Bundles of axons in the peripheral nervous system (PNS) are referred to as nerves.
Central Nervous System
Image by TheVisualMD
Nerves
3D Medical Animation still shot of Lumbosacral Plaxus of human nervous system
Image by https://www.scientificanimations.com
3D Medical Animation still shot of Lumbosacral Plaxus of human nervous system
3D Medical Animation still shot of Lumbosacral Plaxus of human nervous system
Image by https://www.scientificanimations.com
Nerves
Nerves
Bundles of axons in the PNS are referred to as nerves. These structures in the periphery are different than the central counterpart, called a tract. Nerves are composed of more than just nervous tissue. They have connective tissues invested in their structure, as well as blood vessels supplying the tissues with nourishment. The outer surface of a nerve is a surrounding layer of fibrous connective tissue called the epineurium. Within the nerve, axons are further bundled into fascicles, which are each surrounded by their own layer of fibrous connective tissue called perineurium. Finally, individual axons are surrounded by loose connective tissue called the endoneurium (image). These three layers are similar to the connective tissue sheaths for muscles. Nerves are associated with the region of the CNS to which they are connected, either as cranial nerves connected to the brain or spinal nerves connected to the spinal cord.
Review
The PNS is composed of the groups of neurons (ganglia) and bundles of axons (nerves) that are outside of the brain and spinal cord. Ganglia are of two types, sensory or autonomic. Sensory ganglia contain unipolar sensory neurons and are found on the dorsal root of all spinal nerves as well as associated with many of the cranial nerves. Autonomic ganglia are in the sympathetic chain, the associated paravertebral or prevertebral ganglia, or in terminal ganglia near or within the organs controlled by the autonomic nervous system.
Nerves are classified as cranial nerves or spinal nerves on the basis of their connection to the brain or spinal cord, respectively. The twelve cranial nerves can be strictly sensory in function, strictly motor in function, or a combination of the two functions. Sensory fibers are axons of sensory ganglia that carry sensory information into the brain and target sensory nuclei. Motor fibers are axons of motor neurons in motor nuclei of the brain stem and target skeletal muscles of the head and neck. Spinal nerves are all mixed nerves with both sensory and motor fibers. Spinal nerves emerge from the spinal cord and reorganize through plexuses, which then give rise to systemic nerves. Thoracic spinal nerves are not part of any plexus, but give rise to the intercostal nerves directly.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (1)
Central Nervous System
Central Nervous System
Image by TheVisualMD
Central Nervous System
TheVisualMD
Nerve Tissue
Progenitor Cell
Committed Cell
Mature Cell
Differentiated Cell
1
2
3
4
Maturation of a Neuron
Interactive by TheVisualMD
Progenitor Cell
Committed Cell
Mature Cell
Differentiated Cell
1
2
3
4
Maturation of a Neuron
Interactive by TheVisualMD
Nerve Tissue
Although the nervous system is very complex, there are only two main types of cells in nerve tissue. The actual nerve cell is the neuron. It is the "conducting" cell that transmits impulses and the structural unit of the nervous system. The other type of cell is neuroglia, or glial, cell. The word "neuroglia" means "nerve glue." These cells are nonconductive and provide a support system for the neurons. They are a special type of "connective tissue" for the nervous system.
Neurons
Neurons, or nerve cells, carry out the functions of the nervous system by conducting nerve impulses. They are highly specialized and amitotic. This means that if a neuron is destroyed, it cannot be replaced because neurons do not go through mitosis. The image below illustrates the structure of a typical neuron.
Each neuron has three basic parts: cell body (soma), one or more dendrites, and a single axon.
Cell Body
In many ways, the cell body is similar to other types of cells. It has a nucleus with at least one nucleolus and contains many of the typical cytoplasmic organelles. It lacks centrioles, however. Because centrioles function in cell division, the fact that neurons lack these organelles is consistent with the amitotic nature of the cell.
Dendrites
Dendrites and axons are cytoplasmic extensions, or processes, that project from the cell body. They are sometimes referred to as fibers. Dendrites are usually, but not always, short and branching, which increases their surface area to receive signals from other neurons. The number of dendrites on a neuron varies. They are called afferent processes because they transmit impulses to the neuron cell body. There is only one axon that projects from each cell body. It is usually elongated and because it carries impulses away from the cell body, it is called an efferent process.
Axon
An axon may have infrequent branches called axon collaterals. Axons and axon collaterals terminate in many short branches or telodendria. The distal ends of the telodendria are slightly enlarged to form synaptic bulbs. Many axons are surrounded by a segmented, white, fatty substance called myelin or the myelin sheath. Myelinated fibers make up the white matter in the CNS, while cell bodies and unmyelinated fibers make the gray matter. The unmyelinated regions between the myelin segments are called the nodes of Ranvier.
