Resting Membrane Potentials Flashcards
What is the equation for Ohms law?
I=V/R
Breakdown the ohms law
Current (I, in ampere)= driving force (volt)/ resistance (ohm)
g(conductance)= ease of flow, units (A/V)= Siemens
Conductance and resistance are reciprocal: 1/R= g
Hence the inverse if conductance can be substituted for resistance :
I= V x g
Explain the water flow analogy for electric current
Electric current= water flow
Driving force(voltage)= water pressure
Resistance(Ohm)= pipe resistance to water flow
Bigger pipes have more conductance,equivalent to less resistance since they are the inverse of each other
Conductance for specific ions is thus key for generating membrane potential
Ions are either______ or ______
Positively(cations) or negatively charged(anions)
Same charges repel each other, opposing charges attract each other
What is charge equivalency?
A neutral solution contains equal,amounts of positive and negative ions
What is a charge gradient?
When charges move across a membrane, a charge gradient is set up. Only a small fraction is required.
Due to this, even though we talk about a charge flux, the moving proportion is generally so small that it will not significantly change the concentration of ions ins8de or outside the cell
What are the requirements and effects of charge separation?
- requires selective movement of specific charge across the membrane, e.g. only Na+ or only K+
- this leads to a charge difference and thus electrical potential (voltage, V) across the membrane
- requires a pathway for specific charges to move, e.g. selective ion channels
What is required for resting membrane potential?
- a semi- permeable (blocking water and ion flow)
- a concentration gradient of ions across the membrane driven by Na-K ATPase
- a pathway for charged ions to flow across the membrane: selective channels
How is a resting membrane potential formed?
Charge separation across the membrane via selective ion channels
What is a resting membrane potent determined by?
- which ion conductance is dominant at rest
- the magnitude of the concentration gradient for that ion
What were the measurements and typical values of a resting membrane potential?
- written as inside relative to outside, e.g. -50 mV means interior is 50 mV more negative than exterior
- usually for an epithelial (non-excitable) cell -50mV or more negative, for a neuron (excitable) -80mV
- specific value depends largely upon the type of ion channels expressed in a cell
What is the steady state model for electrochemical equilibrium potentials?
Constant ion pumping (active, e.g. Na-K ATPase) and leakage (passive via channels) results in uneven distribution of key ions across the membrane
What is net movement of each ion driven by?
Chemical gradient(concentration difference) and electrical gradient (charge difference), together refferred to as el3ctrochemical gradient
When is overall net movement of an ion 0?
When the electrical and chemical gradients balance each other out.
Due to this, ions with uneven chemical gradients, will generate a specific electrical charge gradient
The electrical potential for this ion is called the equilibrium potential/Nernst equilibrium potential for the ion, and can be calculated by the Nernst equation
What is the Vm?
Membrane potential-the net effect of all charge movements taking place across the membrane. Most affected by the ion species with the largest conductance across the membrane (and requires a concentration gradient of that ion)