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The Nervous System

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Page 1: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

The Nervous System

Page 2: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

The nervous system is made of:•Interconnected neurones, specialised for

rapid transmission of impulses

•These carry impulses from receptor cells

•Neurones also carry impulses to effector cells which carryout appropriate responses

Page 3: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•Simplest nervous system is made up of a receptor, neurone and nerve endings associated with an effector

•It can be much more complex

•Many receptors working together make up sensory organs eg the eye

•Complex nerve pathways exist.

•Sensory neurones only carry information from receptors to processing areas of the nervous system

Page 4: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•As animals increase in complexity, so do their nervous systems

•They develop specialised concentrations of nerves – the Central Nervous System (brain and spinal cord in us)

•Incoming information is processed here

•Impulses are then sent out via motor neurones

Page 5: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•Neurones are individual cells each one having a nerve fibre that carries impulses

•Nerves are bundles of nerve fibres(axons or dendrons the name relates to direction of

impulse)

•Some nerves are exclusively motor nerves, some sensory, some are a mix

Page 6: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Simple organisms

•Hydra etc have simple nerve net

•They respond to limited stimuli•They have limited effectors•The nerve net is made of simple nerve

cells with extensions that branch out connect up to others in various directions.

Page 7: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Reflex arc

Page 8: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Sensory Neurone

Page 9: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Motor Neurone

Page 10: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Relay neurone

Page 11: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Structure and Function of Neurones

•Neurones are the basic building blocks of a nervous system

•They have a cell body containing the nucleus etc along with Nissl’s granules – groups of RER and ribosomes needed to make neurotransmitters

•Dendrites are finger like processes that connect to neighbouring neurones

Page 12: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•The nerve fibre itself is a slender fibre that carries the impulses

•Fibres that carry impulses away from the cell body are called axons

•Those that carry impulses toward the cell body are dendrons

•Relay neurones are found in the CNS linking sensory and motor neurones

Page 13: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Myelinated Nerve Fibres

•Vertebrate neurones are associated with specialist cells called Schwann cells

•It is a membrane that wraps round the nerve fibre many times

•It forms a myelin sheath•There are gaps between Schwann cells

called nodes of Ranvier•The myelin sheath protects the nerve from

damage and speeds up impulse transmission

Page 14: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Myelin Sheath

Page 15: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Speedy Nerve Impulses

•The thicker the fibre, the quicker the impulse

•Myelinated nerves are faster than unmyelinated

•Invertebrates have no myelin sheaths and their fibres are thin… they are slow at around 0.5ms-1

•So how do they avoid danger?•Some invertebrates have giant axons upto

1mm in diameter•This allows impulses to move at 100ms-1

Page 16: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•Vertebrates have both myelinated and unmylinated nerves.

•Voluntary motor neurones are myelinated•Autonomic motor neurones eg those

controlling digestive system muscles are not

•Myelinated nerves means you don’t need giant axons

•This saves room•It also means that can have a more

versatile network carrying impulses at up to 120 ms-1

Page 17: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Investigating Nerve Impulses•Best way is to measure the (small)

electrical changes taking place.•Needs apparatus sensitive to these

changes•Uses micro-electrodes to record and

displayed on a screen (oscilloscope)

•Most work done using motor neurones (axons)

• Can you think why?????

Page 18: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor
Page 19: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor
Page 20: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Nerve Impulses

•The basis of nerve impulses is different levels of Na+ and K+ on the inside and outside of axons

•Remember membranes are partially permeable

•It has different permeability to the 2 ions•At rest the axon is impermeable to Na

ions, but permeable to K ions.•It also has a very active

sodium/potassium pump•This uses ATP to move Na+ out of the

axon, K+ in

Page 21: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•End up with less Na+ on the inside, pumped out but can’t get back in

•At same time, K+ gets moved in, but it diffuses back out along the concentration gradient

•Eventually the movement of K down the conc. gradient is stopped by the electrochemical gradient

•The inside of the axon is left slightly –ve compared with the outside: polarised

•This resting potential is around -70mV

Page 22: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor
Page 23: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Action Potential•When a neurone is stimulated there is a rapid

change in membrane permeability to Na+

•Specific Na+ channels (sodium gates) open allowing movement to rapidly diffuse down their conc. gradient

•This means the potential across the membrane is briefly reversed

•Cell becomes +ve on inside (compared to outside)

•This depolarisation last 1ms, and the difference is about +40mV

•This is the Action Potential

Page 24: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•At the end of this brief period, Na+ channels close again

•Sodium pumps removed the excess ions(requires ATP)

• the membrane becomes hyperpolarised as voltage dependant K+ channels also open

•So more K+ move out than should

•This is soon reversed when they shut

Page 25: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

All or Nothing

•There is a threshold amount of Na channels needed to be open before the rush of Na+ in, is more than K+ out

•When this has been reached, an action potential will occur

•The size of the action potential is always the same.

