Nervous system (electrophysiology) Flashcards

1
Q

What are the ways a membrane potential can change due to ion movement?

A

Depolarize
Repolarize
Hyperpolarize

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2
Q

What happens to the membrane potential when it depolarizes?

A

Membrane potential becomes more + than the resting membrane potetial and creates an electrical signal

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3
Q

What happens to the membrane potential when it repolarizes?

A

The depolarized membrane returns to resting potential

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4
Q

What happens to the membrane potetntial when is hyperpolarizes?

A

The membrane potential becomes less negative than the resting potential

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5
Q

What is the function of ion channels?

A

Allow the cell to change its ion permeability by opening or closing existing channels on the membrane

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6
Q

What are some examples of ion channels in the membrane?

A

K+ channels, Na+ channels, Ca2+ channels, Cl- channels

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7
Q

What is the definition of conductance?

A

The ease in which ions flow through a channel

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8
Q

How is a mechanical gate controlled (opened/closed)?

A

-deforms due to pressure

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9
Q

How are chemically gated ion channels controlled?

A

-controlled by intracellular messenger molecules or extracellular ligands that bind to the channel protein

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10
Q

How are voltage gated ion channels controlled?

A

-respond to changes in the cell’s membrane potential

-open and close when the electrical state of the cell changes
>opens at threshold voltage

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11
Q

Voltage charges across the membrane can be classified into what 2 types of electrical signals?

A

Graded potentials and action potentials

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12
Q

What are the characteristics of a graded potential?

A
  • variable strength signals
  • travel short distances and lose strength as they travel through the cell
  • occurs through dendrites and cell body
  • mechanically, chemically, o voltage gated channels involved
  • what ions are involved; Na+, K+, Ca+
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13
Q

Where do graded potentials occur?

A

-occurs through the dendrites and cell body

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14
Q

What kind of gated channels are grade potentials involved in?

A
  • mechanical
  • chemical
  • voltage
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15
Q

What kind of signals do graded potentials produce? How far do they travel?

A
  • variable strength signals

- travels over short distance and lose strength as they travel through the cell

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16
Q

What are the characteristics of an Action potential?

A
  • Very brief, large depolarizations
  • travel long distances through a neuron, without losing strength
  • occurs at axon hillock (trigger zone)
  • All or Nothing
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17
Q

What kind of signals does an action potential produce? How far does it travel?

A
  • very brief, large depolarizations

- travel large distances without losing strength

18
Q

Where do action potentials occur?

A

-occur at the axon hillock (trigger zone)

19
Q

Why is an action potential considered an “ All -or-Nothing” response?

A

-Action potential occurs if a stimulus reaches threshold or does not occur at all (below threshold)

20
Q

What does not influence the amplitude of an action potential?

A

-the strength of a graded potential

21
Q

How is a action potential initiated?

A

-when a depolarizing graded potential is strong enough when it reaches an integrating center within a neuron

22
Q

Conduction of the action potential along the axon requires what types of ion channels to open/close to alter the membrane permeability (2)

A
  • Voltage gated Na+ channels

- voltage gated K+ channels

23
Q

During the conduction of an Action potential, what channels help regulate the movement of ions?

A

Activation and inactivation gates

24
Q

9 steps to create an action potential

A

1) resting membrane potential
2) depolarizing stimulus
3) As the cell starts depolarizing, Voltage gated Na+ and K+ channels begin to open
4) Rapid entry of Na+ depolarizes the cell
5) As the membrane potential reaches threshold, Na+ channels close and slower K+ channels open
6) K+ moves from cell to extracellular
7) K+ channels remain open and additional K+ leaves cell, hyper polarizing it
8) Voltage- Gated K+ channels then close, less K+ leaks out of the cell
9) cell returns to resting ion permeability and resting membrane potential.

25
Q

Describe the ion movement during the depolarization phase of an action potential

A
  • rapid entry of Na+
26
Q

What happens to the Na+ and K+ ion channels when the action potential reaches the threshold?

A

-Na+ channels close and slower K+ channels open

27
Q

Describe the ion movement during the repolarization phase of the action potential?

A

-K+ moves from the cell to the extracellular fluid

28
Q

What causes the cell to hyperpolarize?

A
  • K+ channels remain open and additional K+ leaves the cell

- Voltage gate K+ channels eventually close and less K+ leaks out of the cell

29
Q

What happens during the refractory period?

A

-once an Action potential has begun, a 2nd action potential cannot be triggered during this time (1-2 mill sec), no matter how large the stimulus

30
Q

What is a subthreshold graded potential?

A
  • starts above the threshold at its initiation point but decreases in strength as it travels through they cell body
  • at trigger zone, its below threshold= does not initiate an action potential
31
Q

What is a Suprathreshold graded potential?

A

-A stronger stimulus that creates a graded potential that is still above threshold by the time it reaches the trigger zone=initiates action potential

32
Q

The refractory period is divided into what 2 periods

A
  • Absolute refractory period

- Relative refractory period

33
Q

Describe the absolute refractory period?

A
  • represents the time required for Na+ channel gates to reset to their resting positions
  • ensures one way travel
  • 2nd AP cannot occur before the first has finished
34
Q

Describe the relative refractory period?

A
  • follows the absolute refractory period
  • some but not all Na+ channel gates have reset to their original positions
  • K+ channels are still open
  • a STRONG stimulus may induce a 2nd action potential at this time
35
Q

Describe saltatory conduction

A
  • the action potential transmits from node to node with myelinated axons
  • can only perform an AP at a node of ranvier
36
Q

What factors can influence a faster action potential?

A
  • large diameter of an axon

- myelinated axons (leak resistant); prevents ion flow of of the cytoplasm

37
Q

What determines the number of action potentials produced at the axon hillock?

A
  • stimulus intensity
  • weak stimulus releases little neurotransmitters
  • strong stimulus causes more action potentials and releases more neurotransmitters
38
Q

What 3 chemical factors alter electrical activity?

A

1) Normokelemia
2) hyperkalemia
3) hypokelemia

39
Q

Describe Normokalemia

A
  • blood K+ is in the normal range
40
Q

Describe hyperkalemia

A
  • increase in blood K+ concentration
  • depolarizes cell
  • a stimulus that would normally be subthreshold can trigger an action potential
41
Q

Describe Hypokalemia

A
  • decrease in blood K+ concentration
  • hyperpolarizes cell
  • a stimulus that would normally be above threshold would less likely be able to fire an action potential