Neuronal Signal Propagation Flashcards

1
Q

Action potential firing is produced by ________ ion channels.

A

voltage-gated

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2
Q

The ______property of a neuron describes the likelihood that a neuron will fire an Action Potential depending upon the strength of the input signal

A

Excitability

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3
Q

________ uses an intracellular electrode to inject current commands across the surface membrane and record the neuronal electrical response (It is like a programmable charge pump)

A

Current clamp

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4
Q

Rheobase

A

Minimum current to reach threshold

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5
Q

Chronaxie

A

Time to fire at a current that is 2x Rheobase

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6
Q

By keeping _____ constant, the ________is kept constant, so all changes in current are due to change in the probability of the channel being open

A

membrane potential, driving force

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7
Q

Leak current

A

Linear changes in Current as expected

from Ohm’s Law

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8
Q

How do you isolate a Na+ ion specific component of a current?

A

Remove K+ from the media or add a drug (TEA) that selectively eliminates the K+ ion dependent current

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9
Q

How do you isolate a K+ ion specific component of a current?

A

Remove Na+ from the media or add a drug (TTX) that selectively eliminates the Na+ ion dependent current

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10
Q

Name the 3 axonal membrane ionic current components determined through H&H’s experimentation.

A
  1. Linear Leak Current (Looks Ohmic)
  2. A depolarization activated Na+ current that shuts down in a time dependent manner
  3. A depolarization activated K+ current that remains active
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11
Q

H&H suggested that ____ could be accurately modeled by assuming multiple switches whereas _____ only required a single switch model

A

activation, inactivation

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12
Q

What positively charged residues are found in transmembrane segment of voltage-gated K+ channel?

A

Arg, Lys

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13
Q

The ______ structure of Voltage-gated channels suggested that each S4 transmembrane segment was acting like a separate gating switch as predicted by H&H

A

tetrameric

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14
Q

_____ is a “autoinhibitory” state analogous to receptor desensitization

A

Inactivation

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15
Q

A ______exists, where the Neuron cannot fire another action potential until the Na+ channels recover from Inactivation

A

Refractory period

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16
Q

What exists close to the membrane and exists on many lipids proteins, glycosylations? Why can these be problematic?

A

Fixed charges - ions can bind them, so ion concentration changes can produce surface charge effects that change stability of gating charges - appears as a change in membrane potential

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17
Q

When are surface charge effects particularly large?

A

With divalent cations like Ca2+

18
Q

What symptoms result from hypercalcemia?

A

Decreased excitability of neurons - fatigue, depression, confusion, cardiac arrhythmias, coma

19
Q

What symptoms result from hypocalcemia? (often due to hypoparathyroidism)

A

Increased excitability - cardiac arrhythmias, cramps, tingling, bronchospasms, seizures

20
Q

Higher Ca2+ outside cell (increases/decreases) surface binding, (destabilizing/stabilizing) Na+ channel gating charges in the open state, making it (harder/easier) to fire an action potential.

A

Increases, destabilizing, harder

21
Q

Lower Ca2+ outside cell (increases/decreases) surface binding, (destabilizing/stabilizing) Na+ channel gating charges in the open state, making it (harder/easier) to fire an action potential.

A

Decreases, stabilizing, easier

22
Q

____ are locations where + charges are entering the cell, driving a depolarization

A

Sinks

23
Q

______ are peripheral locations that are being depolarized due to the + charges flowing in at the sink

A

Sources

24
Q

A current loop between nearby parts of the same cell that are at different potentials is called a ____

A

Local circuit current

25
Q

Action potentials run down the axon from _____depolarized patch of membrane to _____depolarized membranes

A

More –> Less

26
Q

Name the current sink and source for a depolarizing synaptic input.

A

Sink - site of neurotransmitter action, synapse

Source - soma depolarization by dendritic current

27
Q

Name the current sink and source for a propagating action potential.

A

Sink - axon hillock

Source - further down the axon, dendrite

28
Q

How do propagation waves spread in an unmyelinated axon?

A

Continuously down the axon

29
Q

If internal resistance increases, what happens to conduction speed

A

Slows down

30
Q

Local circuit can extend further if internal resistance is ____ and membrane resistance is ____.

(Low or high?)

A

Low, high

31
Q

If membrane resistance increases, what happens to conduction speed?

A

Accelerates

32
Q

Myelination is produced by repetitive wrapping of what type of cell around an axons

A

glial cell

33
Q

How do myelinated axons reduce amt of current needed to depolarize the membrane?

A

Reduces the membrane conductance (increasing resistance) and reducing capacitance (greater charge separation)

34
Q

Does myelin thickness increase or decrease as axon diameter increases?

A

Increases

35
Q

T or F. Myelination does not accelerate propagation speed for small axons <1 um

A

TRUE - but many small CNS axons are myelinated anyway b/c of energy savings

36
Q

In myelinated axons, propagation waves are only generated where?

A

Nodes of Ranvier

37
Q

How do propagation waves spread in a myleinated axon?

A

Saltatory propagation of action potential down the axon

38
Q

Name effects of myelination on the following:

  • Membrane Resistance
  • Membrane Capacitance
  • Conduction velocity
  • Energy Utilization
A
  • Increases
  • Decreases
  • Increases
  • Decreases - b/c fewer ions need to cross the membrane to propagate the action potential
39
Q

What is the primary limit to myelination?

A

Increase in axon caliber

40
Q

Are myelin sheaths thinner or thicker in brain? Periphery?

A

Brain - thinner

Periphery - thicker

41
Q

Is axon density low or high in the periphery? In the brain?

A

Periphery - low (so diameters are bigger)

Brain - high (to limit diameter so brain doesn’t get too big)