Term
"Sending" neuron fires an _____ |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
has a bunch of little presynaptic vesicles that contain neurotransmitters (the chemical messenger released at the synapse) |
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Term
dendrite of postsynaptic neuron is called the _____ |
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Definition
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Term
junction between axon of presynaptic cell & dendrite of postsynaptic neuron = ? |
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Definition
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Term
electrical signals that propagate down the axon go through a sort of transformation process where they are translated into a ______ signal |
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Definition
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Term
how is chemical transmission more easily tuned compared to electrical? |
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Definition
how much or how little neurotransmitter is released |
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Term
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Definition
a neuron can listen to a bunch of different inputs & based on all of those inputs, it can summate/integrate it all together before deciding which information to send |
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Term
how does chemical transmission give you some flexibility? |
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Definition
effect depends on which neurotransmitter is released (excitatory vs inhibitory) |
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Term
temporal control mechanism of chemical transmission |
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Definition
some release neurotransmitters very fast, some very slow |
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Term
the first chemical neurotransmitter that was really established was _____ |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
German scientist who was trying to study/understand chemical transmission & its role in communication between neurons |
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Term
heart gets input from vagus nerve (axon of neuron found in the brainstem) & _____ is released here |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
electrically stimulated vagus nerve --> slowing down of heart beating --> poured solution that the heart was sitting in into a vat that another heart was beating in --> when you pour the solution onto heart number two, it also slowed the heart down --> if you washed the solution out, the heart would speed back up |
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Term
where is acetylcholine particularly important? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
connects nervous system to muscular system |
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Term
even though not many neurons in the brain can make ACh, it is very important for _____ state |
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Definition
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Term
what enzyme is necessary for the synthesis of ACh |
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Definition
cholineacetyltransferase (ChAT) |
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Term
reaction where you make ACh |
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Definition
acetyl coA + choline --> acetylcholine |
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Term
if you have too much ACh, you have runaway muscle excitation --> ? |
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Definition
could lead to muscles locking up/paralysis |
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Term
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Definition
ACh --> acetyl coA & coline |
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Term
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Definition
one neuron, one neurotransmitter |
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Term
is there a limit on number of release sites/how many neurons a given neuron can contact? |
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Definition
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Term
presynaptic terminal at the NMJ |
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Definition
motor neuron from brainstem |
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Term
postsynaptic side with receptors (determines the effect of the ACh) at the NMJ |
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Definition
the muscle (specifically the arm skeletal muscle) |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
indirectly gate ion channels that can influence the activity of the neuron |
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Term
junction between motor neurons & skeletal muscle |
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Definition
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Term
why is the NMJ good to study? |
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Definition
in the periphery & easy to access |
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Term
NMJ releases a huge saturating amount of _____ |
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Definition
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Term
stimulate axon of the NMJ --> ? |
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Definition
depolarization of muscle after about 2 - 3 ms that eventually tapers back down to baseline |
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Term
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Definition
depolarization that is a sub-threshold event (doesn't reach AP all-or-nothing threshold) |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
EPSPs = change in the _____ of the postsynaptic neuron |
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Definition
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Term
are nAChR's excitatory or inhibitory receptors? |
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Definition
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Term
heart has _____ ACh receptors |
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Definition
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Term
is ACh intrinsically excitatory? |
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Definition
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Term
something that turns on a receptor |
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Definition
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Term
something that turns off a receptor |
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Definition
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Term
pre-synaptic cell of the NMJ |
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Definition
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Term
post-synaptic cell of the NMJ |
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Definition
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Term
neurotransmitter at the NMJ |
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Definition
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Term
post-synaptic receptor at the NMJ |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
when you expect to see a post-synaptic response when you stimulate a nerve |
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Term
really small events that just seem to spontaneously happen in terms of EPSPs --> ? |
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Definition
spontaneous EPSPs (sEPSPs) |
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Term
who discovered that neurotransmitters are released in vesicles (quantal packets of information)? |
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Definition
researchers studying sEPSP's (1952 by Fatt & Katz) |
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Term
put on an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor --> ? |
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Definition
response events got larger & decayed a lot slower |
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Term
what did Fatt & Katz notice about spontaneous responses? |
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Definition
they seem to have discrete sizes |
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Term
