts of electricity compared to neurons. The potentials relevant for neurons are on the millivolt scale, and the currents are measured in picoAmps. You could never be shocked by touching a neuron. 

*it is more complicated than just acting as insulation, see Nodes of Ranvier if you really want to know how it works.

1 comment:

  1. Your funny bone ulnar nerve gives you a nice electric zap to when you tweak it, ever feel it?. Yea axons deliver spikes, but what few realize is they deliver power too. Ever look at the size of the sacral plexus in the flesh, it looks like some big veins. The spikes deliver power, axoplasm delivers modest slow hydraulic power, and more rapid mechanical wave power that accompanies the spike. Also depending on the transmitter system, chemical power is transmitter as well. Arteries deliver some hydraulic power to the brain too as you might also realize, in addition to the the standard 10 or 20 metabolic watts usually claimed for it.
    @jhewitt123

    ReplyDelete