lecture 7 - osmosis & membrane potential Flashcards

1
Q

What is diffusion?

A

The movement of molecules from high concentration to low concentration

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2
Q

What is osmosis?

A

The movement of water across a semi-permeable membrane to equalize solute concentration

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3
Q

How can the flow of water across a semi-permeable membrane be opposed?

A

By applying force against the direction of flow

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4
Q

What divides intracellular and extracellular spaces

A

semi-permeable membrane

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5
Q

What does osmosis balance?

A

Tonicity

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6
Q

What is an isotonic solution in cells?

A

When the ECF and ICF are in balance, with equal concentration

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7
Q

What is a hypertonic solution?

A

A solution with a higher solute concentration, and less water, so water will flow into the solution

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8
Q

What is a hypotonic solution?

A

A solution with a low solute concentration and high amount of water. Water flows out of the solution to restore equilibrium

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9
Q

If the extracellular fluid is hypotonic, will a cell shrivel or swell?

A

Swell

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10
Q

If the extracellular fluid is hypertonic, will a cell shrivel or swell?

A

Shrivel

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11
Q

What are the two key electrolytes in the body?

A

NaCl and KCl

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12
Q

What are the two key cations in the body?

A

Na+ and K+

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13
Q

Is [Na+] greater inside or outside the cell?

A

Outside the cell.

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14
Q

Is [K+] greater inside or outside the cell?

A

Inside the cell.

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15
Q

How do Na+ and K+ passively move in/out of the intracellular fluid?

A

Through ion channels in the plasma membrane.

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16
Q

What do active sodium and potassium pumps use to provide energy?

A

ATP, which is converted into ADP, releasing energy.

17
Q

What is the value of the resting membrane potential?

A

-70mV

18
Q

At rest, which side of the cell membrane is positive and which is negative?

A

Intracellular fluid is negative, Extracellular fluid is positive.

19
Q

What is the ratio of K+ to Na+ exchanged by the sodium potassium pump?

A

2 Ka+, 3 Na+

20
Q

What is an electrical gradient?

A

The difference in charge between the ICF and ECF, caused by a difference in the concentration of cations on either side of the cell membrane.

21
Q

What direction does the electrical gradient drive cations?

A

From positive to negative - into the intracellular fluid

22
Q

Why does the electrochemical gradient of K+ push ions weakly?

A

The electrical gradient opposes the chemical gradient of the Potassium, limiting movement out of the cell.

23
Q

Why does the Na+ electrochemical gradient strongly push Na+ into the cell?

A

The chemical and electrical gradient are in the same direction, meaning they add to give an electrochemical gradient with a large magnitude.

24
Q

What is depolarization?

A

When excitable cells trigger ion channels, causing cations to flow into the cell, increasing the membrane potential (the magnitude of the membrane potential decreases, but it becomes more positive so there is a net increase).

25
Q

What is repolarizaion?

A

When a stimulus is removed and excess ions in the cell are removed, decreasing the membrane potential until it reaches the initial membrane potential.