neural tissue (wilcox) Flashcards

1
Q

t/f. theres higher [potassium] inside the cell and higher [sodium] outside the cell.

A

true.

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2
Q

transmembrane potential of sodium

A

+66 mV

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3
Q

transmembrane potential of potassium

A

-90 mV

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4
Q

Na/K ATPase

A

powered by ATP and carries 3 NA out and 2K in, balanaces passive forces of diffusion to maintain the resting potential

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5
Q

passive channels

A

aka leak channels, always open, permeability changes with conditions

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6
Q

active channels

A

aka gated channels, open and close in response to stimuli; at rest, most gated channels are closed

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7
Q

3 classes of gated channels

A

chemical, voltage, mechanical

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8
Q

how do chemical gated channels open and where are they found?

A

open by binding chemical (like ACh), and found on neuron cell bodies and dendrites

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9
Q

how do voltade gated channels open and where are they found?

A

open in response to change in transmembrane potental, and found on axons, skeletal muscle sarcolemma, cardiac muscle

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10
Q

what is a characteristic of an excitable membrane?

A

voltage gated channel

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11
Q

how do mechanical gated channels open and where are the found?

A

open in response to membrane distortion, found on sensory receptors (touch, pressure, vibration)

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12
Q

what happens in depolarization?

A

transmemb potential moves toward 0 because NA is rushing through channel to produce a local current

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13
Q

what happens in repolarization

A

stimulus is removed and transmemb potential returns to normal by potassium leaving the cell

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14
Q

what happens in hyperpolarization

A

the negativity of the resting potential increases

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15
Q

4 characteristics of graded potentials

A
  1. effect decreases with distance 2. effect spreads passively due to local currents 3. depolarization or hyperpolarization 4. the stronger the stimulus, the greater the change in TM potential and the larger the area affected
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16
Q

how do you initiate an AP?

A

a graded depolarization of an axon hillock must be large enough to change the resting potential to the threshold level of the voltage gated sodium channels

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17
Q

t/f. if a stimulus excess the threshold amount, the AP is the same, no matter how large the stimulus.

A

true.

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18
Q

how do you stop an AP?

A

inactivate the Na channels and activate the voltage gated K channels (repolarization) and return to normal permeability (resting potential)

19
Q

t/f. during the refractory period, the membrane can respond normally to additional stimuli

A

false. it cannot respond to any additional stimuli

20
Q

absolute refractory period

A

no AP possible

21
Q

relative refractory period

A

membrane potential almost normal, a very large stimulus can initiate AP

22
Q

continuous propagation

A

unmyelinated axons

23
Q

saltatory propagation

A

myelinated axons

24
Q

type A axon fibers

A

myelinated, large diameter; for position, balance, touch, and motor impulses

25
Q

type B axon fibers

A

myelinated, medium diameter; for sensory info, peripheral effectors

26
Q

type C axon fibers

A

unmyelinated, small diameter; for invountary muscle, gland controls

27
Q

electrical synapses

A

direct physical contact between cells

28
Q

chemical synapses

A

signal transmitted across a gap by a chemical NT

29
Q

excitatory NT

A

cause depolarization of postsynaptic membranes and promote AP

30
Q

inhibitory NT

A

cause hyperpolarization of postsynaptic membranes and suppress AP

31
Q

after the AP reaches the synaptic end, the extracellular influx of what ion causes NT to be exocytosed?

A

calcium

32
Q

what removed ACh from the post synaptic receptors?

A

AChE

33
Q

t/f. fewer synapses mean fewer synaptic delay

A

true.

34
Q

when NT cannot recycle fast enough to meet demands of intense stimmuli

A

synaptic fatigue

35
Q

what are the 4 important NT we need to know

A

NE, dopamine, serotinin, GABA

36
Q

t/f. GABA is both excitatory and inhibitory.

A

false. ALWAYS INHIBITORY

37
Q

3 ways nt and neuromodulators work

A
  1. direct effects on membrane channels 2. indirect effects via G proteins 3. indirect effects via intracellular enzymes
38
Q

t/f. G proteins activate adenylate cyclase, producing the second messenger cAMP

A

true.

39
Q

excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP)

A

graded depolarization of postsynaptic memb

40
Q

inhibitory postsynaptic potential (IPSP)

A

graded hyperpolarization of post synaptic memb

41
Q

t/f. inhibition of a postsynaptic neuron happens when it receives many IPSPs

A

true.

42
Q

temporal summation

A

keep using the same stimuli until you trigger an AP, one synapse

43
Q

spatial summation

A

use more than one stimuli until you trigger an AP, multiple synapses

44
Q

t/f. neruomodulators and hormones can change membrane sensitivity to NT.

A

true.