In this video, I want to
talk about Schwann cells. Schwann cells are glia of
the peripheral nervous system derived from neural
crest cells and named after a person who
described them. Schwann cells come in
a couple of shapes. Some are fairly
shapeless cells that have little troughs
on their surface. And the axons of neurons that
have small diameter axons often just sit
inside these troughs. So these are
neurons with a soma. And I'm leaving
off the dendrites. And these have small axons,
small diameter axons. And they'll just kind of
sit in these little troughs on the surface of
these Schwann cells. And these are called
nonmyelinating Schwann cells. They do provide some support
to these peripheral neuron axons that are small diameter. But they don't myelinate them. So they're nonmyelinating
Schwann cells. Now, peripheral neurons
that have a larger axon-- and let me just draw this one
with a little larger axon-- usually have a myelin sheath. And just like in the
central nervous system, there will be a sheath going all
the way down the axon, that's regularly interrupted by
these little gaps called the nodes of Ranvier. And these little
segments of myelin in the myelin sheath
of peripheral neurons have the same
structure and function as the myelin sheath
in central neurons. However, the Schwann cells
create the myelin sheath in the peripheral
nervous system, as opposed to the
oligodendrocytes of the central nervous system. Now while the structure and the
function of the little myelin segments is the same,
a big difference between the Schwann cells in
the peripheral nervous system and the oligodendrocytes in
the central nervous system is that a Schwann cell only
produces the myelin sheath for one segment
of only one axon. It's not myelinating
multiple neurons, like oligodendrocytes do. Now, let's take a
little closer look at one of these areas
of myelin sheath. And let's cut through
this segment of myelin, just like this. And we'll look at it this
way, like we're looking down from the end of the axon. And this is going to
look just like the myelin sheath for a central axon. Here's the axon. And we're looking at it end-on. And the cell membrane
of the Schwann cell, which is this material
we call myelin, that's very rich in lipid,
is just going to be wrapped again
and again and again, very thinly and very
tightly, like a role of tape, around the axon. Now for a Schwann cell,
this is almost the entirety of its cell membrane. And then it's just going to have
this little lump on the outside that's going to be
sort of like a soma because it's going
to have a nucleus and it's going to have most
of the cytoplasm of a Schwann cell. But most of its
membrane is actually wrapped around the axon
as the myelin sheath. In addition to these
functions, Schwann cells also appear to influence
neurons, and vice versa, through exchange of a
variety of substances.