Graph of 15.2 Flashcards
What happens at 1?
Na+ ions/K+ ion pump active maintaining resting potential
What happens at 2?
Stimulus causes some Na+ ions channels to open allowing some Na+ ions into the axon
What happening at 3?
Resting potential of -70mV When no impulse
What happening at 4?
Membrane potential is less negative as Na+ ions diffuse through the axon
(-55mV threshold reached)
What happening at 5?
All Na+ ion channels open - rapid influex (IN) of Na+ ions
What is happening at 6?
All Na+ ion channels close at +40mV
What happening at 7?
All K+ ion channels open
What is happening at 8?
Rapid eff;ux (OUT) of K+ ions = electricla charge inside axon falls as K+ ions move out so axon membrane starts to be repolarised back to the original -70mV
What is happening at 9?
K+ ion channels remai open = hyper polarisation
What is happening at 10?
K+ ion channels clse at -80mV/90mV
What is happening at 11?
Na/K ion pump now allow membrane potential to go from hyper-polarised back to resting potential of -70mV
What is happening at 12?
Resting potential is re-estbalished at -70mV
Explain the shape of the curve for sodium ions between 0.5 ms and 0.7 ms
Sodium channel protein close
Sodium ions move into the axon membrane by faciliated diffusion (depolarisation)
More sodium channels are open
Makes inside of axon less negative
During an action potential, the membrane potnetial rises to + 40mV and then falls
Use this information to explain the fall in membrane potential
Potassium channels open
Sodium channel protein close
Potassium ions move out of axon membrane by facilitated diffusion (repolarising)
Making axon membrane change from +ve to -ve
After exercise,
some ATP is used to re-estbalish the resting potential in axons
Explain how the resting potential is re-established
Resting potential is re-established
Active transport is used to pump 3Na+ out of the axon membrane and pump 2K+ in the axon membrane using sodium-potassium pump