M&R 4.1 The (axonal) AP Flashcards
Describe some main features of an AP
- A rapid change in MP from negative to positive and back again
- Triggered once a threshold level of membrane depolarisation is reached
- All or nothing (happens full or not at all - larger currents do not provoke larger APs)
- Stimulus intensity is encoded by frequency of APs (not amplitude - amplitude always the same)
- Propagated without loss of amplitude
Sketch an axonal AP
x axis = time (ms)
Depolarisation phase should be ~0.5ms, total time ~1ms
y axis = membrane potential (mV)
RMP should be ~-70mV
Peak of depolarisation should be ~+30mV
What causes the upstroke of the AP?
Depolarisation
Once membrane has reached threshold (~ -55mV) opening of voltage-gated sodium channels (VGNCs) causes rapid influx of Na+ ions into the cell down the Na+ conc gradient
MP depolarises (becomes more positive)
Positive feedback - more depolarisation causes more Na+ channels to open
MP reaches ~+30mV
What is happening at the peak of the AP?
VGNCs become inactivated
Slower K+ channels are open
What is happening during the downstroke of the AP?
Repolarisation
K+ efflux via VGKCs down its concentration gradient
Na+ influx is stopped due to inactivation of VGNCs
MP returns towards RMP (becomes more negative)
There is a slight overshoot where K+ channels remain open and MP becomes slightly more negative than the RMP = hyperpolarisation
Then VGKCs close and RMP is restored
(Inactivated VGNCs channels then enter closed state - become responsive to voltage again)
What is the purpose of the hyperpolarisation phase of the AP?
Transiently makes the MP more negative and therefore further from the threshold potential
This assists in the directionality of the AP by making it harder for a portion of axon that just underwent an AP to undergo another one (therefore encourages forwards transmission)
What method can be used for direct measurement of membrane currents, and how does it work?
Voltage clamping
Clamps the MP at a desired value
Measure the current required to keep the membrane at this value - because the current needed to keep the MP at that value is equal to the amount of current flowing across the membrane
What is patch-clamping?
A contemporary version of voltage-clamping
It has higher resolution, so rather than looking at an area of membrane, can measure tiny currents flowing through single ion channels
How do VGKCs react to maintained depolarisation?
They are voltage-gated so open in response to depolarisation
They open slowly
They stay open throughout depolarisation
How do VGKCs react to repolarisation?
They close
But not immediately (because they cannot ‘inactivate’ like Na+ channels so their closure takes longer)
How do VGNCs react to maintained depolarisation?
They activate quickly
They inactivate during maintained depolarisation
Therefore inward Na+ current eventually wanes to 0 even if depolarisation is maintained
They then need to enter the closed state before they can re-open (recovery time)
What is the absolute refractory period? What causes it?
The period just after an AP when it is impossible to fire another one, no matter how strong the stimulus
Due to nearly all Na+ channels being in the inactivated state (cannot be opened - need to enter close state first)
What is the relative refractory period? What causes it?
The period where Na+ channels are recovering from inactivation (and entering the closed state) so there is slow recovery of membrane excitability.
Can initiate an AP (because some Na+ channels are closed and therefore available to open) but requires a stronger than normal stimulus (because some K channels still open, so K+ efflux is opposing some of the depolarisation)
What is accommodation?
Where a prolonged depolarisation causes an increase in the threshold potential.
This is because more Na+ channels are in the inactivated state, and K+ conductance increases
This makes the peak of the AP lower and the threshold higher (more positive)
Subsequent inputs won’t cause an AP to fire even if the original threshold is surpassed
Describe the structure of a VG Na+ channel
1 channel is made up of 1 subunit (alpha)
The subunit can be split into 4 repeating quarters (I-IV)
Each quarter has 6 TM domains
- > 4th TM domain in each quarter detects voltage (contains lots of +ve AAs - voltage change causes conformational change so pore opens)
- > Between 5th & 6th TM domains in each quarter is a H5 pore-forming region (in 3D structure the 4 pore-forming regions come together to form the pore)
Between quarters III and IV is the inactivation particle (when pore is open it can swing into pore and block flow of Na+)