Lecture 6: Cell excitability, Cunningham Flashcards
At -94 mV for the inside of a cell, what is implicated for potassium in regards to its net movement?
The concentration force and electrical forces are balanced, and potassium has no net tendency to diffuse
At Em=-74 mV for the inside of a cell, what is implicated for the movement of potassium in regards to its net movement?
The electrical force is too weak, and potassium will tend to diffuse out of the cell due to the concentration force being greater than the electrical force
Why is the inside of the cell negative?
Due to proteins that perform cellular activities, and proteins are negative
What does the 3:2 Na-K pump really mean?
3 sodium ions are pumped out of the cell for every 2 potassium ions that are pumped into the cell
Why does sodium’s movement into the cell overshadow the movement of potassium?
- There is a much larger driving force for sodium (both concentration and electrical gradients facing in).
- The potassium channels open more slowly than do the sodium channels, so the rise in potassium permeability happens more.
The depolarization phase occurs when what happens to sodium?
When sodium becomes the most permeable ion
What causes the repolarization phase (has to do with the sodium and potassium permeability)
When the sodium permeability returns to rest, and the potassium permeability peaks
The afterhyperpolarization occurs when in regards to sodium and potassium permeability?
When sodium is resting, while the potassium permeability is greater than resting level
What’s the equation for driving force? What is a positive driving force?
Nernst potential - membrane potential; positive driving force means the driving force is itself positive
“The membrane potential of a cell will always most closely resemble the ___ of the most permeable ion”
Nernst potential
What substance from puffer fish can block the selectivity filter in the voltage-gated sodium channels?
Tetrodotoxin
How many positive charges need to shift in order to open the voltage-gated sodium channels?
About 6
What is the absolute refractory period? When does this period end?
The time when the inactivation gate is closed. This period ends when the membrane potential goes back below threshold
What are two big differences between voltage-gated potassium and sodium channels?
For potassium, there is only 1 gate and it is either open or closed; the charges in the conductance pore are arranged to stabilize potassium instead of sodium
What drug poison the sodium potassium pump?
Ouabain