Biology, asked by neemaajith, 1 year ago

Why are the chemicals released from the neuron tip not reverted back into the same neuron??

Answers

Answered by Raju2392
1

Answer:

After a chemical is released, it must be inactivated. Inactivation can be through a reuptake mechanism or by an enzyme that stops the action of the chemical. If the chemical is applied on the post-synaptic membrane, it should have the same effect as when it is released by a neuron.

Answered by sresisingh19
4

Answer:

Hi mate....!!!

Here is your answer

Explanation:

Communication of information between neurons is accomplished by movement of chemicals across a small gap called the synapse. Chemicals, called neurotransmitters, are released from one neuron at the presynaptic nerve terminal. Neurotransmitters then cross the synapse where they may be accepted by the next neuron at a specialized site called a receptor. The action that follows activation of a receptor site may be either depolarization (an excitatory postsynaptic potential) or hyperpolarization (an inhibitory postsynaptic potential). A depolarization makes it MORE likely that an action potential will fire; a hyerpolarization makes it LESS likely that an action potential will fire.

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