In the peripheral nervous system, the myelin is produced by Schwann cells. The cytoplasm, nucleus, and outer cell membrane of the Schwann cell form a tight covering around the myelin and around the axon itself at the nodes of Ranvier. This covering is the neurilemma, which plays an important role in the regeneration of nerve fibers. In the CNS, oligodendrocytes produce myelin, but there is no neurilemma, which is why fibers within the CNS do not regenerate.
Functionally, neurons are classified as afferent, efferent, or interneurons (association neurons) according to the direction in which they transmit impulses relative to the central nervous system. Afferent, or sensory, neurons carry impulses from peripheral sense receptors to the CNS. They usually have long dendrites and relatively short axons. Efferent, or motor, neurons transmit impulses from the CNS to effector organs such as muscles and glands. Efferent neurons usually have short dendrites and long axons. Interneurons, or association neurons, are located entirely within the CNS in which they form the connecting link between the afferent and efferent neurons. They have short dendrites and may have either a short or long axon.
Neuroglia
Neuroglia cells do not conduct nerve impulses, but instead, they support, nourish, and protect the neurons. They are far more numerous than neurons and, unlike neurons, are capable of mitosis.
Tumors
Schwannomas are benign tumors of the peripheral nervous system which commonly occur in their sporadic, solitary form in otherwise normal individuals. Rarely, individuals develop multiple schwannomas arising from one or many elements of the peripheral nervous system.
Commonly called a Morton's Neuroma, this problem is a fairly common benign nerve growth and begins when the outer coating of a nerve in your foot thickens. This thickening is caused by irritation of branches of the medial and lateral plantar nerves that results when two bones repeatedly rub together.
Source: Nerve Tissue | SEER Training
Additional Materials (17)
Progenitor Cell Environment
Committed Cell Environment
Differentiated Cell Environment
1
2
3
neuron begins life as a progenitor cell
Each neuron begins life as a progenitor cell. These cells form in the central part of the developing brain and then move outward along the supportive glial cells until they reach their pre-programmed location in the brain. As a progenitor cell reaches its destination, its status changes and it now is \"committed\" to become one of numerous types of neurons. The neuron begins to grow axons and dendrites. These fibers will eventually form a synapse, or connection, with those of other neurons. Once the neuron has taken on its specialized function, it is considered \"differentiated.\"
Interactive by TheVisualMD
Neurons
Neurons
Image by TheVisualMD
Neurons and Glial Cells
Glial cells support neurons and maintain their environment. Glial cells of the (a) central nervous system include oligodendrocytes, astrocytes, ependymal cells, and microglial cells. Oligodendrocytes form the myelin sheath around axons. Astrocytes provide nutrients to neurons, maintain their extracellular environment, and provide structural support. Microglia scavenge pathogens and dead cells. Ependymal cells produce cerebrospinal fluid that cushions the neurons. Glial cells of the (b) peripheral nervous system include Schwann cells, which form the myelin sheath, and satellite cells, which provide nutrients and structural support to neurons.
Image by CNX Openstax
Myelinated neurons are faster than unmyelinated neurons because of Saltatory motion.
Myelinated neurons are faster than unmyelinated neurons because of Saltatory motion.
Image by Dr. Jana
Brain Neuron
Medical visualization of a cluster of neurons in the brain. The brain chiefly consists of neurons - a major type of cell in the nervous system. Neurons vary widely in appearance, but all are comprised of cell bodies, dendrites, and axons. Because they have excitable membranes, neurons are able to generate and propagate electrical impulses, which allow them to process and transmit information. Therefore, they are responsible for communication between the different regions of the brain and body. Neurons in the brain also conduct such tasks as converting testosterone to estrogen.
Image by TheVisualMD
Neurons and Glial Cells
Nervous systems vary in structure and complexity. In (a) cnidarians, nerve cells form a decentralized nerve net. In (b) echinoderms, nerve cells are bundled into fibers called nerves. In animals exhibiting bilateral symmetry such as (c) planarians, neurons cluster into an anterior brain that processes information. In addition to a brain, (d) arthropods have clusters of nerve cell bodies, called peripheral ganglia, located along the ventral nerve cord. Mollusks such as squid and (e) octopi, which must hunt to survive, have complex brains containing millions of neurons. In (f) vertebrates, the brain and spinal cord comprise the central nervous system, while neurons extending into the rest of the body comprise the peripheral nervous system. (credit e: modification of work by Michael Vecchione, Clyde F.E. Roper, and Michael J. Sweeney, NOAA; credit f: modification of work by NIH)
Image by CNX Openstax
ALS Disease Pathology and Proposed Disease Mechanisms
This figure is from the journal article "Modelling amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: progress and possibilities" and shows ten proposed disease mechanisms for ALS.
