6A - Receptors Flashcards
What are receptors specific to?
One kind of stimulus
Examples of receptors
- Cells (e.g. photoreceptors)
- Proteins on cell surface membranes (e.g. glucose receptors)
What do transducers do?
Convert one form of energy into another (energy of stimulus –> energy of electrical impulse).
What occurs when a receptor is stimulated?
A generator potential.
What happens if a generator potential reaches a threshold?
An action potential occurs.
What is there when a nervous system receptor is in its resting state (not being stimulated)?
Difference in charge between the inside and the outside of the cell.
What is the difference in charge between the inside and the outside of the cell generated by?
Ion pumps and ion channels.
What is there across a membrane if there is a difference in charge between the inside and the outside of a cell?
A voltage.
What is the potential difference when a cell is at rest called?
Resting potential.
Resting potential
Potential difference when a cell is at rest.
What happens when a stimulus is detected?
The cell membrane is excited and becomes more permeable, allowing more ions to move in and out of the cell - altering the potential difference.
What is the change in potential difference due to a stimulus called?
The generator potential.
Generator potential
The change in potential difference due to a stimulus.
What does a bigger stimulus do?
Excites the membrane more, causing a bigger movement of ions and a bigger change in potential difference - so a bigger generator potential is produced.
What happens if the generator potential is big enough?
An action potential is triggered.
When is an action potential triggered?
if the generator potential reaches a certain level called the threshold.
Action potential
An impulse along a neurone.
Size of different action potentials:
All the same size.
What is the strength of the stimulus measured by?
By the frequency of action potentials (the number of action potentials triggered during a certain time period).
What happens if the stimulus is too weak?
The generator potential won’t reach the threshold, so there’s no action potential.
What type of receptor are pacinian corpuscles?
Mechanoreceptors.
What receptors do we need to know?
Pacinian corpuscles.
Rods and cones.
Stimulus of pacinian corpuscles
Mechanical e.g. pressure and vibrations.
Location of pacinian corpuscles
Skin and joints, ligaments and tendons.
What do pacinian corpuscles contain?
The end of a sensory neurons called a sensory nerve ending.
What is the sensory nerve ending of a pacinian corpuscle wrapped in?
Loads of layers of connective tissue called lamellae.
What happens when a pacinian corpuscle is stimulated?
- The lamellae are deformed and press on the sensory nerve endings.
- This pressure causes the sensory neurone’s cell membrane to stretch, deforming the stretch-mediated sodium ion channels (widening them). The channels open and sodium ions diffuse into the cell (depolarisation), creating a generator potential.
- If the generator potential reaches the threshold, it triggers an action potential.
What are photoreceptors?
Light receptors in your eye - found in the retina.
Where does light enter the eye?
Through the pupil.