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synapse
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synapse

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How the nerve impulse is transmitted across the synapse. When the impulse reaches the end of the nerve cell, neurotransmitter is released. This diffuses across the synapse to the next nerve cell, which then continues to transmit the impulse.

Junction between two nerve cells, or between a nerve cell and a muscle (a neuromuscular junction), across which a nerve impulse is transmitted. The two cells are separated by a narrow gap called the synaptic cleft. The gap is bridged by a chemical neurotransmitter, released by the nerve impulse.

The threadlike extension, or axon, of the transmitting nerve cell has a slightly swollen terminal point, the synaptic knob. This forms one half of the synaptic junction and houses membrane-bound vesicles, which contain a chemical neurotransmitter. When nerve impulses reach the knob, the vesicles release the transmitter and this flows across the gap and binds itself to special receptors on the receiving cell's membrane. If the receiving cell is a nerve cell, the other half of the synaptic junction will be one or more extensions called dendrites; these will be stimulated by the neurotransmitter to set up an impulse, which will then be conducted along the length of the nerve cell and on to its own axons. If the receiving cell is a muscle cell, it will be stimulated by the neurotransmitter to contract.



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In contrast to most other neurons, which rely on chemical synapses to communicate with each other, GnRH neurons instead appear to be interconnected through very long branch-like protrusions known as dendrites.
00 Hardcover QP364 Chemical synapses involve the release of neurotransmittters by the presynaptic nerve terminal of one neuron, which then influences the function of a second neuron.
SEROTONIN AND THE CHEMICAL SYNAPSE Clinical depression has been traditionally attributed to a depletion of serotonin in the cells responsible for neural transmission, known as chemical synapses.
 
 
 
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