Fig. 1. ALS disease pathology and proposed disease mechanisms. At the level of cell pathology, ALS is characterized by axonal retraction and cell body loss of upper and lower motor neurons, surrounded by astrogliosis and microgliosis (see Box 2), with ubiquitin- and p62-positive inclusions in surviving neurons. Proposed disease mechanisms contributing to motor neuron degeneration are:
Alterations in nucleocytoplasmic transport of RNA molecules and RNA-binding proteins.
Altered RNA metabolism: several important RNA-binding proteins become mislocalized in ALS, with cytosolic accumulation and nuclear depletion. The nuclear depletion causes defects in transcription and splicing. Some RNA-binding proteins can undergo liquid- liquid phase separation and can be recruited to stress granules (TDP-43, FUS, ATXN2, hnRNPA1/A2). Altered dynamics of stress granule formation or disassembly can propagate cytoplasmic aggregate formation.
Impaired proteostasis with accumulation of aggregating proteins (TDP-43, FUS, SOD1, DPRs). Overload of the proteasome system and reduced autophagy may contribute and/or cause this accumulation.
Impaired DNA repair: two recently identified ALS genes (see main text for details) work together in DNA repair, suggesting that impaired DNA repair could also contribute to ALS pathogenesis.
Mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress: several ALS- related proteins (SOD1, TDP-43, C9orf72) can enter mitochondria and disrupt normal functioning, with increased formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) as a consequence.
Oligodendrocyte dysfunction and degeneration, leading to reduced support for motor neurons.
Neuroinflammation: activated astrocytes and microglia secrete fewer neuroprotective factors and more toxic factors.
Defective axonal transport: several ALS-related mutations cause disorganization of the cytoskeletal proteins and disrupt axonal transport.
Defective vesicular transport: several ALS-related proteins (VABP, ALS2, CHMP2B, UNC13A) are involved in vesicular transport, suggesting that impaired vesicular transport contributes to ALS pathogenesis.
Excitotoxicity: loss of the astroglial glutamate transporter EAAT2 causes accumulation of extracellular glutamate, which causes excessive stimulation of glutamate receptors (e.g. AMPA receptors) and excessive calcium influx.
Image by Philip Van Damme, Wim Robberecht, and Ludo Van Den Bosch/Wikimedia
Neurons from Hippocampus
This image shows a group of pyramidal neurons from the CA1 region of the hippocampus, with individual neurons receiving impulses across synapses from below. Creating memories is one of the brain's most remarkable functions. By relying on an intricate network of connected nerves in different parts of the brain, we can record an experience, store it like a biological file stuffed with emotions and sensory legacies and then recall it at will. The hippocampus serves as the hub for making and storing memories.
Image by Pseudounipolar_bipolar_neurons.svg: Juoj8 derivative work: Jonathan Haas (talk)
Neuron Classification
Hand drawing of the main types of neurons, illustrating the four regions of each neuron: Input (red), Integrative (yellow), Conductive (blue) and Output (green)
Image by Miguel Iglesias
Pyramidal neurons
GFP expressing pyramydal cell in mouse cortex.
Image by Original uploader was Nrets at en.wikipedia
Motor Neuron
Extensor digitorum reflex is basically an example of monosynaptic as same as biceps reflex and brachioradialis reflex. Extensor digitoium reflex arc involves-receptor (muscle spindle in extensor digitoium), afferent (Iα fiber), center (Spinal cord C6, C7), efferent (alpha motor neurons), effector organ (skeletal muscle---extensor digitoium), while dynamic stretch reflexes of biceps reflex and brachioradialis reflex involving the spinal segment C5,C6.
Image by Zhang MJ, Zhu CZ, Duan ZM, Niu X. Department of Cardiology, Second Affiliated Hospital, School of Medicine, Xian Jiao Tong University, China. zhangmingjuan@mail.xjtu.edu.cn
Nerve Cell, Neuron, Brain, Neurons
Image by ColiN00B/Pixabay
Neuron Development
Each neuron begins life as a progenitor cell. These cells form in the central part of the developing brain and then move outward along the supportive glial cells until they reach their pre-programmed location in the brain. As a progenitor cell reaches its destination, its status changes and it now is \"committed\" to become one of numerous types of neurons. The neuron begins to grow axons and dendrites. These fibers will eventually form a synapse, or connection, with those of other neurons. Once the neuron has taken on its specialized function, it is considered \"differentiated.\"
Image by TheVisualMD
Progenitor Cell Environment
Each neuron begins life as a progenitor cell. These cells form in the central part of the developing brain and then move outward along the supportive glial cells until they reach their pre-programmed location in the brain. As a progenitor cell reaches its destination, its status changes and it now is \"committed\" to become one of numerous types of neurons. The neuron begins to grow axons and dendrites. These fibers will eventually form a synapse, or connection, with those of other neurons. Once the neuron has taken on its specialized function, it is considered \"differentiated.\"
Image by TheVisualMD
neuron begins life as a progenitor cell
TheVisualMD
Neurons
TheVisualMD
Neurons and Glial Cells
CNX Openstax
Myelinated neurons are faster than unmyelinated neurons because of Saltatory motion.
