The nervous system derives its name from nerves, which are cylindrical bundles of fibers (the
axons of
neurons), that emanate from the brain and
spinal cord, and branch repeatedly to innervate every part of the body. but their internal structure was not understood until it became possible to examine them using a
microscope. The author Michael Nikoletseas wrote: "It is difficult to believe that until approximately year 1900 it was not known that neurons are the basic units of the brain (
Santiago Ramón y Cajal). Equally surprising is the fact that the concept of chemical transmission in the brain was not known until around 1930 (
Henry Hallett Dale and
Otto Loewi). We began to understand the basic electrical phenomenon that neurons use in order to communicate among themselves, the action potential, in the 1950s (
Alan Lloyd Hodgkin,
Andrew Huxley and
John Eccles). It was in the 1960s that we became aware of how basic neuronal networks code stimuli and thus basic concepts are possible (
David H. Hubel and
Torsten Wiesel). The molecular revolution swept across US universities in the 1980s. It was in the 1990s that molecular mechanisms of behavioral phenomena became widely known (
Eric Richard Kandel)." A microscopic examination shows that nerves consist primarily of axons, along with different membranes that wrap around them and segregate them into
fascicles. The neurons that give rise to nerves do not lie entirely within the nerves themselves—their cell bodies reside within the brain,
spinal cord, or peripheral
ganglia.
Cells The nervous system contains two main categories or types of cells:
neurons and
glial cells.
Neurons with
Schwann cells in the
peripheral nervous system The nervous system is defined by the presence of a special type of cell—the
neuron (sometimes called "neurone" or "nerve cell"). The vertebrate nervous system can also be divided into areas called
gray matter and
white matter.
Bilateria The vast majority of existing animals are
bilaterians, meaning animals with left and right sides that are approximate mirror images of each other. All bilateria are thought to have descended from a common wormlike ancestor that appear as fossils beginning in the Ediacaran period, 550–600 million years ago. Bilaterians can be divided, based on events that occur very early in embryonic development, into two groups (
superphyla) called
protostomes and
deuterostomes. The nervous system of one very small roundworm, the
nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, has been completely mapped out in a
connectome including its synapses. Every neuron and its
cellular lineage has been recorded and most, if not all, of the neural connections are known. In this species, the nervous system is
sexually dimorphic; the nervous systems of the two sexes, males and female
hermaphrodites, have different numbers of neurons and groups of neurons that perform sex-specific functions. In
C. elegans, males have exactly 383 neurons, while hermaphrodites have exactly 302 neurons. Typically, each body segment has one
ganglion on each side, though some ganglia are fused to form the brain and other large ganglia. The head segment contains the brain, also known as the
supraesophageal ganglion. In the
insect nervous system, the brain is anatomically divided into the
protocerebrum,
deutocerebrum, and
tritocerebrum. Immediately behind the brain is the
subesophageal ganglion, which is composed of three pairs of fused ganglia. It controls the
mouthparts, the
salivary glands and certain
muscles. Many arthropods have well-developed
sensory organs, including
compound eyes for vision and
antennae for
olfaction and
pheromone sensation. The sensory information from these organs is processed by the brain. In insects, many neurons have cell bodies that are positioned at the edge of the brain and are electrically passive—the cell bodies serve only to provide metabolic support and do not participate in signalling. A protoplasmic fiber runs from the cell body and branches profusely, with some parts transmitting signals and other parts receiving signals. Thus, most parts of the
insect brain have passive cell bodies arranged around the periphery, while the neural signal processing takes place in a tangle of protoplasmic fibers called
neuropil, in the interior.
Molluscs "Identified" neurons A neuron is called
identified if it has properties that distinguish it from every other neuron in the same animal—properties such as location, neurotransmitter, gene expression pattern, and connectivity—and if every individual organism belonging to the same species has one and only one neuron with the same set of properties. In vertebrate nervous systems very few neurons are "identified" in this sense—in humans, there are believed to be none—but in simpler nervous systems, some or all neurons may be thus unique. In the roundworm
C. elegans, whose nervous system is the most thoroughly described of any animal's, every neuron in the body is uniquely identifiable, with the same location and the same connections in every individual worm. One notable consequence of this fact is that the form of the
C. elegans nervous system is completely specified by the
genome, with no experience-dependent plasticity. Every fish has two Mauthner cells, in the bottom part of the brainstem, one on the left side and one on the right. Each Mauthner cell has an axon that crosses over, innervating neurons at the same brain level and then travelling down through the spinal cord, making numerous connections as it goes. The synapses generated by a Mauthner cell are so powerful that a single action potential gives rise to a major behavioral response: within milliseconds the fish curves its body into a
C-shape, then straightens, thereby propelling itself rapidly forward. Functionally this is a fast escape response, triggered most easily by a strong sound wave or pressure wave impinging on the lateral line organ of the fish. Mauthner cells are not the only identified neurons in fish—there are about 20 more types, including pairs of "Mauthner cell analogs" in each spinal segmental nucleus. Although a Mauthner cell is capable of bringing about an escape response individually, in the context of ordinary behavior other types of cells usually contribute to shaping the amplitude and direction of the response. Mauthner cells have been described as
command neurons. A command neuron is a special type of identified neuron, defined as a neuron that is capable of driving a specific behavior individually. Such neurons appear most commonly in the fast escape systems of various species—the
squid giant axon and
squid giant synapse, used for pioneering experiments in neurophysiology because of their enormous size, both participate in the fast escape circuit of the squid. The concept of a command neuron has, however, become controversial, because of studies showing that some neurons that initially appeared to fit the description were really only capable of evoking a response in a limited set of circumstances. ==Function==