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C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion based on Donnan equilibrium

C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

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C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion. based on Donnan equilibrium. Nernst equation. 1. What membrane potential would exist at the true equilibrium for a particular ion?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ionbased on Donnan equilibrium

Page 2: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion
Page 3: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion
Page 4: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Nernst equation1. What membrane potential would exist at the true equilibrium for a particular ion?

- What is the voltage that would balance diffusion gradients with the force that would prevent net ion movement?

2. This theoretical equilibrium potential can be calculated (for a particular ion).

Eion = RT ln [X]outside

zF [X]inside

Page 5: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

ENa,K,Cl = RT PK [K+]out + PNa [Na+]out + PCl[Cl-]in

PK [K+]in + PNa [Na+]in + PCl[Cl-]outF_____________________________ln___

Goldman Equation1. quantitative representation of Vm when membrane is permeable to more than one ion species2. involves permeability constants (P)

pp 72-73

Page 6: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Resting Potential

A. Vrest

1. represents potential difference at non-excited state-30 to -100mV depending on cell type

2. not all ion species may have an ion channel3. there is an unequal distribution of ions due to active pumping mechanisms

- contributes to Donnan equilibrium- creates chemical diffusion gradient that contributes to the equilibrium potential

Page 7: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion
Page 8: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Resting Potential

B. Ion channels necessary for carrying charge across the membrane1. the the concentration gradient, the greater its contribution to the membrane potential

2. K+ is the key to Vrest (due to increased permeability)

Page 9: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Resting PotentialC. Role of active transport

ENa is + 63 mV in frog muscleVm is + -90 to -100mV in frog muscle

Page 10: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Action Potentials

large, transient change in Vm

depolarization followed by repolarizationpropagated without decrementconsistent in individual axons“all or none”

Page 11: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Action Potentials

A. Depends on1. ion chemical gradients established by active transport through channels2. these electrochemical gradients represent potential energy3. flow of ion currents through “gated” channels

- down electrochemical gradient4. different types of Na+ and K+ channels than seen in most cells

- voltage-gated

Page 12: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Action PotentialsB. Properties

1. only in excitable cells- muscle cells, neurons, some receptors, some secretory cells

Page 13: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Action PotentialsB. Properties

2. a cell will normally produce identical action potentials (amplitude)

Page 14: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Action PotentialsB. Properties

3. depolarization to threshold

- rapid depolarization- results in reverse of polarity

- or just local response (potential) if it does not reach threshold

Page 15: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Action PotentialsB. Properties

a. threshold current (-30 to -55 mV)b. AP regenerative after threshold (self-perpetuating)

Page 16: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Action PotentialsB. Properties

4. overshoot: period of positivity in ICF5. repolarization

a. return to Vrest

b. after-hyperpolarization

Page 17: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Action PotentialsB. Properties

6. accommodationa. time-dependent decrease in excitability b. result of a series of subthreshold depolarizationsc. threshold increasesd. the slower the rate of depolarization (current intensity), the greater the in thresholde. change in sensitivity of ion channels

Page 18: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Action PotentialsC. Refractory period

1. absolute2. relative

a. strong enough stimulus can elicit another APb. threshold is increased

Page 19: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion
Page 20: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Action PotentialsD. ∆ Ion conductance

- responsible for current flowing across the membrane

Page 21: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Action PotentialsD. ∆ Ion conductance

1. rising phase: in gNa

overshoot approaches ENa

(ENa is about +60 mV)2. falling phase: in gNa and in gK

3. after-hyperpolarizationcontinued in gK

approaches EK

(EK is about -90 mV)

Page 22: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Gated Ion ChannelsA. Voltage-gated Na+ channels

1. localization

Page 23: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Gated Ion ChannelsA. Voltage-gated Na+ channels

1. localizationa. voltage-gated

Page 24: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Gated Ion ChannelsA. Voltage-gated Na+ channels

1. localizationb. ligand-gated at synapses

Page 25: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Gated Ion ChannelsA. Voltage-gated Na+ channels

1. localizationNa+ channels occupy only a small fraction of surface area100-500 channels/m

Page 26: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Gated Ion ChannelsA. Voltage-gated Na+ channels

2. current flowa. Na+ ions flow through channel at 6000/sec at emf of -100mVb. number of open channels depends on time and Vm

Page 27: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Gated Ion ChannelsA. Voltage-gated Na+ channels

3. opening of channela. gating molecule with a net charge

Page 28: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Gated Ion ChannelsA. Voltage-gated Na+ channels

3. opening of channelb. change in voltage causes gating molecule to undergo conformational change

Page 29: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Gated Ion ChannelsA. Voltage-gated Na+ channels

4. factors contributing to specificitya. anions at mouth of channelb. sizec. ability to dehydrate (shed water of hydration)

Page 30: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Gated Ion ChannelsA. Voltage-gated Na+ channels

5. generation of AP dependent only on Na+

repolarization is required before another AP can occurK+ efflux

Page 31: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Gated Ion ChannelsA. Voltage-gated Na+ channels

6. positive feedback in upslopea. countered by reduced emf for Na+ as Vm approaches ENa

b. Na+ channels close very quickly after opening (independent of Vm)

Page 32: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Gated Ion ChannelsB. Voltage-gated K+ channels

1. slower response to voltage changes than Na+ channels2. gK increases at peak of AP

Page 33: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Gated Ion ChannelsB. Voltage-gated K+ channels

3. high gK during falling phasedecreases as Vm returns to normalchannels close as repolarization progresses

Page 34: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Gated Ion ChannelsB. Voltage-gated K+ channels

4. hastens repolarization for generation of more action potentials

Page 35: C. Establishes an equilibrium potential for a particular ion

Does [Ion] Change During AP?A. Relatively few ions needed to alter Vm

B. Large axons show negligible change in Na+ and K+ concentrations after an AP.