smallest event Fatt & Katz ever saw |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
1. ACh 2. nicotine 3. carbachol |
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Term
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Definition
1. neostigmine 2. sarin nerve gas |
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Term
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Definition
1. curare - competitive antagonist 2. alpha-bungarotoxin - non-competitive antagonist |
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Term
pre-synaptic terminal contains vesicles which contain the _____ |
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Definition
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Term
vesicles can dock with the inside of the pre-synaptic surface facing the ______ |
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Definition
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Term
sometimes vesicles release too early --> ? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
are evoked EPSPs larger or smaller than an mEPSP? |
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Definition
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Term
the probability of release (p) can be changed by changing ______ |
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Definition
extracellular calcium levels |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
can an axon of a presynaptic cell attach to postsynaptic cell at multiple branching sites? |
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Definition
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Term
discrete size of EPSPs --> Fatt & Katz observed a _____ distribution describing release of synaptic vesicles |
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Definition
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Term
Fatt & Katz put neurons in an environment where they are very unlikely to release vesicles (low calcium) so they could _____ |
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Definition
really study just 1 or 2 at a time |
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Term
a ton of receptors --> a big or small mini? |
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Definition
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Term
small amount of receptors --> a big or small mini? |
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Definition
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Term
size of a mini is also referred to as the _____ |
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Definition
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Term
how can a mini EPSP be an evoked EPSP? |
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Definition
you put the cell in an environment where they are likely to only release one vesicle & then stimulate it presynaptically |
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Term
will "n" (amount of vesicles available at the synapse) always be a whole number? |
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Definition
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Term
is "n" (amount of vesicles available at the synapse) fixed? |
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Definition
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Term
does "m" (on average, how many vesicles are released when there is an AP) need to be a whole number? |
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Definition
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Term
equation relating "m", "p", & "n" |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
quantal size (q) is specifically helpful telling you about ______ |
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Definition
post-synaptic sensitivity |
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Term
different quantal size is related to different ______ |
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Definition
amounts of receptors on the post-synaptic cell |
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Term
looking at a graph of EPSP amp vs number of observations --> quantal size will be ______ |
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Definition
first peak that you see not at 0 (EPSP amp of this peak) |
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Term
the only thing that changes quantal size is ______ |
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Definition
post-synaptic sensitivity |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
equation for EPSP amplitude, q, and m |
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Definition
EPSP amplitude (mV) = q * m |
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Term
skews of quantal analysis graphs: weak |
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Definition
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Term
skews of quantal analysis graphs: average |
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Definition
fairly normal distribution |
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Term
skews of quantal analysis graphs: strong |
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Definition
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Term
neurotransmitter release via ______ fusion with the presynaptic terminal |
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Definition
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Term
neurotransmitter gets synthesized in the _______ |
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Definition
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Term
neurotransmitter gets packaged into little ______ |
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Definition
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Term
vesicle transport molecules |
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Definition
move them around where they need to go |
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Term
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Definition
1. reserve pool: vesicles just kind of hanging out in the presyantpic terminal but not in the exact position to be ready to be sent out in response to calcium influx 2. readily-releasable pool: vesicles able to be released right when calcium comes in |
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Term
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Definition
docked vesicles to the membrane |
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Term
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Definition
moving vesicle from reserve pool to be primed for release & moved to the membrane |
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Term
calcium comes in through ______ for vesicle release |
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Definition
voltage-gated calcium channels |
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Term
______ interacts with docked vesicles & causes them to be released |
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Definition
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Term
formation of ______ complex is required to dock vesicles |
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Definition
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Term
when a vesicle is ______, it is anchored to the presynaptic membrane |
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Definition
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Term
2 types of SNAREs that interact to hold vesicle in place |
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Definition
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Term
until it is ready to fuse, ______ actively blocks the vesicle fusion that would lead to neurotransmitter release |
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Definition
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Term
entering calcium binds to synaptotagmin --> ? |
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Definition
calcium bound syanptotagmin catalyzes membrane fusion |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
the different kinds of synaptotagmin have different sensitivities to calcium --> ? |
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Definition
influences probability of release |
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Term
basically, if there is more ______ you are more likely that it will bind to synaptotagmin to allow for vesicle release |
