Action Potential Flashcards

(11 cards)

1
Q

How is resting potential created and maintained?

A
  • Na+/K+ pump in the axon membrane actively transports 3Na+ out of the axon and 2K+ into the axon, against a concentration gradient
  • K+ ion channels transport many K+ out of the axon down a concentration gradient by facilitated diffusion
  • This makes the membrane potential inside of the axon more negative (-70mv)
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2
Q

What is a nerve impulse?

A

the passage of an action potential along an axon

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3
Q

What is an action potential?

A
  • a rapid change in voltage across the axon membrane
  • due to changes in the cell surface membrane permeability to Na+ and K+
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4
Q

Describe depolarisation.

A
  • localised depolarisation causes Na+ channels to open
  • Na+ diffuses into the axon down a concentration gradient by facilitated diffusion
  • this stimulates more Na+ channels to open so more Na+ diffuses in
  • This causes embrace potential to become less negative, reaching +40mV
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5
Q

Describe repolarisation.

A
  • Na+ channels close as the permeability of the membrane to Na+ decreases
  • K+ channels in the membrane open, so K+ diffuses out of the axon
  • as K+ are positively charged this returns the membrane potential to the resting value (-65mV)
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6
Q

Why does hyper-polarisation occur?

A
  • voltage gated K+ channels need to close, but they close slowly
  • sp the membrane potential drops to below -70mV
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7
Q

What is the all or nothing principle?

A

An action potential is only initiated of the threshold is passed

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8
Q

Describe what changes with strong and weak stimuli.

A

frequency of action potential increases as stimulus strength increases

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9
Q

What is the refractory period?

A

the rest period after one ion channel opens and the next time it reopens

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10
Q

What are the importances of the refractory period?

A
  • produces discrete impulses in one direction, which don’t merge
  • limit to frequency of impulses
  • action potentials are unidirectional
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11
Q

Why do nerve impulses travel faster along myelinated neurones than unmyleinated neurones?

A
  • saltatory conduction takes place as impulses jump from node to node
  • as the myelin sheath acts as an electrical inculcator so prevents the axon from be depolarised
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