Membrane Physiology (Resting Membrane Potential) Flashcards
What does the cell membrane do?
- Defines boundaries of the cell
- Encloses the cell’s organelles
- Enables the cell to create an internal environment that promotes the normal functions of the cell
- Creates an internal environment that is different from that outside of the cell
What is the structure of the cell membrane?
- Cell membranes are composed of closely apposed 2 layers of phospholipids
- Each unit of the phospholipid layer has a:
- Head that is hydrophilic
- Tail that is hydrophobic
- Layers of phospholipid units of the membrane arrange themselves such that
- Hydrophobic tails align deep within layers of the membrane
- Hydrophilic heads form outer surfaces of the membrane
- Arrangement allows the cell membrane to be impermeable to any particles that are hydrophilic
What does the cell membrane create?
- A perfect seal
- Two distinct environments
- Can influence the contents of the internal
How does the cell membrane establish a resting potential?
- Concentration difference of species of charge-carrying ions between intra-& extra-cellular compartments
- Standing electro-chemical gradient between intra-& extra-cellular compartments of the cell
- Electro-chemical gradient is known formally as the ‘resting membrane potential’
Resting membrane potential of nerve cells
- In nerve cells at rest, the inside of the cell is relatively negatively charged with respect to outside the cell
- The resting membrane potential of nerve cells is around -65mV to -70 mV with respect to the outside of the cell
- RMP will vary between cell types
A defining characteristic of electrically excitable tissues
they are able to momentarily discharge the standing electrical potential between the intracellular and extracellular compartments
How do nerve cells communicate?
- In nervous tissues, the process of discharging the standing electrical potential is also a mechanism of electrical communication between cells
- Upon discharging the standing potential between the intracellular and extracellular compartments, the cell membrane works to restore the resting membrane potential
Factors that define whether or not particles cross the cell membrane
- Size of the particles
- Electrical charge on the particles
- Whether particles are recognised by specialised transport systems that cross the cell membrane or not
- Solubility of molecules in water
What specialised proteins allow movement across membranes?
Ion channels, and ion pumps
Properties of ion channels
- Protein assemblies that are lodged within the substance of the cell membrane
- These protein assemblies span the full thickness of the cell membrane
- Also known as trans-membrane spanning proteins
- They have a water-filled central pore that passes from inside to the outside of the cell (or vice-versa)
- They facilitate passive movement of ions across the cell membrane
- From inside to outside
- From outside to inside•
- Some ion channels are selective as to which ions they conduct through their pores
- Other ion channels are less selective in terms of which ions they will conduct
How do ion channels differ?
- which species of ions they conduct
- how their conductance of ions is governed
- gating mechanisms of the ion channels
Different types of ion channel
- Voltage-gated ion channels
- Voltage-gated sodium channels
- Voltage-gated potassium channels
- Ligand-gated ion channels
- Most common ligands are neurotransmitters e.g. Acetylcholine
- Mechanically-gated ion channels
- Non-gated ion channels
- Leak channels
What are ion pumps?
- They are also found lodged within the cell membrane
- Their main function is to maintain the resting membrane potential
- They do not set-up the RMP
- They require energy in the form of ATP to maintain the RMP