How are voltage gated Na+ channels structured?
With transmembrane domains and ion-selective pores
What happens to the membrane potential during hyperpolarization or depolarization?
What condition must be reached to trigger an action potential ?
-the threshold of excitation must be reached (-60mV)
What happens during an action potential ?
What is action potential caused by?
-brief increase in permeability of membrane to Na+, then brief increase of permeability of membrane to K+
Can an action potential change of size and duration?
No, it can spread across different branches of the axon but it always has the same size and duration (all or none law)
What does the rate law state?
The principle that variations on the intensity of a stimulus or other information being transmitted in an axon are represented by variations in the rate at which that axon fires.
What is used to study action potentials and what aspects are studied?
- rising phase, overshoot, falling phase, undershoot
What are optogenics?
What happens to concentration of Na+ during depolarization and concentration of K+ in repolarization?
- repolarization: efflux of K+
How does Na+ get into the cell?
- Pore loop gated channels highly selective for Na+
What are the main properties of Na+ channels ?
What does potassium conductance serve as ?
-delayed rectifier: serves to rectify or reset membrane potential
How are potassium and sodium gates structured?
-four separate polypeptide subunits join to form a pore
How does initiation to an action potential start? (Hodgkin cycle)
What kind of signals can cause depolarization? (reach of treshold)
-generator potentials can be chemical signals or electric signals
Why does Na+ never reach equilibrium?
- Heads toward it but never happens because Na+ channels close before it reaches equilibrium
How do Na+ channels close and open?
What does the refractory period refer to ?
Refers to the time after AP when no other AP can occur
What is absolute RP ?
-Na+ channels are inactivated, no AP is possible
What is relative AP?
How does the AP travel down the axon?
- positive charges spread across the membrane to depolarize the next segment
What are the two directions of conduction of an action potential?
What is the typical length and conduction velocity of an action potential?
- velocity: 10m/sec