Membrane physiology Flashcards
How movement of ions through ion channels in the cell membrane is able to control the membrane potential of a cell. Chemical and electrical forces that act on ions.
Why is the cell membrane impermeable to ions?
- seperates intracellular and extracellular comartments which have very different ionic compositions
- ion pumps mantain gradients
What is the membrane potential and why is it negative?
The membrane potential is the voltage inside a cell
- The inside of a cell contains slight excess of anions (lack of positive charge)
- in neurones, this may be -65mV
- balance of charges determines value of Em
*
How are ion channels classified and what are the three main types?
Classification is based on
- permeant ion: Na+, K+, Ca2+, Cl-, cation(Na+/K+)
- Gating mechanism
- non gated(leak)- set Em of resting membrane
- Voltage gated- generate action potentials
- Ligand gated- generate Em changes at synapse
What affects the ion movements across resting membrane?
- Presence of ion channels
- Non gated K+ and Na+ channels
- The membrane has a permeability to each ion
- The permeability is partly dependent on the number of ion channels
- Factors that influence the flux
-
chemical gradient- unequal ion idstribution
- K+ concentration high inside- drive to leave cell- efflux
- Na+ concentration high outside- drive to enter cell- influx
- Electrical force- ions attracted/repelled by Em- voltage inside cell
- Em negative, drive for K+ and Na+ to move in
-
chemical gradient- unequal ion idstribution
What happens in this hypothetical scenario
- membrane is permeable to K+only
- membrane potential is initially 0mV
- Chemical gradient would lead to K+ efflux
- This leads to a loss of positive charge inside the cell
- This creates a negative membrane potential which sets up an electrical force
- electrical force leads to K+influx
- initially K+efflux> K+influx
- K+ continues to leave the cells and electrical force continues to get stronger
- At a sufficiently negative membrane potential, the chemical and electrical influences are balanced
- no net K+ movement
What happens in this hypothetical scenario
- membrane is permeable to Na+ only
- membrane poteintial is initially 0mV
- Chemical gradient would lead to Na+ influx
- membrane potenital becomes more positive
- Electrical force leads to Na+ efflux
- Initially Na+ influx>Na+ efflux
- When membrane potential reaches a sufficiently positive value, chemical and electrical influences are balanced
- There is no net Na+ movement
Why is the chemical gradient constant in a resting membrane ?
The changes in concentrations are extremely small
What is the Nernst equation ?
The Nernst equation defines the voltage in which ion is in equilibrium and the chemical and electrical force are in balance
What is the Ionic Driving Force?
Net force resulting from chemicl and electrical influences
Driving force >0 whenever membrane potential is different from equilibrium potntial for the ion
Em is -65mV, what is the effect of this on ion movements?
- EK = -80mV, Em doesnt equal to EK, the influences on K+movements are unequal
- at -65mV, chemical influence> electrical influence
- K+efflux- trying to bring Em to -80mV
- ENa= +62mV, Em doesnt equal to ENa
- at -65mV, chemical and electrical influences both cause Na+influx
- Na+ influx- trying to bring Em to +62mV
- Em is at rest, Na+ influx =K+efflux
What is the actual value of membrane potential dependent on?
Relative permeablities
There is a large excess of K+ leak ion channels
At rest PK= 40x PNa
Em is therefore a lot closer to EK
How is the ionic gradient maintianed
- Ion pumps
- sodium potasium pump
- enzyme - catalyses ATP breakdown
- provides energy to exchange internal Na+ for external K+
- This is done against concentration gradient
- Calcium pump- transports Ca2+ out of the cell
- sodium potasium pump
- operate in the backgound continously
- over long time periods, the constant efflux of K+ will lead to significant changes in the concentration, which will lead to depolarisation of the membrane
- pumps maintian concentrations over long term