Propagation of action potential Flashcards

1
Q

Axon diameter compared to conductance velocity

A

Larger diameter = faster conductance

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2
Q

How can conduction velocity be measured?

A
Nerve fibre consists of axons with different diameters
stimulus one end
crush other end (so cant conduct)
record extracellular action potentials
plot graph
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3
Q

Local current theory

A

Injection of current into an axon will cause the resulting charge to spread along the axon and cause immediate local change in membrane potential

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4
Q

What is capacitance?

A

Ability to store charge

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5
Q

Membrane resistance?

A

depends on number of ion channels open

low resistance = lots of open channels

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6
Q

what does high capacitance mean?

A

voltage changes more slowly in response to current injection

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7
Q

High resistance meaning

A

Change in voltage spreads further along axon

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8
Q

What does spread of current depend on?

A

Capacitance and membrane resistance

increase membrane resistance and in decrease capacitance = more time for current to spread

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9
Q

How does an action potential spread along an axon?

A

Local currents depolarise adjacent section above threshold
action potential continues down
(cant go backwards as Na+ channels inactivated)

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10
Q

What does myelination do?

A

increases length constant as it is a good insulator

local currents can depolarise next node above threshold

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11
Q

Unmyelinated sections called and what they contain

A

Nodes of Ranvier - lots of V gated Na+ channels

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12
Q

How is a myelin sheath formed?

A

Schwann cells coil around axon

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13
Q

What do action potentials do in myelinated axons?

A

‘Skip’ myelinated sections - SALTATORY CONDUCTION

Action potentials occur at nodes of ranvier
faster conductance velocity

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14
Q

Na+ distribution unmyelinated axon vs myelinated

A

unmyelinated: Evenly across whole of axon

Myelinated: High Na+ channels at nodes

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15
Q

Myelinated axons vs unmyelinated axons velocity

A

myelinated axons: velocity is proportional to diameter

unmyelinated: velocity is proportional to square root of diameter

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16
Q

How does sheath improve conduction?

A

Increase membrane resistance
Decrease membrane capacitance
this increases length constant

decrease in time constant

17
Q

What is length constant?

A

How far voltage can travel along axon

if increase diameter, increase length constant

18
Q

Disease affecting AP conductance

A

Multiple Sclerosis - CNS

Devics disease - optic and spinal cord nerves

19
Q

What occurs in these diseases affecting AP conductance?

A

Breakdown/damage to myelin sheath

20
Q

Multiple sclerosis nerve effects

A

Demyelination of nerves
Lost insulation = decreased spread of voltage (decreased length constant)
Can’t raise next node the threshold - no saltatory conduction

21
Q

Multiple sclerosis symptoms

A

Muscle stiffness/spasms
Slurred speech
Numbness and tingling
Difficulty swallowing

22
Q

What triggers opening of V gated Na+ channels?

A

Depolarisation to threshold