•This is the ‘all or nothing’ law

Page 26: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Weak Stimulus

•Some Sodium gates opened

•Some Depolarisation

•Does NOT reach Threshold

•So NO Action potential

Page 27: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Strong Stimulus

•Many sodium gates open

•Enough depolarisation to reach threshold

•Action Potential produced

Page 28: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Very Strong Stimulus

•Depolarisation reaches threshold

•Action potential produced

•BUT the action potential is no bigger than before!

Page 29: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•The recovery time of an axon is called its refractory period

•This depends on the sodium/potassium pump and membrane permeability to K +

•For the first ms or so, you cant send another impulse down the fibre

•This is the absolute refractory period•After this there is a few ms where it can be

re-stimulated, but it requires a much higher stimulus

•This is the relative refractory period•During this time, the voltage-dependent K+

channels are still open, resting potential cant be restored until they are shut.

Page 30: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•Refractory periods are important in the nervous system

•It limits rate of impulses to 500-1000 each second

•It also ensures impulses flow in only one direction down a nerve

•Until resting potential is restored, that section of a fibre cannot conduct an impulse

•This means the impulse can only go forward, never in reverse…

Page 31: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Neurones in Action

Page 32: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor
Page 33: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor
Page 34: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor
Page 35: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

• In myelinated neurones it is more complex

• Ions can only pass through membranes at nodes of Ranvier

• These occur every 1mm• This means Action

Potentials can only occur at nodes

• They appear to jump from node to node

• The effect of this is to speed up transmission

• It is called saltatory conduction (from the Latin saltare – to jump)

Page 36: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor
Page 37: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor
Page 38: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Synapses• Neurones need to

intercommunicate• Receptors pass on to

sensory nerves, they relay to the CNS. The CNS processes and pass on to effectors via motor neurones.

• Where 2 neurones meet they are linked by a synapse

• Every cell in the CNS is covered with synaptic knobs from other cells

• Neurones don’t touch each other, there is a gap between

Page 39: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•Synapses rely on movement of Ca ions•When an impulse reaches the synaptic knob, it increases the presynaptic membrane’s permeability to Ca ions (Ca ion channels open)

•Ca ions move in•The influx makes synaptic vesicles to move to the membrane

•They fuse and release their contents•They contain neurotransmitter (~

3000 molecules)

Page 40: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•The molecules diffuse across the synaptic cleft and bond with receptors on the post-synaptic membrane

•This opens Na channels so there is an influx intp the post-synaptic neurone

•This creates an excitatory post-synaptic potential (EPSP)

•With sufficient EPSPs, the positive charge exceeds the threshold and an Action Potential is set up.

Page 41: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•Once the transmitter has had its effect, it is broken down by enzymes in the cleft so it can react with new impulses.

•In some cases the transmitter can have opposite effects

•Other ion channels open so the inside becomes even more negative

•Inhibitory post-synaptic potential is set up

•It makes it less likely an AP will be set up•IPSPs are important, for example, in how

we hear sounds

Page 42: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Transmitter Substances•One of the most common neurotransmitters

found in most synapses is acetylcholine (ACh)

• It is made in the synaptic knob using the ATP made by all the mitochondria present

•Nerves which use ACh are called cholinergic nerves

•Cholinesterase breaks it down in the cleft•The products are reabsorbed and recycled•Not all nerves use ACh, some (symapthetic

nervous system) use noradrenaline – adrenergic nerves

•Dopamine is used in the CNS

Page 43: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Interactions Between NeuronesNeurones interact in a variety of complex ways…

Page 44: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Summation and Facilitation

•Often one synaptic knob wont release enough transmitter to set up an AP

•If 2 or more knobs are stimulated at the same time releasing on the same membrane, the effects add together and an AP may be generated

•This is spatial summation

Page 45: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•Sometimes, if one knob isnt enough to stimulate a response, but a second impulse from the same one arrives soon after, it may trigger an AP

•This is called temporal summation•This also involves facilitation•The first impulse doesn’t trigger an AP,

but it makes it easier for (facilitates) the next one

Page 46: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor
Page 47: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Accommodation•If your senses are continually triggered,

you eventually get used to it and no longer notice it.