Dr. Jana
Brain Neuron
TheVisualMD
Neurons and Glial Cells
CNX Openstax
ALS Disease Pathology and Proposed Disease Mechanisms
Philip Van Damme, Wim Robberecht, and Ludo Van Den Bosch/Wikimedia
Pseudounipolar_bipolar_neurons.svg: Juoj8 derivative work: Jonathan Haas (talk)
Neuron Classification
Miguel Iglesias
Pyramidal neurons
Original uploader was Nrets at en.wikipedia
Motor Neuron
Zhang MJ, Zhu CZ, Duan ZM, Niu X. Department of Cardiology, Second Affiliated Hospital, School of Medicine, Xian Jiao Tong University, China. zhangmingjuan@mail.xjtu.edu.cn
Nerve Cell, Neuron, Brain, Neurons
ColiN00B/Pixabay
Neuron Development
TheVisualMD
Progenitor Cell Environment
TheVisualMD
More on Nerve Tissue
Muscle, Bone and Nervous System
Image by TheVisualMD
Muscle, Bone and Nervous System
Muscle, Bone and Nervous System
Image by TheVisualMD
The Nervous System and Nervous Tissue
The nervous system is a very complex organ system. In Peter D. Kramer’s book Listening to Prozac, a pharmaceutical researcher is quoted as saying, “If the human brain were simple enough for us to understand, we would be too simple to understand it” (1994). That quote is from the early 1990s; in the two decades since, progress has continued at an amazing rate within the scientific disciplines of neuroscience. It is an interesting conundrum to consider that the complexity of the nervous system may be too complex for it (that is, for us) to completely unravel. But our current level of understanding is probably nowhere close to that limit.
One easy way to begin to understand the structure of the nervous system is to start with the large divisions and work through to a more in-depth understanding. In other chapters, the finer details of the nervous system will be explained, but first looking at an overview of the system will allow you to begin to understand how its parts work together. The focus of this chapter is on nervous (neural) tissue, both its structure and its function. But before you learn about that, you will see a big picture of the system—actually, a few big pictures.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (12)
Male Body Revealing Skeletal System and Nervous System
Since the nervous system's job is to communicate with every part of the body, it follows that anything that injures the brain has the potential to affect another part of the body. At the same time, diseases that interfere with the body's functions may damage the brain. This applies not only to those that specifically target the nervous system and its neurotransmitters, like Parkinson's disease or multiple sclerosis, but to conditions we don't normally associate with mental disease such as diabetes, cardiovascular disease, even arthritis.
Image by TheVisualMD
Central Nervous System and Peripheral Nervous System
While the CNS processes information, it is the peripheral nervous system (PNS) that transmits this information to and from the CNS. It does this by receiving stimuli from sensory (afferent) neurons outside the CNS, and returning instructions from the CNS through motor (efferent) neurons. Efferent neurons control the muscles and glands. The PNS is responsible for both voluntary action such as walking, bending your arm or leg, and chewing, and involuntary actions such as breathing, digestion, and reflexes
Image by TheVisualMD
The Nervous System, Part 1: Crash Course A&P #8
Video by CrashCourse/YouTube
Autonomic Nervous System, Sympathetic and Parasympathetic Nervous Systems
Autonomic Nervous System, Sympathetic and Parasympathetic Nervous Systems
Image by TheVisualMD
The sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems often have opposing effects on target organs.
Image by OpenStax College
Microglia
Slc1a3 gene expressed in the Bergmann glia of the cerebellum of a mice aged 7 days; saggital section. The Gene Expression Nervous System Atlas (GENSAT) Project, NINDS Contract # N01NS02331 to The Rockefeller University (New York, NY)
Image by The Gene Expression Nervous System Atlas (GENSAT) Project, NINDS Contract # N01NS02331 to The Rockefeller University (New York, NY)
Somatic Nervous System
1. (Brain) Precentral gyrus: the origin of nerve signals initiating movement.
2. (Cross Section of Spinal Cord) Corticospinal tract: Mediator of message from brain to skeletal muscles. 3. Axon: the messenger cell that carries the command to contract muscles.
4. Neuromuscular junction: the messenger axon cell tells muscle cells to contract at this intersection
Image by Isa.tomanelli
Central Nervous System
A diagram of the human nervous system.
