Physiology Lecture #5 [Channels, Action Potentials and Chemical Synapses]

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42 Terms

1
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A typical neuron at rest has a membrane potential of approximately

-70 mV

2
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If the potential decreases (inside changes towards 0 mV), the membrane is said to

depolarize

3
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If the potential increases (inside changes further away from 0, even more than resting membrane potential), the membrane is said to

hyperpolarize

4
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Reversal potential of ion determine direction and magnitude of

Ion flux

5
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A threshold potential for a typical neuron is ~___

-50mV

6
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Action potentials propagate down the axon without changing ____

amplitude

7
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What is responsible for the propagation of an action potential (General)

Voltage-gated ion channels

8
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Rapid depolarization is caused by

- Opening of voltage-gated Na channels

- Inward flux of Na ions

- Threshold dictated by opening of voltage-gated Na channels

9
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Repolarization is caused by

- Slower opening of voltage-gated K channels

- Outward flux of K ions

- Inactivation of voltage-gated Na channels

10
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In a resting cell when the voltage is low (-70) Na channels are (open or closed)

Closed

11
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When you increase the membrane voltage the Na channels (open or close)

Open

12
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Once the membrane is staying at a high voltage Na channels?

inactivate

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Na channels inactivating is extremely critical for what phase

Repolarization Phase

- If the Na channels do not close then you are always going to have an inward flux of Na ions

14
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To bring the membrane voltage down you need both

You need the K efflux and the Na influx to shut down

15
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Do Na or K channels faster to open

Na open faster

16
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Membrane depolarization causes _____ and the Na channel opening

conformational change (protein changes shape)

17
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Once open Na channels remain open for about _____

1 millisecond

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Na channels cannot re-open during what phase

inactivation

19
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During membrane repolarization and refractory period, the Na channels are able to

return to the normal closed state during recovery after inactivation

20
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A refractory period follows an

Action potential

21
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Once an action potential passes a region of the axon, that region becomes temporarily

refractory to subsequent activation

22
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The refractory period result from

Na channel inactivation

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The refractory phase puts a cap on action potential

Frequency

24
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During an action potential we get Na and K ions moving down their electrochemical gradients across the Plasma Membrane which results in a change in ion gradient. How do we restore the original gradient?

Na/K ATPase (pump)

25
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Local anesthetics (LA) work by reversibly blocking

Na channels in nerves

26
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Water and lipid friendly

Amphiphilic

27
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the neutral base form of LA penetrates lipid membanes and inhibits the channel with low ____ which changes bilayer fluidity

affinity

28
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The charged form of LA potently ____ the channel

inhibits

29
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Charged form of LA is _______ into the Plasma membrane

Not able to enter

30
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The charged for of LA can only ____ the channel from the outside

weakly inhibit

31
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The basic form of LA are _____ into the Plasma membrane

able to enter

32
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Once the basic form of LA goes through the membrane into the cell it is able to

Accept a proton in the cytoplasm becoming the charged form of LA

33
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Once positive form of LA is in the cell it waits for?

the Na channel to open and then inserts itself into the channel

34
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The Positive form of LA is able to

Effectively block the Na channel from the inside.

35
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Myelin is composed of sheets of membrane derived from what supportive cells

- Oligodendrocytes in the Central nervous system

- Schwann cells in the peripheral nervous system

36
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Myelin acts as an electric

insulator

37
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Myelination ____ the conduction velocity of action potentials 10-30 fold

increases

38
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Without myelin the strength of the electrical signal gets ____ as it moves down the axon

weakend

39
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Continuous conduction occurs along _______ axons

unmyelinated axons

40
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Saltatory conduction occurs along __________ axons.

myelinated: action potential "jumps" from node to node

41
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Demyelination leads to

neurological disorders

- Slower conduction (due to lack of saltatory conduction)

-Multiple sclerosis (CNS: auto-immune disorder)

42
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Where does the initial stimulus to the neuron come from

Other cells