Lecture 3 Active Membranes and Ion Channels Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the structure of voltage-gated Na+ channels

A

VG Na+ channels are single polypeptides (~2800 amino acids) with 4 homologous Domains (I, II, III, IV).
Each Domain has 6 α-helical spanning regions (S1-S6).
S4 contains the voltage sensor.
S5 - S6 linker forms the pore.

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2
Q

Which amino acids attribute the highly conserved charge of the selectivity pore of the VG Na+ channel?

A

Aspartate or Glutamate

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3
Q

Describe the mechanism by which Na+ passes through the Na+ channel pore

A

Asp and Glu lining the permeation pore extract the hydration shell surrounding Na+. The dehydrated Na+ passes through the channel in single file.

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4
Q

Describe the structure of the voltage-gated K+ channel

A

4 subunits (~750 amino acids each).
4 separate gene products assemble on membrane
Heterogeneous assembly results in many VG K+ subtypes
Each subunit has 6 α-helical regions (S1-S6)
S4 - the voltage sensor
S5 - S6 linkers form the pore

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5
Q

What is one structural difference between the VG Na+ and K+ channels?

A

The S4 voltage sensor region of VG K+ channels does not contain as many Ariginine residues, so it is activated more slowly.

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6
Q

What is used as diagnostic technique for demyelination of neuronal tissue?

A

Action Potential Conduction Velocity testing

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7
Q

Describe the general mechanisms for scorpion toxin, tetrodotoxin (pufferfish), and Karenia breves (red tide) toxin.

A

ScTx and TTX block at the external mouth of the channel pore. Karenia breves does not allow the channel to close.

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8
Q

Why does only dehydrated Na+ pass through VG Na+ channels?

A

Negatively charged amino acids line the channel pore. They pull H2O molecules from the hydration shell allowing Na+ to pass through.

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9
Q

What is the most common type of Ca2+ channel?

A

L type- CaV 1.x (first family)- dihydropyridine (DHP) sensitive

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10
Q

The T-type of Ca2+ channels has what characteristics?

A

CaV 3.x- low activation threshold; active at rest

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11
Q

What is phase 2 in ventricular action potentials?

A

Phase 2 is the plateau- slow Ca2+ inward (sodium can flow in as well, but mostly calcium) and minimal outward K+ current.

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12
Q

What phases does the sino-atrial action potentials consist of?

A

Phase 0- depolarization, inward Ca2+
Phase 3- repolarization, outward K+ current
Phase 4- slow depolarization, inward Na+ current, unstable resting membrane potential

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13
Q

What makes up the myelin sheath and what important property does it have?

A

Sphingomyelin; it has good insulating characteristics

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14
Q

What produces myelin in the CNS?

A

oligodendrocytes

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15
Q

Nodes of Ranvier have a high expression of VG Na+ and VG K+ channels; what is the ‘jumping’ on impulse from node to node called?

A

Saltatory conduction; it allows for cells to conserve energy & conduction velocity is increased

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16
Q

What is multiplle sclerosis (MS) and what are the symptoms?

A

MS is an autoimmune disease of the CNS caused by inflammatory processes that demyelinate axons. Symptoms include sporadic paresthesia (tingling) and motor dysfunction.

17
Q

What is the specific sequence that creates the K+ channel canonical pore sequence?

A
Glycine
Tyrosine
Glycine
Valine
Threonine
18
Q

What are the 5 subfamilies of the human voltage gated ion channel voltage sensors?

A
  1. Nav and Cav channels
  2. Two-pore channels (TPCs)
  3. Kv Channels
  4. Cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG)
  5. Transient Receptor potential
19
Q

What kind of specialized action potentials can exhibit a plateau phase?

A

Cardiac Ventricular Action Potentials

20
Q

What is an example of a specialized action potential where some excitable cells fire rhythmically?

A

S-A Node (pacemaker)

21
Q

What is an example of a cell that has a specialized action potential that occurs in peristalsis?

A

Enteric Pacemaker cells

22
Q

What is an example of a cell that has a specialized action potential that occurs in the spinal cord or CNS?

A

Rhythmic oscillators

23
Q

What are the action potential conduction velocities of small unmyelinated axons, small myelinated axons, and large myelinated axons?

A

Small unmyelinated axons = ~ 1 m/s
Small myelinated axons = ~3-15 m/s
Large myelinated axons = ~ 70 m/s

24
Q

What happens in Wallerian Degeneration?

A

Type of axonal injury where axons and myelin deteriorate in peripheral nerves distal to the site of lesion. It takes about 2 weeks.

25
Q

What do schwann cells in the PNS do when axonal injury occurs?

A

Release trophic factors taht induce axonal repair and remyelination

26
Q

Can oligodendrocytes repair axonal injury? If yes, how? If no, why not?

A

No, oligodendrocytes in the CNS lack trophic factors causing limited ability for regeneration (effectively none)

27
Q

What are the three classes of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels and where are they found?

A
  • L-type (CaV 1.x) is the most common; DHP-sensitive; important in use of Norvasc for congestive heart failure
  • n-type (CaV 2.x) for neuronal/neurotransmission
  • T-type (CaV 3.x) has low activation threshold; active at rest