Image by William Crochot
The Central Nervous System
The limbic system regulates emotion and other behaviors. It includes parts of the cerebral cortex located near the center of the brain, including the cingulate gyrus and the hippocampus as well as the thalamus, hypothalamus and amygdala.
Image by CNX Openstax
Central and Peripheral Nervous System
The structures of the PNS are referred to as ganglia and nerves, which can be seen as distinct structures. The equivalent structures in the CNS are not obvious from this overall perspective and are best examined in prepared tissue under the microscope.
Image by CNX Openstax
Human Nervous System
The ability to balance like an acrobat combines functions throughout the nervous system. The central and peripheral divisions coordinate control of the body using the senses of balance, body position, and touch on the soles of the feet. (credit: Rhett Sutphin)
Image by CNX Openstax (credit: Rhett Sutphin)
Somatic Nervous System - Somatic Autonomic Enteric Structures
Somatic Autonomic Enteric Structures
Image by OpenStax
Male Body Revealing Skeletal System and Nervous System
TheVisualMD
Central Nervous System and Peripheral Nervous System
TheVisualMD
10:36
The Nervous System, Part 1: Crash Course A&P #8
CrashCourse/YouTube
Autonomic Nervous System, Sympathetic and Parasympathetic Nervous Systems
TheVisualMD
The sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems often have opposing effects on target organs.
OpenStax College
Microglia
The Gene Expression Nervous System Atlas (GENSAT) Project, NINDS Contract # N01NS02331 to The Rockefeller University (New York, NY)
Somatic Nervous System
Isa.tomanelli
Central Nervous System
William Crochot
The Central Nervous System
CNX Openstax
Central and Peripheral Nervous System
CNX Openstax
Human Nervous System
CNX Openstax (credit: Rhett Sutphin)
Somatic Nervous System - Somatic Autonomic Enteric Structures
OpenStax
Basic Structure and Function of the Nervous System
Posterior-lateral view of the central nervous system
Image by TheVisualMD
Posterior-lateral view of the central nervous system
3D visualization reconstructed from scanned human data of a posterior-lateral view of the central nervous system. The central nervous system is made up of brain and spinal cord. Enclosed within, and protected by, the bony vertebral column, the spinal cord functions primarily in the transmission of neural signals between the brain and the rest of the body.
Image by TheVisualMD
Basic Structure and Function of the Nervous System
The picture you have in your mind of the nervous system probably includes the brain, the nervous tissue contained within the cranium, and the spinal cord, the extension of nervous tissue within the vertebral column. That suggests it is made of two organs—and you may not even think of the spinal cord as an organ—but the nervous system is a very complex structure. Within the brain, many different and separate regions are responsible for many different and separate functions. It is as if the nervous system is composed of many organs that all look similar and can only be differentiated using tools such as the microscope or electrophysiology. In comparison, it is easy to see that the stomach is different than the esophagus or the liver, so you can imagine the digestive system as a collection of specific organs.
The Central and Peripheral Nervous Systems
The nervous system can be divided into two major regions: the central and peripheral nervous systems. The central nervous system (CNS) is the brain and spinal cord, and the peripheral nervous system (PNS) is everything else (image below). The brain is contained within the cranial cavity of the skull, and the spinal cord is contained within the vertebral cavity of the vertebral column. It is a bit of an oversimplification to say that the CNS is what is inside these two cavities and the peripheral nervous system is outside of them, but that is one way to start to think about it. In actuality, there are some elements of the peripheral nervous system that are within the cranial or vertebral cavities. The peripheral nervous system is so named because it is on the periphery—meaning beyond the brain and spinal cord. Depending on different aspects of the nervous system, the dividing line between central and peripheral is not necessarily universal.
Nervous tissue, present in both the CNS and PNS, contains two basic types of cells: neurons and glial cells. A glial cell is one of a variety of cells that provide a framework of tissue that supports the neurons and their activities. The neuron is the more functionally important of the two, in terms of the communicative function of the nervous system. To describe the functional divisions of the nervous system, it is important to understand the structure of a neuron. Neurons are cells and therefore have a soma, or cell body, but they also have extensions of the cell; each extension is generally referred to as a process. There is one important process that every neuron has called an axon, which is the fiber that connects a neuron with its target. Another type of process that branches off from the soma is the dendrite. Dendrites are responsible for receiving most of the input from other neurons. Looking at nervous tissue, there are regions that predominantly contain cell bodies and regions that are largely composed of just axons. These two regions within nervous system structures are often referred to as gray matter (the regions with many cell bodies and dendrites) or white matter (the regions with many axons). The image below demonstrates the appearance of these regions in the brain and spinal cord. The colors ascribed to these regions are what would be seen in “fresh,” or unstained, nervous tissue. Gray matter is not necessarily gray. It can be pinkish because of blood content, or even slightly tan, depending on how long the tissue has been preserved. But white matter is white because axons are insulated by a lipid-rich substance called myelin. Lipids can appear as white (“fatty”) material, much like the fat on a raw piece of chicken or beef. Actually, gray matter may have that color ascribed to it because next to the white matter, it is just darker—hence, gray.
