Lecture 32: Flashcards
An excitable cell is one that responds to external stimuli through a rapid and reversible alteration in membrane potential.
The external stimuli can be either:
- mechanical
- thermal
- chemical or
- light
What is the typical membrane potential of a cell?
-60 to -90 mV (negative on inside of the cell)
Excitable cells differ from their non-excitable counterparts by their ability to use:
Changes in this potential as a means of communication
How is this resting membrane potential developed?
- have high K+ inside and low Na+ inside, which is a result of the activity of the Na+/K+ pump (an active transport process)
- there is a difference in stoichiometry -> 3 Na+ are pumped out for every 2K+ pumped into the cell
- the rate of leakage of Na+ into the cell is far slower than for K+ out of the cell
- therefore there is a great flow of K+ out than Na+ in, resulting in an internal negative potential
- In addition the internal anions (proteins, ATP, nucleic acids) are impermeable to the cell membrane whereas external Cl- are not.
What happens when a nerve cell transmits an impulse?
When a nerve is stimulated by another nerve or by external stimuli there is a resultant local depolarisation. This is the result if a marked increase in the permeability of the membrane to Na+.
- the result is reverse polarisation (the inside us now more positive than the outside)
- at this point the membrane permeability to Na+ returns to normal and permeability to K+ increases
- K+ flows out along a concentration gradient and restores the potential to its resting state. The Na/ K+ pump now restores the ion concentration back to their standing potential
- these changes in membrane potential is called ACTION POTENTIAL
- the local depolarisation causes permeability changes in the adjacent area moving the action potential down the axon- a nerve impulse
How is the nerve impulse transferred to the next neuron or to an effector cell?
Transmission across a synapse is achieved by chemical signal molecules called neurotransmitters, such as serotonin, adrenalin, or acetylcholine.
These are the events that take place:
-when action potential reaches end of axon, acetylcholine is released from the synaptic vesicles
-acetylcholine diffuses across the synaptic gap
-acetylcholine binds to specific receptors in the post synaptic membrane.
-this causes the opening of an ion channel triggering a marked increase in Na+ entry and initiates an action potential in the adjacent neurone or effector cell
-acetylcholine dissociates from receptors and is hydrolysed by cholinesterase
-the products, acetate and choline, can diffuse back to the presynaptic axon and regenerate acetylcholine.