04 Resting Potential Flashcards

1
Q

2 What is the formula for salt?

A

NaCl

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2
Q

2 Water molecules are nonpolar.

A

False

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3
Q

2 What is an anion and cation?

A

Negatively and positively charged molecules respectively

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4
Q

3 How thick is the lipid bilayer?

A

5 nm

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5
Q

4 How is separation of charges responsible for potential?

A

Charges line up along the membrane and the rest of the fluid is electrically neutral. You only get the membrane potential right up against the membrane because the + and - charges line up on the membrane.

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6
Q

4 What are the two basic properties that account for resting membrane potential?

A

1)Unequal distribution of key ions across the cell membrane. (like more sodium than potassium ions) 2) Differences in membrane permeability to these ions.

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7
Q

5 How long does it take for charge to become evenly distributed after depolarization?

A

100 picoseconds or 10-10 seconds

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8
Q

6 Hyperpolarization and what cause it?

A

Increase in potential (polarization). Membrane more negative than resting membrane potential. Reason: The extra K+ that go out of the channel because the gate is slow to close.

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9
Q

8 How do Ions get across the membrane:

A

through pumps, channels and exchangers

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10
Q

8 What is a gated channel?

A

A channel that is only open when it is bound by a specific molecule or ion.

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11
Q

8 What are exchangers in a cell membrane?

A

A channel that will trade an ion from the cytosol with an ion outside the cell.

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12
Q

8 Which pore is designed to maintain polarity across the cell membrane?

A

Na/K pump.

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13
Q

8 Why is it that potassium ions are more free to move in and out of the cell, while sodium ions are not?

A

Potassium ions are free to move across many channels, while sodium relies on gated channels.

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14
Q

8 How long does it take for ions to find gate and move through it?

A

Milliseconds

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15
Q

11 How does diffusion work?

A

Molecules move from an area of high concentration to low concentration

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16
Q

12 What does Ohm’s Law describe?

A

Describes ionic current flow across the membrane for a particular ion.

17
Q

14 What keeps the cell polarized?

A

Transmembrane potential

18
Q

15 What do you find mostly in the cytosol?

A

Potassium

19
Q

15 Considering that the cytosol has a lot of potassium ions (positively charged), how is it that the cytosol carries a negative charge?

A

Cytosol also contains many negatively charged proteins, phosphates, and chlorine anions.

20
Q

16 The equilibrium state for charged molecule (ions) is determined by what?

A

electrochemical gradient

21
Q

16 What is the Electrochemical equilibrium potential (Eion) ?

A

When electrical and concentration gradients exactly balance one another. Resulting in no net movement of a specific ion across the membrane.

22
Q

17-18 What are the concentration gradients for K+ and Na+? And what is the electrical gradient for K+ and Na+?

A

Concentation gradient for K+ is outward, for Na+ is inward. Electrical gradient: inward for both.

23
Q

17 It takes a large change in ion concentration to trigger depolarization.

A

False: a change of 10-5 mM of K is sufficient to change membrane potential from 0mV to - 80mV

24
Q

18 How thick is the cell membrane?

A

Membrane is less than 5nm thick

25
Q

22 Potassium is _____X more permeable than sodium.

A

40

26
Q

19 Each ion has its own equilibrium potential.

A

True

27
Q

21 How do you measure resting membrane potential?

A

Nernst equation

28
Q

21 What is the resting membrane potential of potassium ions?

A

-80mV

29
Q

21 What is the resting membrane potential of sodium ions?

A

61.54 mV

30
Q

22 Which way is chlorine going to move if the resting potential outside the cell is 65 mv and inside the cell is 65 mv?

A

Not moving anywhere because chlorine is the same value as the resting membrane potential

31
Q

23 What does the Goldman equation calculate?

A

Calculates the resting membrane potential based on the relative permeability of different ions

32
Q

23 What is the ratio of sodium outside the cell to inside the cell?

A

10: 1

33
Q

23 According to Goldman’s equation, what is the average resting membrane potential of a cell?

A

-65mV

34
Q

24 Concentration gradients are created and maintained by ______?

A

Active transporters: ATPase pumps; Ion exchangers; Co- transporters etc.

35
Q

26 What does the blood brain barrier limit?

A

Potassium

36
Q

26 ____________ have potassium pumps and channels that move K+ into the cell.

A

Astrocytes