Neurons (also known as neurones and nerve cells) are electrically excitable cells in the nervous system that process and transmit information from both internal and external environments. In vertebrate animals, neurons are the core components of the brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nerves. Although the neuron is considered a discrete unit, the output of the nervous system is produced by the connectivity of neurons (that is, the strength and configuration of the connections between neurons).
The basic function of a neuron is to communicate information, which it does via chemical or electric impulses across a synapse (the junction between cells). The fundamental process that triggers these impulses is the action potential, an electrical signal that is generated by utilizing the electrically excitable membrane of the neuron.
Neurons represent one component of a nervous system, which can be remarkably complex in higher organisms. Neurons allow an individual to continuously engage in a reciprocal relationship with its internal and external environment. The complex coordination exhibited by neurons in its interaction with other bodily cells and systems reveals the remarkable harmony in living organisms.
Neurons can be classified based on three broad roles:
There is great heterogeneity across the nervous system and across species in the size, shape, and function of neurons. The number of neurons in a given organism also varies dramatically from species to species. The human brain contains approximately 100 billion () neurons and 100 trillion () synapses (or connections between neurons). By contrast, in the nervous system of the roundworm Caenorhabditis elegans, males have 383 neurons, while hermaphrodites have a mere 302 neurons (Hobert 2005). Many properties of neurons, from the type of neurotransmitters used to ion channel composition, are maintained across species; this interconnectedness of life allows scientists to study simple organisms in order to understand processes occurring in more complex organisms.
Given the diversity of their functions, neurons have a wide variety of structures, sizes, and electrochemical properties. However, most neurons are composed of four main components: A soma, or cell body, which contains the nucleus; one or more dendritic trees that typically receive input; an axon that carries an electric impulse; and an axon terminal that often functions to transmit signals to other cells.
The axon is specialized for the conduction of a particular electric impulse, called the action potential, which travels away from the cell body and down the axon. Many neurons have only one axon, but this axon may—and usually will—undergo extensive branching, enabling communication with many target cells. The junction of the axon and the cell body is called the axon hillock. This is the area of the neuron that has the greatest density of voltage-dependent sodium channels, making it the most easily excited part of the neuron.
Although the canonical view of the neuron attributes consistent roles to its various components, dendrites and axons often act in ways contrary to their so-called main function. For example, while the axon and axon hillock are generally involved in information outflow, this region can also receive input from other neurons. Information outflow from dendrites to other neurons can also occur.
Neurons can have great longevity (human neurons can continue to work optimally for the entire lifespan of over 100 years); with exceptions, are typically amitotic (and thus do not have the ability to divide and replace destroyed neurons); and normally have a high metabolic rate, requiring abundant carbohydrates and oxygen (Marieb and Hoehn 2010).
Neurons communicate with one another via synapses, junctions where neurons pass signals to target cells, which may be other neurons, muscle cells, or gland cells. Neurons such as Purkinje cells in the cerebellum may have over one thousand dendritic branches, making connections with tens of thousands of other cells; other neurons, such as the magnocellular neurons of the supraoptic nucleus, possess only one or two dendrites, each of which receives thousands of synapses.
Synapses generally conduct signals in one direction. They can be excitatory or inhibitory; that is, they will either increase or decrease activity in the target neuron.
Chemical synapses are specialized junctions through which the cells of the nervous system signal to each other and to non-neuronal cells such as those in muscles or glands. Chemical synapses allow the neurons of the central nervous system to form interconnected neural circuits. They thus are crucial to the biological computations that underlie perception and thought. They provide the means through which the nervous system connects to and regulates the other systems of the body.
In a chemical synapse, the process of signal transmission is as follows:
While most neurons rely on chemical synapses, some neurons also communicate via electrical synapses. An electrical synapse is a mechanically and electrically conductive link that is formed at a narrow gap between two abutting neurons, which is known as a gap junction. In contrast to chemical synapses, the postsynaptic potential in electrical synapses is not caused by the opening of ion channels by chemical transmitters, but by direct electrical coupling of the neurons. Electrical synapses are therefore faster and more reliable than chemical synapses.
Many cold-blooded fishes contain a large number of electrical synapses, which suggests that they may be an adaptation to low temperatures: the lowered rate of cellular metabolism in the cold reduces the rate of impulse transmission across chemical synapses.
The action potential refers to a series of sudden changes in the electric potential across the plasma membrane of a neuron. Generating the action potential is an all-or-nothing endeavor: each neuron averages all the electric disturbances on its membrane and decides whether or not to trigger an action potential and conduct it down the axon. The composite signal must reach a threshold potential, a certain voltage at which the membrane at the axon hillock is depolarized. The frequency with which action potentials are generated in a particular neuron is the crucial factor determining its ability to signal other cells.
The narrow cross-section of the axon lessens the metabolic expense of carrying action potentials, but thicker axons convey impulses more rapidly. To minimize metabolic expense while maintaining rapid conduction, many neurons have insulating sheaths of myelin around their axons. The sheaths are formed by glial cells, which fill the spaces between neurons. The myelin sheath enables action potentials to travel faster than in unmyelinated axons of the same diameter, while using less energy.
Multiple sclerosis is a neurological disorder that is characterized by patchy loss of myelin in areas of the brain and spinal cord. Neurons with demyelinated axons do not conduct electrical signals properly.
Some neurons do not rely on action potentials; instead, they generate a graded electrical signal, which in turn causes graded neurotransmitter release. Such nonspiking neurons tend to be sensory neurons or interneurons, because they cannot carry signals across long distances.
The neuron's role as the primary functional unit of the nervous system was first recognized in the early twentieth century through the work of the Spanish anatomist Santiago Ramón y Cajal. To observe the structure of individual neurons, Cajal used a histological staining technique developed by his contemporary (and rival) Camillo Golgi. Golgi found that by treating brain tissue with a silver chromate solution, a relatively small number of neurons in the brain were darkly stained. This allowed Golgi to resolve in detail the structure of individual neurons and led him to conclude that nervous tissue was a continuous reticulum (or web) of interconnected cells, much like those in the circulatory system.
Using Golgi's method, Ramón y Cajal reached a very different conclusion. He postulated that the nervous system is made up of billions of separate neurons and that these cells are polarized. Cajal proposed that neurons were discrete cells that communicated with each other via specialized junctions, or spaces between cells. This hypothesis became known as the neuron doctrine, which, in its longer form, holds that (Sabbatini 2003):
Electron microscopy later showed that a plasma membrane completely enclosed each neuron, supporting Cajal's theory and weakening Golgi's reticular theory. However, with the discovery of electrical synapses, some have argued that Golgi was at least partially correct. For this work, Ramón y Cajal and Golgi shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1906.
While the neuron doctrine has become a central tenet of modern neuroscience, recent studies challenging this view have suggested that the narrow confines of the doctrine need to be expanded:
Most neurons can be anatomically characterized as:
Some unique neuronal types can be identified according to their location in the nervous system and their distinct shape. Examples include basket, Betz, medium spiny, Purkinje, pyramidal, and Renshaw cells.
Classification by connectivity
The terms afferent and efferent can also refer to neurons which convey information from one region of the brain to another.
Classification by action on other neurons
Classification by discharge patterns
Neurons can be classified according to their electrophysiological characteristics:
Classification by neurotransmitter released
Examples include cholinergic, GABA-ergic, glutamatergic, and dopaminergic neurons.
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