A typical neuron consists of a cell body (soma), dendrites, and an axon.
The neuronal cell body, also known as the soma, does not regenerate once destroyed. Once damaged, the cell body cannot regrow, and the neuron will not be able to function properly without it.
The cell body, called the SOMA, is the main part of the neuron. It is the main metabolic center or region of the neuron. The neuron has 3 parts: DENDRITES (inputs), SOMA (cell body), and AXON (output). The axon is the part which FIRES when sufficient inputs reach it at the axon hillock.
soma (cell body), axon, and axon terminals. I left out dendrites, because there are some kinds of neurons (sensory neurons) which don't have dendrites, but rather have axons which come from a sense receptor cell, come to but do not enter the soma, where the impulse continues onalong a second branch of the axon stub which comes out from the soma. In other words, a single axon (or perhaps a fused axon and dendrite?) comes out from the soma, where it branches into two, one of which goes to the receptor cell to receive an impulse (and is myelinated and conducts an action potential), and the other goes to the spinal cord or brain.
A message within a neuron travels from the dendrites to the cell body (soma), then down the axon, and finally to the axon terminals where it is passed on to the next neuron through neurotransmitters.
The three main structures of a neuron are the cell body (soma), dendrites, and axon. The cell body contains the nucleus and other organelles, the dendrites receive signals from other neurons, and the axon transmits signals to other neurons or cells.
A typical neuron consists of a cell body (soma), dendrites, and an axon.
The three main parts of a neuron are the dendrites, the axon, and the soma. The dendrites are the nerve endings, the axon is the body, and the soma is the cell body.
The neuronal cell body, also known as the soma, does not regenerate once destroyed. Once damaged, the cell body cannot regrow, and the neuron will not be able to function properly without it.
The three main parts of a neuron are the cell body (soma), dendrites, and axon. The cell body contains the nucleus and organelles, dendrites receive signals from other neurons, and the axon transmits signals to other neurons.
1. The cell body (or soma) 2) The axon 3) The dendrites
axon hillock
The three main parts of a neuron are the axon, the dendrites, and the soma (cell body). The axon carries information away from the soma and transmits it to other neurons. The dendrites receive information from other neurons. The soma contains the nucleus of the cell and protein synthesis occurs here.
The four parts of a neuron are dendrites, cell body (soma), axon, and terminal branches (axon terminals). Dendrites receive signals from other neurons and transmit them towards the cell body. The axon carries signals away from the cell body to other neurons or cells, and the terminal branches release neurotransmitters to communicate with these target cells.
The parts of a generic neuron are:- soma - cell body axon - upto 1 meter long dendrite - many
The cell body, called the SOMA, is the main part of the neuron. It is the main metabolic center or region of the neuron. The neuron has 3 parts: DENDRITES (inputs), SOMA (cell body), and AXON (output). The axon is the part which FIRES when sufficient inputs reach it at the axon hillock.
soma (cell body), axon, and axon terminals. I left out dendrites, because there are some kinds of neurons (sensory neurons) which don't have dendrites, but rather have axons which come from a sense receptor cell, come to but do not enter the soma, where the impulse continues onalong a second branch of the axon stub which comes out from the soma. In other words, a single axon (or perhaps a fused axon and dendrite?) comes out from the soma, where it branches into two, one of which goes to the receptor cell to receive an impulse (and is myelinated and conducts an action potential), and the other goes to the spinal cord or brain.