Q.
Two neurons, A and B, synapse onto a third neuron, C. If neurotransmitter from A opens ligand-gated channels permeable to Na+ and K+ and neurotransmitter from B opens ligand-gated Cl− channels, which of the following statements is true?
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Neural Control and Coordination
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Solution:
Once neurotransmitters are released from the pre-synaptic axon terminal, they diffuse across the cleft. This results in binding of neurotransmitter to receptor and opening or closing of specific ion channels in the post-synaptic plasma membrane. Usually at an excitatory snapse, channels in the post-synaptic cell that are permeable to Na+, K+ and other small positive ions open, but Na+ flux dominates, because it has the largest electrochemical gradient. At inhibitory synapses, channels to Cl− or K+ open. In the given situation, the neuron B sends inhibitory pre-synaptic signals onto post-synaptic neuron C which would summate (subtract from) with the amplitude of excitatory pre-synaptic signal caused by neuron A. Therefore depolarisation will be of lower amplitude.