Neuronal signalling Flashcards
What is voltage?
voltage (ΔV) is the difference in electric potential energy per unit charge between two points. In physiology, most voltages are observed across a membrane.
What is current?
Current (I) is the flow of electric charge through a medium or across a surface. It represents the movement of charged particles.
What is resistance?
Resistance (R) is the opposition to the passage of an electric current. It represents how difficult it is for electricity to flow along a certain path.
What is conductance?
Conductance (g) is the inverse quantity of resistance. It measures how easily electricity flows along a certain path or through a medium.
What is the relationship between voltage, current, and resistance?
According to Ohm’s Law, the relationship between voltage (V), current (I), and resistance (R) is given by the equation V = I x R. It states that the voltage across a circuit is equal to the current flowing through it multiplied by the resistance.
How is current related to conductance?
Current (I) is related to conductance (g) by the equation I = V x g. It states that the current flowing through a circuit is equal to the voltage applied across it multiplied by the conductance.
What is a selectively permeable membrane?
A selectively permeable membrane refers to a membrane that allows the free movement of certain molecules while tightly controlling the movement of others. It acts as a selective filter.
How do uncharged substances move across the cell membrane?
Uncharged substances, such as O2, CO2, urea, alcohol, and glucose, move across the cell membrane based on their concentration gradient. The membrane is permeable to these molecules, allowing them to move freely.
How do charged substances cross the cell membrane?
Charged substances, such as K+, Na+, and Cl- ions, cannot easily diffuse through the hydrophobic cell membrane. They utilize specialized ion channels, which are water-filled pores, to cross the membrane.
What are ion channels?
Ion channels are specialized proteins that form pores in the cell membrane, allowing the passage of specific ions. They are selective for particular ions.
What factors induce the movement of ions through ion channels?
Concentration gradient: Ions move from areas of higher concentration to areas of lower concentration.
Electrical gradient: The electrical potential difference across the membrane attracts ions with opposite charges and repels ions with the same charge.
Electrochemical gradient: The combined influence of concentration and electrical gradients determines the net movement of ions.
How does the concentration gradient influence the movement of potassium (K+) ions across the cellular membrane?
The intracellular concentration of potassium is higher than the extracellular concentration. As a result, potassium ions tend to move out of the cell following the concentration gradient.
How does the electrical gradient influence the movement of potassium (K+) ions?
When positively charged potassium ions are released from the cell, the intracellular space becomes relatively negative. This negative charge attracts some potassium ions back towards the intracellular space, counteracting the concentration gradient.
hat “streams” are created due to the combined influence of concentration and electrical gradients for potassium ions?
Two “streams” of potassium ions are created. One stream expels potassium ions according to the concentration gradient, moving them out of the cell. The other stream attracts potassium ions back towards the intracellular space due to the increasing negative electrical environment.
What ions have the greatest impact on the resting membrane potential?
Sodium (Na+) and potassium (K+) ions have the greatest impact on the resting membrane potential as the cell membrane is most permeable to these ions.
What is the resting membrane potential of neurons primarily determined by?
The resting membrane potential of neurons is primarily determined by the equilibrium potential for potassium ions (due to high permeability), with the slight influence of sodium ion influx making it slightly less negative.
How can changes in ion permeability affect the membrane potential?
Changes in ion permeability caused by the opening or closing of ion channels can alter the membrane potential. This is how action potentials are generated.
How is the resting membrane potential maintained?
The resting membrane potential is maintained by the sodium-potassium pump (Na+/K+ ATPase). This pump actively transports potassium ions into the cell and sodium ions out of the cell, against their electrochemical gradients. This helps maintain the ionic differences across the membrane and the resting membrane potential.