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Definition
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Term
if presynaptic membrane is depolarized beyond activation voltage for voltage-gated calcium channels (about -50 mV), what happens? |
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Definition
calcium comes in & diffuses around presynaptic area |
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Term
4 steps following if calcium binds to synaptotagmin |
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Definition
1. vesicle fusion 2. neurotransmitter release 3. binds with postsynaptic receptors 4. postsynaptic depolarization |
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Term
what destroys SNARE proteins |
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Definition
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Term
full name for black widow spider venom |
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Definition
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Term
what makes pores in the membrane for calcium entry |
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Definition
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Term
presynaptic depression paired pulse ratios --> ? |
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Definition
smaller response in second pulse |
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Term
presynaptic facilitation paired pulse ratios --> ? |
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Definition
higher response in second pulse |
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Term
what does it mean that paired pulse ratios reveal presynaptic dynamics? |
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Definition
tells you whether it is a high or low probability of release synapse |
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Term
2 ways to change the strength of a synapse |
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Definition
1. change presynaptic vesicle release probability (more neurotransmitter --> strengthen synapse) 2. change number of postsynaptic receptors (more receptors --> strengthen synapse) |
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Term
give two electrical pulses to the nerve in rapid succession (50 ms) & the second EPSP is smaller = ? |
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Definition
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Term
is short-term depression the same thing as LTD? |
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Definition
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Term
why is the second EPSP smaller than the first EPSP in short-term depression? |
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Definition
depletion of readily releasable pool |
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Term
equation for paired pulse ratio (PPR) |
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Definition
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Term
if you have a high probability of release (ex. 0.8) --> in paired pulse? |
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Definition
more vesicles will be released at the first pulse & there are very few docked vesicles left in the readily releasable pool for release |
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Term
when you see _______, it implies that the initial probability of release at that synapse is high |
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Definition
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Term
what is indicative of synapses with an initially low probability of release |
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Definition
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Term
you give a pulse & then you give another pulse 50 ms later (very soon!) --> ? (short term facilitation) |
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Definition
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Term
if you have a lot of ______ around, you will probably get neurotransmitter release because it is more likely to bind to synaptotagmin to move it out of the way |
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Definition
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Term
if you don't have a lot of calcium around, there will be a not very strong coupling of calcium influx to ______ |
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Definition
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Term
short-term facilitation second pulse gives extra boost to calcium already there --> ? |
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Definition
more likely to bind to synaptotagmin to release vesicles |
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Term
the boosted calcium amount has more vesicles to interact with if there is a ______ probability of release on the first pulse |
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Definition
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Term
short-term faciliation --> ______ in second pulse |
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Definition
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Term
short-term depression --> ______ in second pulse |
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Definition
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Term
short-term depression --> initial ______ prob of release |
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Definition
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Term
short-term facilitation --> initial ______ prob of release |
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Definition
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Term
synapse with mixed facilitation & depression could happen because? |
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Definition
1. second pulse increases effective concentration of calcium & enough vesicles are still docked that second pulse causes release of more vesicles than first pulse 2. continued stimulation of synapse causes readily releasable pool of vesicles to become progressively more depleted, so even though calcium concentration is still high, fewer vesicles are released |
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Term
myasthenia gravis symptoms |
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Definition
weakness of muscles that are frequently used |
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Term
autoimmune disease where body makes antibodies against post-synaptic nicotinic ACh receptors at NMJ |
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Definition
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Term
does myasthenia gravis affect presynaptic terminals? |
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Definition
no! but you have a finite number of post-synaptic receptors |
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Term
myasthenia gravis on a synaptic physiology level: decrease in size of mini EPSP --> ? |
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Definition
decrease in size of average EPSP |
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Term
muscles become weak with repetitive use in myasthenia gravis because ______ |
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Definition
depression is starting from a lower starting point |
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Term
treatment of myasthenia gravis |
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Definition
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Term
autoimmune disease where body makes antibodies against presynaptic calcium channels of the NMJ |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
what you see at a LEMS synaptic physiology level |
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Definition
you would see many more "failures" on quantal analysis graph |
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Term
you actually get better with muscle use in LEMS because more use --> ? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
myasthenia gravis vs LEMS: cause |
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Definition
both autoimmune disorders |
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Term
myasthenia gravis vs LEMS: symptoms |
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Definition
myasthenia gravis: muscle weakness particularly in muscles with repetitive use (ex. drooping eyelids, chewing muscles, etc.)
