Action Potential Flashcards
difference between charges on each side of neuron’s plasma membrane @ rest
- 70 mV (millivolts)
- charge inside membrane = 70 less than outside
resting potential
- polarization of neuron’s plasma membrane at rest
- maintained via sodium-potassium pump
- sodium + potassium gates closed
sodium-potassium pump
- active transport process (against grain of diffusion)
- 3 Na+ ions pumped out, 2K+ ions pumped in
- uneven #s & diffusion rates –> higher charge outside membrane than inside
action potential overview
- rapid change in polarity that occurs when axon stimulated to conduct a nerve impulse
- self-propagating
- all or nothing response
phases of action potential
- Resting Potential
- Depolarization
- Repolarization
- Afterpolarization
depolarization
- sodium gates open
- sodium rushes into axon
- voltage rises to 0, then to +40mV
repolarization
- sodium gates close
- potassium gates open
- potassium rushes out of axon
- negative voltage returns to inside of axon
afterpolarization
- aka hyperpolarization
- potassium gates slow to close
- undershoot of potential voltage ( < -70mV) then increases back to -70mV to return to resting potential
intensity of sensation depends on:
- # neurons stimulated
- frequency with which the neurons stimulated
how neurotransmitters work
nerve impulse reaches end of axon
- -> volt-gated calcium channels to open
- -> Ca +2 rushes in
- -> vesicles containing neurotransmitters fuse with the plasma membrane & release them into synapse
- -> neurotransmitter binds with receptor on next neuron
inhibition
processes, such as enzymes inactivating neurotransmitters, that prevent continuous stimulation of post-synaptic membranes
acetylcholine
neurotransmitter found at NMJs in PNS
acetylcholinesterase
enzyme that breaks down acetylcholine
dopamine
- neurotransmitter produced in brain
- specialized to regulate emotional responses and muscle tone
neuromuscular junction (NMJ)
synapse between motor neuron and muscle tissue (where motor neuron ends on a muscle instead of another neuron)