6 - Resting Membrane Potential Flashcards
What are the resting membrane potentials for:
- Cardiomyocytes
- Neurones
- Skeletal myocytes
- Smooth myocytes
-80 mv
-70 mv
-90 mv
-50 mv
How is the membrane potential measure?
- 2 electrodes
- Microelectrode (fine glass pipette) filled with conducting solution (KCl) that can penetrate cell membrane
- Diamter of electrode 1 um
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What is the resting potential?
The electrical charge across a membrane, expressed as the intracellular potential. (mV)
What is the range of resting potentials for animal cells and nerve cells and what cells have the largest resting potential?
- -20 to -90 mv
- Nerve -50 to - 75 mv
- Cardiac (-80) and Skeletal muscle (-90)
What are the concentrations of Na, Cl, A, K intracellularly and extracellularly?
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Why is there a concentration difference extracellulary and intracellularly in ions?
Membrane is selectively permeable due to different ion channels
How is the resting potential generated?
- Membrane permeable to K+ as K+ channels open
- K+ diffuses out of the cell down it’s concentration gradient
- Anions cannot leave cell as membrane not permeable to them
- Generates electrochemical gradient, K+ reaches equillibrium due to electrochemical gradient
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How do you work out the membrane potential for a particular ion at equilibrum and why is it not always equal to the actual membrane potential?
- Nernst equation (Ek)
- Membrane not selectively permeable to the one ion alone
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What is the resting potential compared to Ek like in:
- Cardiac and Nerve cells
- Smooth muscle cells
- Skeletal muscle
ALL Ek -95mV
- Almost the same, membrane permeable to K+
- Lower, -50mV, membrane less permeable to K+
- In between Ek and Ecl as cells permeable to Cl too
What can changes in membrane potential do?
- Trigger AP
- Trigger and control muscle contraction
- Control secretion of hormones and neurotransmitters
- Post synaptic actions of fast synaptic transmitters
- Transduce sensory information into electrical activity
What are the equilibrium potentials for all of the main ions?
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What changes membrane potential and what are the causes of hyper and depolarisation?
CHANGING IONIC PERMEABILITY
Hyper: Opening Cl- or K+ channels
De: Opening Ca2+ or Na+
What is a more accurate way of working out the membrane potential?
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What are the characteristics of the acetylcholine receptor?
- Opened by acetylcholine
- Allows cations through, mainly Na, but not fully selective
- Moves membrane potential towards 0 as average of ENa and EK
How can membrane potential change?
Changing permeability of the membrane due to
- Ligand gated channels
- Mechanical gated channels
- Voltage gated channels