The distinction between gray matter and white matter is most often applied to central nervous tissue, which has large regions that can be seen with the unaided eye. When looking at peripheral structures, often a microscope is used and the tissue is stained with artificial colors. That is not to say that central nervous tissue cannot be stained and viewed under a microscope, but unstained tissue is most likely from the CNS—for example, a frontal section of the brain or cross section of the spinal cord.
Regardless of the appearance of stained or unstained tissue, the cell bodies of neurons or axons can be located in discrete anatomical structures that need to be named. Those names are specific to whether the structure is central or peripheral. A localized collection of neuron cell bodies in the CNS is referred to as a nucleus. In the PNS, a cluster of neuron cell bodies is referred to as a ganglion. The image below indicates how the term nucleus has a few different meanings within anatomy and physiology. It is the center of an atom, where protons and neutrons are found; it is the center of a cell, where the DNA is found; and it is a center of some function in the CNS. There is also a potentially confusing use of the word ganglion (plural = ganglia) that has a historical explanation. In the central nervous system, there is a group of nuclei that are connected together and were once called the basal ganglia before “ganglion” became accepted as a description for a peripheral structure. Some sources refer to this group of nuclei as the “basal nuclei” to avoid confusion.
Terminology applied to bundles of axons also differs depending on location. A bundle of axons, or fibers, found in the CNS is called a tract whereas the same thing in the PNS would be called a nerve. There is an important point to make about these terms, which is that they can both be used to refer to the same bundle of axons. When those axons are in the PNS, the term is nerve, but if they are CNS, the term is tract. The most obvious example of this is the axons that project from the retina into the brain. Those axons are called the optic nerve as they leave the eye, but when they are inside the cranium, they are referred to as the optic tract. There is a specific place where the name changes, which is the optic chiasm, but they are still the same axons (image below). A similar situation outside of science can be described for some roads. Imagine a road called “Broad Street” in a town called “Anyville.” The road leaves Anyville and goes to the next town over, called “Hometown.” When the road crosses the line between the two towns and is in Hometown, its name changes to “Main Street.” That is the idea behind the naming of the retinal axons. In the PNS, they are called the optic nerve, and in the CNS, they are the optic tract. Table helps to clarify which of these terms apply to the central or peripheral nervous systems.
Optic Nerve Versus Optic Tract
This drawing of the connections of the eye to the brain shows the optic nerve extending from the eye to the chiasm, where the structure continues as the optic tract. The same axons extend from the eye to the brain through these two bundles of fibers, but the chiasm represents the border between peripheral and central.
In 2003, the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to Paul C. Lauterbur and Sir Peter Mansfield for discoveries related to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). This is a tool to see the structures of the body (not just the nervous system) that depends on magnetic fields associated with certain atomic nuclei. The utility of this technique in the nervous system is that fat tissue and water appear as different shades between black and white. Because white matter is fatty (from myelin) and gray matter is not, they can be easily distinguished in MRI images. Try this PhET simulation that demonstrates the use of this technology and compares it with other types of imaging technologies. Also, the results from an MRI session are compared with images obtained from X-ray or computed tomography.
Structures of the CNS and PNS
CNS
PNS
Group of Neuron Cell Bodies (i.e., gray matter)
Nucleus
Ganglion
Bundle of Axons (i.e., white matter)
Tract
Nerve
Functional Divisions of the Nervous System
The nervous system can also be divided on the basis of its functions, but anatomical divisions and functional divisions are different. The CNS and the PNS both contribute to the same functions, but those functions can be attributed to different regions of the brain (such as the cerebral cortex or the hypothalamus) or to different ganglia in the periphery. The problem with trying to fit functional differences into anatomical divisions is that sometimes the same structure can be part of several functions. For example, the optic nerve carries signals from the retina that are either used for the conscious perception of visual stimuli, which takes place in the cerebral cortex, or for the reflexive responses of smooth muscle tissue that are processed through the hypothalamus.
There are two ways to consider how the nervous system is divided functionally. First, the basic functions of the nervous system are sensation, integration, and response. Secondly, control of the body can be somatic or autonomic—divisions that are largely defined by the structures that are involved in the response. There is also a region of the peripheral nervous system that is called the enteric nervous system that is responsible for a specific set of the functions within the realm of autonomic control related to gastrointestinal functions.
