The Nervous System and Nervous Tissue
50 questions available
Questions
What are the two major anatomical divisions of the nervous system?
View answer and explanationWhat is the term for a localized collection of neuron cell bodies within the Central Nervous System (CNS)?
View answer and explanationA bundle of axons found within the Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) is referred to as what?
View answer and explanationWhich functional division of the nervous system is primarily responsible for the involuntary control of the body to maintain homeostasis?
View answer and explanationWhich type of glial cell is responsible for insulating axons with myelin within the central nervous system (CNS)?
View answer and explanationWhat is the name of the glial cell type that provides myelin insulation for axons in the peripheral nervous system (PNS)?
View answer and explanationWhat is the value, in millivolts (mV), that is most commonly used to describe the resting membrane potential of a neuron?
View answer and explanationAn action potential is initiated when the neuronal membrane depolarizes to a specific voltage known as the threshold. What is the typical value of this threshold in millivolts (mV)?
View answer and explanationThe depolarization phase of an action potential, where the membrane potential rapidly rises towards a positive value, is caused by the influx of which ion?
View answer and explanationWhat is the term for the period following an action potential during which a new action potential cannot be initiated, regardless of the stimulus strength, due to the inactivation of voltage-gated sodium channels?
View answer and explanationThe nicotinic receptor for acetylcholine is an example of what type of receptor, which functions as a ligand-gated ion channel?
View answer and explanationWhich amino acid neurotransmitter is considered excitatory in the adult nervous system because its receptors cause depolarization of the postsynaptic cell?
View answer and explanationA neuron that possesses one axon and two or more dendrites is classified by its shape as what type of neuron?
View answer and explanationWhich type of glial cell functions as a CNS-resident macrophage, performing immune surveillance and phagocytosis?
View answer and explanationWhat is the term for the method of action potential propagation along a myelinated axon, where the electrical signal appears to jump from one node of Ranvier to the next?
View answer and explanationA graded potential in a postsynaptic neuron that causes hyperpolarization, making an action potential less likely to occur, is known as what?
View answer and explanationWhat is the name of the special region of a neuron where the axon emerges from the cell body?
View answer and explanationThe repolarization phase of the action potential, where the membrane potential returns toward its resting value, is primarily caused by the efflux (outflow) of which ion?
View answer and explanationThe enteric nervous system (ENS), which operates largely independently of the CNS, is responsible for controlling which organ system?
View answer and explanationWhat chemical is the basis of the cholinergic neurotransmitter system?
View answer and explanationHow many distinct types of glial cells are found within the Central Nervous System (CNS)?
View answer and explanationAn action potential involves a membrane voltage change from a resting potential of -70 mV to a peak depolarization value of what?
View answer and explanationWhat lipid-rich substance is primarily responsible for giving white matter its characteristic color?
View answer and explanationWhat type of receptor is characterized by a complex of proteins that, upon binding a neurotransmitter, initiates metabolic changes inside the cell through a G protein and a second messenger?
View answer and explanationThe physiological barrier that restricts what can cross from circulating blood into the CNS, known as the blood-brain barrier (BBB), is maintained by which glial cell?
View answer and explanationWhat is the name for a type of ion channel that is randomly gated, opening and closing without a specific event, thereby contributing to the resting membrane potential?
View answer and explanationWhat is the term for the process where multiple graded potentials occurring at different locations on a neuron are added together?
View answer and explanationWhat is the primary function of the sodium/potassium pump in a neuron?
View answer and explanationWhich structural classification of neuron, commonly found in the olfactory epithelium and retina, is characterized by two processes extending from opposite ends of the cell body?
View answer and explanationThe biogenic amine neurotransmitter serotonin is enzymatically synthesized from which amino acid?
View answer and explanationThe period of hyperpolarization, or the 'undershoot,' following an action potential is caused by the slightly delayed closing of which ion channels?
View answer and explanationIn the sensory pathway for a stimulus like water temperature, where does conscious perception first occur?
View answer and explanationWhat is the primary function of satellite cells, a type of glial cell in the Peripheral Nervous System?
View answer and explanationIn a metabotropic receptor pathway, what are the two common examples of second messengers that are generated to cause metabolic changes within the cell?
View answer and explanationAccording to the text, which of the following is NOT one of the three basic functions of the nervous system?
View answer and explanationWhat is the anatomical term for the gaps in the myelin sheath that are crucial for saltatory conduction?
View answer and explanationIn unipolar sensory neurons, a graded potential that develops in the dendrites and influences the generation of an action potential in the axon is referred to as what?
View answer and explanationWhich glial cell type is responsible for filtering blood to produce cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)?
View answer and explanationThe principle that an action potential either occurs completely or not at all is known as what?
View answer and explanationThe axons projecting from the retina into the brain are referred to as the optic nerve when they leave the eye. What are they called after they cross the optic chiasm inside the cranium?
View answer and explanationA voltage-gated sodium channel possesses two distinct gates that control ion flow. What are these two gates called?
View answer and explanationDopamine, norepinephrine, and epinephrine are all biogenic amine neurotransmitters that are enzymatically made from which amino acid?
View answer and explanationIn the peripheral nervous system (PNS), how many Schwann cells are required to myelinate a single segment of an axon?
View answer and explanationWhat type of ion channel opens in response to a physical distortion of the cell membrane, such as pressure applied to the skin?
View answer and explanationWhich functional division of the nervous system is characterized by conscious perception and voluntary motor responses?
View answer and explanationAt a chemical synapse, the arrival of an action potential at the axon terminal triggers the influx of which ion, leading to the release of neurotransmitter vesicles?
View answer and explanationBased on their function and characteristics, unipolar cells found in humans are exclusively what type of neuron?
View answer and explanationThe voltage-gated potassium (K+) channel has one gate that is sensitive to a specific membrane voltage. At approximately what voltage does this channel begin to open, albeit with a slight delay?
View answer and explanationWhat is the term for the process by which amino acid neurotransmitters are cleared from the synaptic cleft by being transported back into the presynaptic element or a neighboring glial cell?
View answer and explanationWhat are the three fundamental functions of the nervous system?
View answer and explanation