LEMS: muscle weakness but the weakness is moreso after you've been sitting for a long time |
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Term
why are the symptoms of myasthenia gravis & LEMS different? |
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Definition
if you record from muscle in MG patient, there is an initial strong response but with repeated use, the postsynaptic nAChRs get bound up & receptor loses its efficacy
LEMS postsynaptic response starts really small & gets bigger because calcium builds up in presynaptic terminal with more & more APs --> eventually you get enough for a normal ACh release |
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Term
both myasthenia gravis & LEMS result from poor communication/connection between pre- and postsynaptic terminals in NMJ...______ is just a postsynaptic issue & ______ is a presynaptic issue |
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Definition
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Term
treatment for both myasthenia gravis & LEMS is ______ |
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Definition
acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (such as neostigmine) |
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Term
one of the most ubiquitous synapses in the CNS = ? |
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Definition
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Term
is glutamate inherently excitatory? |
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Definition
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Term
if a neuron synthesizes _____, it will have a VGLUT |
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Definition
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Term
if a neuron is postsynaptic for _______, it will have AMPA and/or NMDA glutamate receptors |
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Definition
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Term
_______ synapses will have astrocytes (glial cells) |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
excitatory post-synaptic potentials |
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Term
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Definition
excitatory post-synaptic currents |
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Term
_______ glutamatergic receptors are controlled by the presence of glutamate, not voltage |
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Definition
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Term
AMPA & NMDA are both ______ glutamate receptors |
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Definition
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Term
AMPA vs NMDA: ions they allow to flow |
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Definition
AMPA = sodium into the cell
NMDA = sodium into the cell & also calcium into the cell |
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Term
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Definition
AMPA: glutamate, AMPA (synthetic molecules)
NMDA: glutamate, NMDA (synthetic molecules) |
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Term
do almost all glutamate receptors have just AMPA, just NMDA, or both? |
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Definition
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Term
AMPA vs NMDA: antagonists |
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Definition
AMPA: QX compounds (DNQX, CNQX, NBQX)
NMDA: APV (AP5), MK801 (will only bind & inactivate NMDA receptors once they have been opened at least once) |
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Term
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Definition
AMPA: linear (think: like a leak channel...flow of ions completely follows Ohm's Law --> current will always be directly related to driving force)
NMDA: non-linear (because they have an intracellular magnesium block) |
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Term
AMPA vs NMDA: ion permeability |
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Definition
AMPA: sodium & potassium (mostly sodium)
NMDA: sodium & potassium (mostly sodium) & also calcium |
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Term
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Definition
AMPA: very fast
NMDA: very slow |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
NMDA has ______ kinetics than AMPA |
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Definition
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Term
Why is there all the weird stuff going on for NMDA IV plot when the cell is more hyperpolarized than 0? |
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Definition
magnesium is a positively charged ion --> at hyperpolarized voltages, the magnesium will be bound into the pore of the NMDA receptor --> no current can go through |
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Term
What would NMDA IV plot look like without magnesium block? |
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Definition
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Term
at -80 mV, you will see a current in response to glutamate, but it is purely an _______ current |
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Definition
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Term
NMDA receptors don't start to get involved until around _____ mV |
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Definition
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Term
If you see a difference in current in the presence of APV, you are blocking the ______ current because it can only come in through the NMDA receptors (also you will get less sodium but mainly demonstrating the loss of this current) |
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Definition
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Term
______ require both glutamate & postsynaptic depolarization to allow current to come through the cell |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
presynaptic activity & postsynaptic activity |
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Term
coincidence detection in NMDA receptors is caused by _______ |
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Definition
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Term
______ is required for LTP! |
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Definition
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Term
______ receptors are only active when neuron is active (i.e. depolarized) |
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Definition
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Term
the molecular mechanism that allows learning to happen |
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Definition
NMDA receptors are coincidence detectors that allow calcium influx only when neurons are depolarized |
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Term
very short time scale (10 ms - 1 s) + strengthened = ? |
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Definition
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Term
very short time scale (10 ms - 1 s ) + weakened = ? |
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Definition
synaptic depression (short-term depression) |
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Term
medium length time scale (hours) + strengthened = ? |
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Definition
long-term potentiation (LTP) |
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Term
long length time scale (days) + strengthened = ? |
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Definition
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Term
long length time scale (days) + weakened = ? |
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Definition
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Term
the ability of synapses to strengthen or weaken over time in response to increases or decreases in their activity |
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Definition
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Term
"Plasticity" just means _______ |
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Definition
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Term
the canonical mechanism of cellular learning in the brain |
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Definition
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Term
