Nerve cells III Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the electrical gradient movement in an axon and the structure of a neuron

A

Electrical grad moves in same direction as Na+ influx

Dendrites, Cell body, Axon, Axon terminal

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2
Q

Briefly describe hyperpolarisation

A

Potential prop to stimuli

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3
Q

What is an action potential?

A

Large, rapid depolarisation for communication

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4
Q

How does an action potential occur?

A

Due to excitable cells with voltage gated ion channels reaching threshold

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5
Q

Describe an action potential

A

In neurons - Mainly axons
Triggered by graded potentials
When initiated, AP propagated long distances along length of axon without loss of strength

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6
Q

Which cells generate an action potential?

A

Only neuron and muscle cells

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7
Q

What factor helps initiate an AP and how?

A

VG ion channels (Na/K)

Open due to changes in membrane potential

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8
Q

What are the 3 main stages of an AP?

A

Rapid depolarisation
Repolarisation
After hyperpolarisation

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9
Q

Describe rapid depolarisation

A

Threshold reached, graded potentials inc membrane potential (-70mV>-55mV)
Threshold triggers VG Na channels open, influx into cell down conc grad, via electrochemical grad, inside becomes more positive hence more VG Na channels open (positive feedback loop)

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10
Q

Describe repolarisation

A

VG Na Channels inactivated, VG K+ channels open as membrane becomes more positive, K rushes out of neuron

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11
Q

Describe after hyperpolarisation

A

K channel stays open (opens later, closes after Na channels), hence K+ still leaves neuron, membrane potential comes closer to equilibrium potential

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12
Q

Describe the 2 gating mechanisms of VG Na+ ion channels

What is it dependent on?

A

Activation gate - closed at rest, opens quickly at depol
Inactivation gate - open at rest, closes slowly
(On voltage/time closes with depolarisation)
Closed, open, inactivation

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13
Q

Describe membrane permeability for resting and action potential

A

Resting potential - K+ channels open, more permeable than Na+, resting potential close to equilibrium potential for K+
Action potential - Na+/K+ permeability VG, changes with time, membrane potential of cell close to equilibrium potential for Na+

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14
Q

Describe the link between channels and potentials

A

VG contribute to AP, leak channels contribute to resting potential

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15
Q

Describe graded potentials

A

Affected by strength of stimulus (not for AP due to all or nothing law)
They’re small, communicate over short distances, determine whether a cell will fire an AP
If graded potential depolarises a neuron to threshold, AP generates
Initiated by stimulus eg sensory/chemical that triggers opening/closing of ligand gated channel
Magnitude varies with strength of stimulus
Can be depolarised/hyperpolarised

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16
Q

Describe 2 types of ways graded potentials add up

A

Temporal summation

Spatial summation

17
Q

What is temporal summation?

A

Same stimuli, repeated rapidly together in time

18
Q

What is spatial summation?

A

Different stimuli applied at same time

19
Q

A patient lacks voltage gated Na+ channels on neurons. How does this affect them?

A

Pain threshold non-existent, can’t feel pain as no AP will be triggered (congenital analgesia)

20
Q

If a patients resting potential was reduced instead, how would it affect them?

A

Would take longer for an AP to generate, so low sensitivity

21
Q

If a patients resting potential was increased , how would it affect them?

A

Faster AP will generate, leads to high pain sensitivity

22
Q

Name some examples of electrolytes

A

Ca/Cl/Mg/K/Na

23
Q

Describe electrolytes

A

Present in blood, bodily fluids, urine > Imbalance causes in function of the body, affects vital body systems > Can lead to seizures/coma

24
Q

Summarise nerve cells III

A

RPs are unequal distribution of ions (mainly Na and K) across membrane maintained by the electrochemical grad of ions.
GPs are electrical signals that are local, vary with intensity of the stimulus, can summate, can be stimulatory or inhibitory, have no refractory period.
APs are electrical signals that are depolarising in nature, are due to the coordinated opening and closing of VG Na/K channels