PATH 3610 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Voltage-Dependent Calcium Channel, Inhibitory Postsynaptic Potential, Synaptic Vesicle

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Synapses are the junctions between nerve cells and other cells, which allow information to be transmitted. In the cns, the second target cell is usually a neuron. In the peripheral nervous system, however, the target cell may be either another neuron or an effector cell such as a muscle fiber or a gland. Although the physiology of neuron-neuron synapses and neuron-muscle synapses is similar, the latter synapses are usually called neuromuscular junctions. Most synapses use chemical transmission, invcalolving release of chemical substances ( neurotransmitters ) from the presynaptic axon terminal, which cause changes in the membrane potential of the post-synaptic cell. However, in some cases transmission between cells can be electrical, via specialized connections called gap junctions which allow direct passage of current from one cell to another. This happens between some neurons in the brain, as well as in heart muscle, which will be dealt with later, in the cardiovascular section.

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