describe the specificity of LTP |
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Definition
if you have a neuron that is getting input from two different presynaptic cells, the one that is releasing glutamate coincident in time to postsynaptic activity --> strengthening in that synapse compared to the other presynaptic cell |
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Term
describe associativity of LTP |
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Definition
once you have a strong connection in one synapse, others that fire when that one fires (even if they are weaker) onto the same postsynaptic neuron will have an association strengthening with that initial strong presynaptic neuron |
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Term
the hippocampus has been known for a long time to be important for ______ |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
to fix his epilepsy, a surgeon lesioned his hippocampus --> HM was no longer able to form new memories |
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Term
If you can't do LTP in the hippocampus, you cannot ______ |
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Definition
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Term
experiment discovering LTP |
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Definition
tetanic stimulation --> huge vesicle release (huge depolarization of hippocampal pyramidal neuron) --> waited a bit & then gave a single pulse --> much larger postsynaptic response compared to responses before tetanic stimulation |
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Term
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Definition
1. huge amount of depolarization 2. magnesium block comes out of NMDAR 3, calcium flows into the cell 4. calcium activates CaMKII (calcium-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II) 5. CaMKII phosphorylates target proteins |
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Term
NMDARs provide the ______, but they do not change in number or really contribute to the size of the response |
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Definition
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Term
______ is essentially the "memory molecule" |
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Definition
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Term
how do groups of CaMKII molecules act? |
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Definition
hang out together & can cooperate with each other in a holoenzyme complex |
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Term
calcium binds to calmodulin --> ? |
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Definition
calmodulin binds to CaMKII to activate it by changing its conformation |
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Term
eventually, calcium & calmodulin will disassociate BUT CaMKII can continue to phosphorylate itself at site ______ |
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Definition
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Term
Can mice with mutations in CaMKII learn the Morris Water Maze? |
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Definition
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Term
what happens in control mice in the Morris Water Maze? |
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Definition
eventually, they learn exactly where platform is & will find platform very quickly (4 - 5 training sessions!) |
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Term
a strengthening of the synaptic connection between two neurons |
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Definition
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Term
when you look at a graph showing LTP, you are basically looking at ______ currents |
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Definition
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Term
APV (AP5) has what effect on LTP? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
compound that blocks CaMKII activity |
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Term
normal autophosphorylation keeps CaMKII active for up to an hour after calcium influx --> ? |
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Definition
driving of AMPARs into postsynaptic terminal |
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Term
what does a current graph look like when you prevent CaMKII autoP to block LTP? |
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Definition
like using APV, you still get the 100% next to baseline AMPAR current but you just don't get the LTP increase that you see normally following tetanic stimulation |
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Term
aplysia gill withdrawal reflex |
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Definition
normal aplysia will pull in siphon/gills if touched but will come back out after about 10 seconds |
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|
Term
5 steps in aplysia gill withdrawal reflex |
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Definition
1. sensory neurons have dendrites in siphon 2. sensory neuron releases glutamate onto motor neuron in response to siphon being poked 3. motor neuron causes muscles in gill to retract to protect the gill 4. maintain sucked in position for about 10 seconds 5. relax back |
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Term
touch the siphon --> ______ in motor neuron |
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Definition
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|
Term
what happens if you teach the aplysia that touching the siphon comes along with a shock? |
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Definition
every time you touch the siphon --> electric shock on tail --> induce plasticity between sensory & motor neuron (presynaptic strengthening) --> touching the siphon even without shock, you get a much stronger gill withdrawal reflex than before |
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Term
sensory neuron from aplysia tail activates ______ in response to shock |
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Definition
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Term
facilitating interneuron has 5HT --> ? |
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Definition
when it is activated 5HT is released onto axon terminal of siphon sensory neuron |
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Term
6 molecular mechanisms of short-term facilitation |
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Definition
1. 5HT release onto siphon sensory neuron 2. metabotropic receptor binds 5HT 3. couples to intracellular signaling pathways (GPCR) 4. G protein dissociates from receptor to target adenylyl cyclase 5. makes cyclic AMP (cAMP) second messenger to trigger many intracellular changes 6. activates protein kinase A (PKA) (AKA "cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase) |
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|
Term
3 possible outcomes of activating PKA |
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Definition
1. increases readily releasable pool of neurotransmitters/vesicles 2. phosphorylate voltage-gated calcium channels 3. phosphorylate voltage-gated potassium channels |
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|
Term
Is PKA relevant for human learning & memory? |
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Definition
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|
Term
does PKA increase or decrease potassium current? |
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Definition
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|
Term
3 steps for changing potassium current to increase neurotransmitter release |
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Definition
1. decrease potassium current 2. changes shape of the AP 3. spends more time depolarized in response to AP which allows calcium in which leads to vesicle release |
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|
Term
PKA gets activated by cAMP which gets produced when ______ |
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Definition
5HT binds to GPCRs on siphon sensory neuron |
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|
Term
more glutamate release from siphon sensory neuron onto motor neuron --> ? |
|
Definition
increased gill withdrawal reflex |
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Term
