When does a voltage-gated ion channel open?
When the membrane depolarises - due to a change in voltage
What are all voltage-gated ion channels selective for?
Cations (K+, Na+ and Ca2+)
What do the rings of charge around the mouth of voltage gated channels do?
help filter out desired ions from undesired. Ring of negative charge would attract cations and repel anions
What is a hydration shell?
ring of water molecules that a positively or negatively charged ion attracts whilst in solution
What is the knock of mechanism?
How does the sodium channel open?
How does the voltage sensor work?
Voltage sensor has charges in it – if you put a charged substance in an electrical field and then change the electrical field the charged particle will move – this happens with the voltage sensor – as we depolarise the membrane the voltage sensor moves and opens the gate of the channel
What are excitable cells key to and what do they do?
What is the action potential?
- Duration: few ms (nerve skeletal muscle) to a few hundred ms (heart)
What does it mean that action potentials are all or none?
- Larger stimulus – fixed size of action potential
How does the body code stimulus intensity?
by changes of frequency of the action potential – not the size of action potentials
what is the sequence of events in an action potential?
How does the probability of sodium channels being opened work?
Voltage gated sodium channel have a much greater probability of them closing than the probability of them being opened – probability of them opening increases during below threshold stimulus however probability of closing is still greater. If an above stimulus threshold is applied probability of opening»_space; probability closing because the membrane is depolarised further
How fast are the neuronal, skeletal muscle and cardiac muscle pacemaker action potentials?
In different tissues what can we have?
What is the anatomy of an action potential?
What happens with sodium channels opening during an actions potential?
Do potassium channels have a faster or slower activation and inactivation than sodium?
Slower
What is the sodium channel positive feedback loop?
- Sodium channel positive feedback loop Depolarization opens Na+ channels Membrane depolarises further Open more Na+ channels Membrane depolarises further Opens more Na+ channels Membrane depolarises further ect.
What controls the sodium channel positive feedback loop?
Sodium channel inactivation
What is the potassium channel negative feedback loop?
Depolarization opens K+ channels Membrane repolarizes Open fewer K+ channels Membrane repolarizes Opens fewer K+ channels Eventually leads to self-termination of negative feedback loop
What does the term ‘Refractory mean’?
Can’t stimulate easily
What happens in the absolute refractory period?
Can’t produce another action potential
What happens in the relative refractory period?
the cell is less excitable – a larger stimulus is needed