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Parts of a Nerve

by Corinth

Science, Biology

File ( 18MB )

Free

Description

The main part of a neuron is the cell body, which is also known as the soma (soma = “body”). The cell body contains the nucleus and most of the major organelles. But what makes neurons special is that they have many extensions of their cell membranes, which are generally referred to as processes. Neurons are usually described as having one, and only one, axon – a fiber that emerges from the cell body and projects to target cells. It is the axon that propagates the nerve impulse, which is communicated to one or more cells. The other processes of the neuron are dendrites, which receive information from other neurons at specialized areas of contact called synapses. The dendrites are usually highly branched processes, providing locations for other neurons to communicate with the cell body. Information flows through a neuron from the dendrites, across the cell body, and down the axon. This gives the neuron a polarity – meaning that information flows in this one direction.



*LICENSES AND ATTRIBUTIONS

CC licensed content, Shared previously, Nervous Tissue, Authored by: OpenStax College. License: CC BY: Attribution. License Terms: Download for free at http://cnx.org/contents/mYoZvS9p@3/Nervous-Tissue*