do the same molecular cascades go on to produce a long-term vs a short-term memory? |
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Definition
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Term
how does structural plasticity work for long-term potentiation? |
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Definition
you are actually causing growth of new connections between sensory neuron & motor neuron! |
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Term
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Definition
regulatory subunits (2) and catalytic subunits (2) |
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Term
what happens to the regulatory subunits & catalytic sites when cAMP activates PKA? |
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Definition
regulatory subunits dissociate from the catalytic sites |
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Term
what happens when PKA is active for a long time? |
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Definition
it actually trans-locates up the axon to the nucleus of the cell |
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Term
when in the nucleus, PKA activates ______ |
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Definition
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Term
4 steps how phosphorylation of CREB turns on gene transcription |
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Definition
1. cAMP turns on PKA 2. repeated long-term activation PKA translocates to nucleus 3. PKA phosphorylates CREB 4. long-term memories are formed due to change in gene transcription |
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Term
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Definition
memory storage for emotional events |
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Term
mutations in ______ block long-term fear conditioning |
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Definition
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Term
is short term memory fine in a CREB mutant? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
protein synthesis inhibitor |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
PKA travels to the nucleus, leads to _______ |
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Definition
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Term
phosphorylation of CREB leads to ______ |
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Definition
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Term
2 results that are the same whether you block CREB phosphorylation or protein synthesis |
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Definition
1. short term memory is fine 2. long term memory is hindered |
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Term
blocking NMDA receptors prevents any ______ |
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Definition
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Term
preventing CaMKII autoP blocks ______ |
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Definition
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Term
CREB mutant: short-term vs long-term change |
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Definition
facilitation in beginning but no long term change because no gene expression changes in the nucleus (transcription factor is not active) |
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Term
block CREB or protein synthesis --> ? |
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Definition
protein/plasticity that fades within a few hours |
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Term
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Definition
EPSP slope never really leaves baseline |
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Term
ACT-D or anisomycin --> ? |
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Definition
field EPSP slope jumps up initially, but then fades back to baseline |
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Term
increase in connection between two neurons (more synapses) |
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Definition
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Term
more axon branches are made & synapse onto dendrite of neuron with ______ |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
brain derived neurotrophic factor (axon growth) |
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Term
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Definition
activity-related cytoskeletal associated protein |
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Term
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Definition
transcription factor that regulates other genes |
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Term
______ can be used to label neurons during a memory task |
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Definition
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Term
hypothesis of what is a memory |
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Definition
a memory is just a specific grouping of neurons that are activated at the same time (called an engram) |
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Term
if we activate a "memory" we should be able to see evidence of _______ in a group of neurons (cfos) |
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Definition
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Term
if cfos labeled neurons are really a memory, & we can somehow use optogenetics, we should be able to ______ |
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Definition
turn that memory on & off |
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Term
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Definition
cluster of neurons active at the same time, constitutes a memory |
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Term
for optogenetics, we use a viral injection to insert new _____ into the cell membrane |
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Definition
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Term
new proteins inserted in optogenetics |
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Definition
light-activated ion channels (opsins) |
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Term
channelrhodopsin (ChR2) ______ neurons |
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Definition
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Term
archaerhodopsin (Arch) ______ neurons |
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Definition
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Term
Arch-T activation of tagged neurons --> ? |
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Definition
NOT freezing when placed in the context |
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Term
ChR2 activation of tagged neurons --> ? |
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Definition
freezing in a new context |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
paired pulse test --> 2 possible evoked responses |
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Definition
1. facilitation 2. depression |
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Term
presynaptic causes of facilitation vs depression |
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Definition
facilitation: not many vesicles were released with the first pulse; more calcium needed to enter the terminal (serotonin --> PKA --> increase calcium influx)
depression: the pool of readily-releasable vesicles was depleted with the first pulse |
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Term
short-term memory is commonly considered ______ |
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Definition
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Term
postsynaptic causes of LTP |
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Definition
NMDA receptors as a coincidence detector; leads to activation of CaMKII |
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Term
long-term memory is considered ______ |
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Definition
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Term
presynaptic causes of L-LTP |
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Definition
serotonin receptors lead to phosphorylation of CREB through GPCR signaling cascade; requires the nucleus (in the soma) |
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