•This is accommodation•Essentially, what has happened is all the

neurotransmitter in a synaptic knob has been released

•It can no longer function, it is fatigued•A short rest and they regenerate

Page 48: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Sensory Systems•Sensory receptors play a vital role in

providing an animal with information about both its internal and external environment.

•Simple receptors are just neurones with a dendrite sensitive to a stimulus

•This type of cell is a primary receptor•A secondary receptor is more

complicated

Page 49: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

• Secondary receptors are made up of one or more completely specialised cells (NOT neurones)

• These cells then synapse with a normal sensory neurone

• A good example is retinal cells in the eye

• As animals become more complex, so do their sensory systems

• In higher animals, many sensory receptors come together to make sensory organs.

Page 50: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Nerves and chemicals

Page 51: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

The Brain’s Chemical Balance

•The brain uses a number of different neurotransmitters

•An imbalance in these transmitters can result in mental and physical symptoms

•Treating these imbalances means getting drugs across the blood-brain barrier

•This makes it difficult

Page 52: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

• Drugs that affect the brain usually work at the synapses

• So there are a number of stages in transmission which they can target

Page 53: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Illegal Drugs and the Brain

Page 54: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor
Page 55: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Illegal Drugs and the Brain•L-dopa and SSRIs can have clear

benefits•They are therapeutic and legal•Others are legal and enjoyable eg

caffeine•Caffeine crosses the blood brain barrier

and affects the brain in several wayseg slows down the rate of dopamine reabsorption in synapses

Page 56: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•Some drugs are used because of the impact they have on the brain

•They are often illegal•Ecstasy (3,4-methylenedioxy-N-

methylamphetamine or MDMA) is one•Ecstasy acts as a stimulant raising heart

rate•It is also psychotropic•Short term affects make people happy,

sociable, full of energy, warm and empathetic

•All by affecting serotonin synapses

Page 57: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•MDMA blocks serotonin reuptake so the synapses are flooded with serotonin

•There is some evidence it makes the transport system work in reverse so serotonin in the pre-synaptic knob is moved into the cleft, flooding it

•It may also affect dopamine systems leading to the pleasure sensation

Page 58: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•Ecstasy causes physical changes like increased heart rate

• It can cause problems with thermoregulation•There may be no desire to drink so you

overheat (hyperthermia) – can lead to death• It affects the hypothalmus so you secrete

more antidiuretic hormone.•This stops production of urine• If you keep drinking water to stay hydrated

and stop overheating, you can retain so much water, osmosis destroys your cells

Page 59: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Sensitivity in Plants

Page 60: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Communication in Plants

•Specific chemicals released by plant cells are used to carry messages

•Plants rely on these chemicals to carry messages to different parts of their structure

•They help respond to factors like light and gravity

•They move cell to cell and through the transport system

Page 61: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Stimuli that affect plants•Light

▫Direction, intensity and length of time of exposure

•Gravity•Water•Temperature•Touch (in some cases)•Chemicals (in some cases)

Page 62: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Plant Responses

•Response to stimuli is by making or destroying chemical messages – plant hormones

•They are produced in one part of a plant, travel elsewhere and have an effect there.

•In animals hormones have a variety of effects

•In plants it is usually just a growth response - tropism

Page 63: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

How Plants Grow

•Define growth…•It is brought about by:

▫Cell division▫Assimilation▫Cell expansion

•Cell expansion most noticeable, takes up water by osmosis

•Meristems are where most growth occur (just behind stem & root tips).

•Meristems are also the area most sensitive to hormones

Page 64: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor
Page 65: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

The effect of Light on plantsDay length determines bud development, flowering, fruit ripening and leaf fall. Chlorophyll formation needs light. Without light plants die.

