lecture 18 - action potentials Flashcards
What is the ‘essential foundation’ for electrical signalling?
The establishment of a resting membrane potential
What are the initial relative concentrations of K+ and Na+ across a cell membrane?
high [K+] in cytosol, high [Na+] in extracellular fluid
What is the electrical gradient of a cell membrane?
A potential difference caused by a greater negative charge within the cytosol than in the extracellular fluid.
What is the value of the resting membrane potential?
-70mV
How are changes in membrane permeability controlled?
Gating of ion channels (the opening and closing of channels)
What is chemical ion channel gating in terms of a neuron?
When a neurotransmitter (e.g. acetylcholine) is received by a neuron in its input zone, and binds to chemically gated channels allowing them to open and allow sodium ions to flow into the cytosol. The cell depolarises.
When chemical ion channels allow Na+ to flow into the cytosol of a cell, what occurs to the membrane potential?
Potential difference decreases - the cell is depolarised.
What is the process of chemical ion channel gating?
Neurotransmitters in extracellular fluid bind to chemically gated channels. Channel opens. Na+ flows down its concentration gradient into the cytosol. Neurotransmitter lost and channel closes.
What is voltage ion channel gating?
Voltage gated channels detect a change in membrane potential (caused by chemically gated channels releasing Na+ into cell). They then open to cause more cations to flow into the cell. The channel is inactivated when the membrane potential becomes positive.
Where is there a high density of voltage gated ion channels, and why?
In the axon hillock/initial segment, because it is where lots of chemical inputs are summed to create an action potential.
What is mechanical ion channel gating?
In some membranes, channels will open to release Na+ only when a mechanical force is applied causing the physical distortion of the channel.
What zone are chemical gated channels found in?
Input zone
What zone are voltage gated ion channels found in?
Summation/conduction zone (Na+) and output zone (Ca2+)
What is a local potential?
When ion channels open in receipt of a chemical signal, Na+ ions flow in causing a flow of local current away from the channel (K+ ions move towards more negative areas). This causes the area immediately surrounding the channel to become depolarised. (graded depolarisation, because it diminishes as the distance fro the source increases and there is no propagation)
What are the two types of local potential?
Inhibitory and excitatory
How does the membrane potential change when an excitatory local potential is initiated?
Depolarisation
How does the membrane potential change when an inhibitory local potential is initiated?
Hyperpolarization
What happens when an inhibitory and excitatory local potential occur at the same time?
They will sum to give no net change in potential.
Where is the action potential generated?
The initial segment/axon hillock