Basic Functions
The nervous system is involved in receiving information about the environment around us (sensation) and generating responses to that information (motor responses). The nervous system can be divided into regions that are responsible for sensation (sensory functions) and for the response (motor functions). But there is a third function that needs to be included. Sensory input needs to be integrated with other sensations, as well as with memories, emotional state, or learning (cognition). Some regions of the nervous system are termed integration or association areas. The process of integration combines sensory perceptions and higher cognitive functions such as memories, learning, and emotion to produce a response.
Sensation. The first major function of the nervous system is sensation—receiving information about the environment to gain input about what is happening outside the body (or, sometimes, within the body). The sensory functions of the nervous system register the presence of a change from homeostasis or a particular event in the environment, known as a stimulus. The senses we think of most are the “big five”: taste, smell, touch, sight, and hearing. The stimuli for taste and smell are both chemical substances (molecules, compounds, ions, etc.), touch is physical or mechanical stimuli that interact with the skin, sight is light stimuli, and hearing is the perception of sound, which is a physical stimulus similar to some aspects of touch. There are actually more senses than just those, but that list represents the major senses. Those five are all senses that receive stimuli from the outside world, and of which there is conscious perception. Additional sensory stimuli might be from the internal environment (inside the body), such as the stretch of an organ wall or the concentration of certain ions in the blood.
Response. The nervous system produces a response on the basis of the stimuli perceived by sensory structures. An obvious response would be the movement of muscles, such as withdrawing a hand from a hot stove, but there are broader uses of the term. The nervous system can cause the contraction of all three types of muscle tissue. For example, skeletal muscle contracts to move the skeleton, cardiac muscle is influenced as heart rate increases during exercise, and smooth muscle contracts as the digestive system moves food along the digestive tract. Responses also include the neural control of glands in the body as well, such as the production and secretion of sweat by the eccrine and merocrine sweat glands found in the skin to lower body temperature.
Responses can be divided into those that are voluntary or conscious (contraction of skeletal muscle) and those that are involuntary (contraction of smooth muscles, regulation of cardiac muscle, activation of glands). Voluntary responses are governed by the somatic nervous system and involuntary responses are governed by the autonomic nervous system, which are discussed in the next section.
Integration. Stimuli that are received by sensory structures are communicated to the nervous system where that information is processed. This is called integration. Stimuli are compared with, or integrated with, other stimuli, memories of previous stimuli, or the state of a person at a particular time. This leads to the specific response that will be generated. Seeing a baseball pitched to a batter will not automatically cause the batter to swing. The trajectory of the ball and its speed will need to be considered. Maybe the count is three balls and one strike, and the batter wants to let this pitch go by in the hope of getting a walk to first base. Or maybe the batter’s team is so far ahead, it would be fun to just swing away.
Controlling the Body
The nervous system can be divided into two parts mostly on the basis of a functional difference in responses. The somatic nervous system (SNS) is responsible for conscious perception and voluntary motor responses. Voluntary motor response means the contraction of skeletal muscle, but those contractions are not always voluntary in the sense that you have to want to perform them. Some somatic motor responses are reflexes, and often happen without a conscious decision to perform them. If your friend jumps out from behind a corner and yells “Boo!” you will be startled and you might scream or leap back. You didn’t decide to do that, and you may not have wanted to give your friend a reason to laugh at your expense, but it is a reflex involving skeletal muscle contractions. Other motor responses become automatic (in other words, unconscious) as a person learns motor skills (referred to as “habit learning” or “procedural memory”).
The autonomic nervous system (ANS) is responsible for involuntary control of the body, usually for the sake of homeostasis (regulation of the internal environment). Sensory input for autonomic functions can be from sensory structures tuned to external or internal environmental stimuli. The motor output extends to smooth and cardiac muscle as well as glandular tissue. The role of the autonomic system is to regulate the organ systems of the body, which usually means to control homeostasis. Sweat glands, for example, are controlled by the autonomic system. When you are hot, sweating helps cool your body down. That is a homeostatic mechanism. But when you are nervous, you might start sweating also. That is not homeostatic, it is the physiological response to an emotional state.
There is another division of the nervous system that describes functional responses. The enteric nervous system (ENS) is responsible for controlling the smooth muscle and glandular tissue in your digestive system. It is a large part of the PNS, and is not dependent on the CNS. It is sometimes valid, however, to consider the enteric system to be a part of the autonomic system because the neural structures that make up the enteric system are a component of the autonomic output that regulates digestion. There are some differences between the two, but for our purposes here there will be a good bit of overlap. See image below for examples of where these divisions of the nervous system can be found.
Somatic, Autonomic, and Enteric Structures of the Nervous System
Somatic structures include the spinal nerves, both motor and sensory fibers, as well as the sensory ganglia (posterior root ganglia and cranial nerve ganglia). Autonomic structures are found in the nerves also, but include the sympathetic and parasympathetic ganglia. The enteric nervous system includes the nervous tissue within the organs of the digestive tract.