Page 66: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Sensory Systems in Plants•Seeds of many plants will not germinate

without exposure to light•Has been shown red light (580-660nm) is most

effective (in lettuce)•Far red light (700-730nm) actually inhibits

germination• It was hypothesised a plant pigment that

reacts with diff. types of light was responsible• In 1960, it was found and isolated,

phytochrome

Page 67: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor
Page 68: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•Phytochrome is blue-green pigment•It exists in 2 forms P660 (PR) and P730 (PFR)•When one form absorbs light it is

converted into the other form.

•PR is more stable but it is PFR that is biologically active

Page 69: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•Phytochromes enable plants to respond to cues like changes in day length

•Sometimes they are excitatory•Other times they are inhibitory•How phytochromes influence plant

responses are not fully understood!

Page 70: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Phytochromes and Etiolation

• In the dark plants become etiolated:▫Grow rapidly using up food in an attempt to

reach the light•Plants become tall and thin, little chlorophyll•When they reach light, growth slows and they

make more chlorophyll – survival mechanism• In the dark there is plenty of PR but little PFR.•PFR inhibits the lengthening of internodes and

stimulates both chlorophyll production and leaf growth

Page 71: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Photoperiodism

•In the UK, daylight can vary from 9 – 15hrs

•It acts as an important cue for organisms •One of the most obvious affected

activities is flowering in plants•In the 1920s Garner and Allard studied a

tobacco plant (in USA)•Most tobacco plants flower in summer,

they looked at one that flowered in December.

Page 72: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

• They realised they were responding to day length as a cue

• With more than 14hrs light – no flowers

• When less than 14hrs – it flowered.

• Called critical day length

Page 73: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•It has been found that plants respond differently:

•Short day plants (SDPs) flower when days are short

•Long day plants (LDPs) flower when days are long

•Day Neutral Plants (DNPs) don’t care!

•Since then it has been shown it is length of darkness, not light, that is important!!!

Page 74: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

How the length of the dark signal is received•The detection of photoperiod takes place

in the leaves•The presence of a hormone, florigen, was

hypothesised in the 1930s•It was thought florigen was made in

response to changing levels of phytochromes and carried in the transport system to buds.

Page 75: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

• If the whole plant is kept in the dark but one leaf is given usual levels of light and dark – flowering occurs as normal.

• If the whole plant is kept in the dark, it doesn’t.

• Using the same set up, if the leaf that gets normal light is removed straight away after stimulus, plant still does not flower

Page 76: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

• If a number of plants are grafted together, but only one is exposed to correct lighting regime, all flower!

• You can even graft a leaf that has been exposed correctly to a plant which hasn’t been exposed correctly and it will flower.

Page 77: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•Nobody has ever managed to isolate ‘florigen’

•It fell out of favour and was thought not to exist.

•Lately though, a particular form of mRNA has been found to be produced in the leaf associated to the Flowering Locus T gene.

•FTmRNA was thought not to be able to leave the cell and therefore it could not be florigen

•But it has been shown to move via plasmodesmata and does go to the shoot apex activating flowering genes!

Page 78: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Tropic responses

Page 79: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•Plants move in response to various cues:▫Light from one direction (Phototropism)▫Gravity (Geotropism)▫Chemicals (chemotropism)▫Touch (Thigmotropism)

They all require chemical signals.

Page 80: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•When a seed starts to germinate, shoot and root need to grow.

•Shoot grows up to the light•Root grows down into the soil where

water and nutrients are.

Page 81: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Phototropism

•In bright, all round light, plants will grow straight

•In unilateral light (from one side) they will bend towards it, roots move away from it

•Shoots are positively phototropic, roots are negatively phototropic

•How does this work?!

Page 82: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Went’s experiments of the 1920s

Page 83: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor
Page 84: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor
Page 85: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor
Page 86: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

Unilateral Light and Phototropisms

Page 87: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•The growth substance (hormone) involved in phototropism is called auxin

•The first auxin discovered was indoleacetic acid (IAA)

•Auxins are now made commercially to help gardeners make cuttings root quickly.

Page 88: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

How Do Auxins Work in a Plant?

Page 89: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor

•The side of a plant exposed to light has less auxin in than the darker side

•Light seems to make auxins move laterally across the shoot

•This movement means the tip is acting as a photoreceptor

•More hormone diffuses down the dark side of the plant to the zone of elongation

•So the dark side grows more•So the plant bends towards the light

Page 90: The Nervous System. The nervous system is made of: Interconnected neurones, specialised for rapid transmission of impulses These carry impulses from receptor