CN - Chapter 3 - The Neuronal Membrane at Rest Flashcards
action potential
A brief fluctuation in membrane potential caused by the rapid opening and closing of voltage-gated ion channels;
also known as spike, nerve impulse, or discharge.
Action potentials sweep like a wave along axons to transfer information from one place to another in the nervous system.
excitable membrane
Any membrane capable of generating action potentials.
The membrane of axons and muscle cells is excitable.
resting membrane potential
The membrane potential, or membrane voltage, maintained by a cell when it is not generating action potentials;
also called resting potential.
Neurons have a resting membrane potential of about -65 mV.
ion
An atom or molecule that has a net electrical charge because of a difference in the number of electrons and protons.
cation
A positively charged ion. (See also anion).
anion
A negatively charged ion. (See also cation).
phospholipid bilayer
The arrangement of phospholipid molecules that forms the basic structure of the cell membrane.
The core of the bilayer is lipid, creating a barrier to water and to water-soluble ions and molecules.
peptide bond
The covalent bond between the amino group of one amino acid and the carboxyl group of another.
polypeptide
A string of amino acids held together by peptide bonds.
ion channel
A membrane-spanning protein that forms a pore that allows the passage of ions from one side of the membrane to the other.
ion selectivity
A property of ion channels that are selectively permeable to some ions and not to others.
gating
A property of many ion channels, making them open or closed in response to specific signals, such as membrane voltage or the presence of neurotransmitters.
ion pump
A protein that ransports ions across a membrane at the expense of metabolic energy.
diffusion
The temperature-dependent movement of molecules from regions of high concentration to regions of low concentration, resulting in a more even distribution.
concentration gradient
A difference in concentration from one region to another.
Ionic concentration gradients across the neuronal membrane help determine the membrane potential.