EVERYDAY CONNECTION
How Much of Your Brain Do You Use?Have you ever heard the claim that humans only use 10 percent of their brains? Maybe you have seen an advertisement on a website saying that there is a secret to unlocking the full potential of your mind—as if there were 90 percent of your brain sitting idle, just waiting for you to use it. If you see an ad like that, don’t click. It isn’t true.
An easy way to see how much of the brain a person uses is to take measurements of brain activity while performing a task. An example of this kind of measurement is functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), which generates a map of the most active areas and can be generated and presented in three dimensions (image below). This procedure is different from the standard MRI technique because it is measuring changes in the tissue in time with an experimental condition or event.
The underlying assumption is that active nervous tissue will have greater blood flow. By having the subject perform a visual task, activity all over the brain can be measured. Consider this possible experiment: the subject is told to look at a screen with a black dot in the middle (a fixation point). A photograph of a face is projected on the screen away from the center. The subject has to look at the photograph and decipher what it is. The subject has been instructed to push a button if the photograph is of someone they recognize. The photograph might be of a celebrity, so the subject would press the button, or it might be of a random person unknown to the subject, so the subject would not press the button.
In this task, visual sensory areas would be active, integrating areas would be active, motor areas responsible for moving the eyes would be active, and motor areas for pressing the button with a finger would be active. Those areas are distributed all around the brain and the fMRI images would show activity in more than just 10 percent of the brain (some evidence suggests that about 80 percent of the brain is using energy—based on blood flow to the tissue—during well-defined tasks similar to the one suggested above). This task does not even include all of the functions the brain performs. There is no language response, the body is mostly lying still in the MRI machine, and it does not consider the autonomic functions that would be ongoing in the background.
Review
The nervous system can be separated into divisions on the basis of anatomy and physiology. The anatomical divisions are the central and peripheral nervous systems. The CNS is the brain and spinal cord. The PNS is everything else. Functionally, the nervous system can be divided into those regions that are responsible for sensation, those that are responsible for integration, and those that are responsible for generating responses. All of these functional areas are found in both the central and peripheral anatomy.
Considering the anatomical regions of the nervous system, there are specific names for the structures within each division. A localized collection of neuron cell bodies is referred to as a nucleus in the CNS and as a ganglion in the PNS. A bundle of axons is referred to as a tract in the CNS and as a nerve in the PNS. Whereas nuclei and ganglia are specifically in the central or peripheral divisions, axons can cross the boundary between the two. A single axon can be part of a nerve and a tract. The name for that specific structure depends on its location.
Nervous tissue can also be described as gray matter and white matter on the basis of its appearance in unstained tissue. These descriptions are more often used in the CNS. Gray matter is where nuclei are found and white matter is where tracts are found. In the PNS, ganglia are basically gray matter and nerves are white matter.
The nervous system can also be divided on the basis of how it controls the body. The somatic nervous system (SNS) is responsible for functions that result in moving skeletal muscles. Any sensory or integrative functions that result in the movement of skeletal muscle would be considered somatic. The autonomic nervous system (ANS) is responsible for functions that affect cardiac or smooth muscle tissue, or that cause glands to produce their secretions. Autonomic functions are distributed between central and peripheral regions of the nervous system. The sensations that lead to autonomic functions can be the same sensations that are part of initiating somatic responses. Somatic and autonomic integrative functions may overlap as well.
A special division of the nervous system is the enteric nervous system, which is responsible for controlling the digestive organs. Parts of the autonomic nervous system overlap with the enteric nervous system. The enteric nervous system is exclusively found in the periphery because it is the nervous tissue in the organs of the digestive system.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (2)
Structure of the nervous system | Organ Systems | MCAT | Khan Academy
Video by khanacademymedicine/YouTube
Brain and Nervous System
Brain and Nervous System : 3D visualization reconstructed from scanned human data of a dorsal view of a seated man revealing the nerves of the central and peripheral nervous systems. The nervous system is the master controlling and communicating system of the body. It's an ultra-high-speed communication network made up of nerve cells (neurons) and their far-reaching fibers (axons) that constantly send infinite numbers of electrical and chemical signals to and from the brain. The nervous system is organized into two principle parts, the central nervous system and the peripheral nervous system. The CNS, consisting of the brain and spinal cord, interprets incoming sensory information and creates responses based on reflexes, past experiences and current conditions. The peripheral nervous system, made up of extensions of the CNS, serves as a communication line that links all parts of the body to the brain.
Image by TheVisualMD
8:48
Structure of the nervous system | Organ Systems | MCAT | Khan Academy