Ion channels and transporters Flashcards

1
Q

why are active transporters needed?

A
  • they are needed for the flow of ions down the electrochemical gradient to maintain electrochemical equilibrium
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2
Q

difference b/w uniport, symport and antiport with examples

A
  1. uniport - transports one substance in one direction e.g. ion channels - Na+, K
  2. symport - transports two substances in same direction e.g. co-transporters - Na+/K+/Cl- co-transporter
  3. antiport - transport two substances in two different directions e.g. ATPase pumps, ion exchangers
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3
Q

give examples of channels, co-transporters, ATPase pumps, ion exchangers

A
  1. channels - Na+,K+,Cl-,Ca2+
  2. Co-transporters - Na+/K+/Cl- co-transporter
    K+/Cl- co-transporter
    Na+/neurotransmitter co-transporter (e.g. DAT)
  3. ATPase pumps - Na+/K+ pump, Ca2+ pump
  4. Ion exchangers - Na+/Ca2+ exchanger, Na+/H+ exchanger
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4
Q

what are the characteristics of Na+/K+ ATPase/pump

A
  • Helps maintain electrochemical gradients for Na+ & K+
  • 3 Na+ out & 2 K+ in per cycle, electrogenic, BUT <1% I of VGSC so minimal effect on resting Em
  • Uses ATP
  • 20-40% of brain energy expenditure
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5
Q

which neurological disorders are caused by mutations in these Nav channel genes?

  1. SCN1A
  2. SCN2A
  3. SCN3A
  4. SCN9A
A
  1. SCN1A - epilepsy, migraine, autism
  2. SCN2A - epilepsy, autism, episodic ataxia
  3. SCN3A - epilepsy
  4. SCN9A - pain in insensitivity and extreme pain disorder
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6
Q

which neurological disorders are caused by mutations in these K+ channels?

  1. KCNA1
  2. KCNQ2,KCNQ3, KCNMA1
A
  1. KCNA1 - episodic ataxia

2. KCNQ2,KCNQ3, KCNMA1 - epilepsy syndrome

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7
Q

which neurological disorders are caused by mutations in these Ca2+ channels?

  1. CAC1NA1A
  2. CACNA1B
  3. CACNA1F
  4. CACNA1H
A
  1. CAC1NA1A - episodic ataxia, SCA6 and familial hemiplegic migraine
  2. CACNA1B - myoclonus dystonia syndrome
  3. CACNA1F - X-linked congenital stationary night blindness
  4. CACNA1H - childhood absence epilepsy
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8
Q

name two inhibitors of Na+/K+ ATPase/pumps

A

inhibitors

  1. cardiac glycosides digoxin (digitalis lanata)
  2. ouabain (acokanthera)
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9
Q

how do the Na+/K+ in inhibitors cause heart muscle contraction?

A
  • by elevating intracellular Ca2+ (secondary effect via Na+/Ca2+ exchanger)
  • Inhibit Na+/K+ ATPase – you dissipate the normal sodium gradient – has an affect on one the antiporters – Na+/Ca2+ exchangers – elevated extracellular Ca+ - increased force of muscle contraction
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10
Q

Na+/K+ in inhibitors have neurological & psychiatric side effects
True or False

A

True

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