Lecture 03, 4

Cards (41)

  • What are the two types of electrical signalling in nerve cells?
    Graded potentials and action potentials
  • What is depolarisation in terms of membrane potential?
    Change to a more positive membrane potential
  • What is repolarisation?
    Return to resting membrane potential after depolarisation
  • What is hyperpolarisation?
    Change to a more negative membrane potential
  • What effect does hyperpolarisation have on a neuron?
    Makes it less excitable
  • How does the size of the stimulus affect graded potentials?
    Bigger stimulus results in bigger change
  • What are the characteristics of graded potentials in a neuron?
    • Can be hyperpolarising or depolarising
    • Vary with stimulus strength
    • Can summate
    • Alter neuron sensitivity
  • What stimulates graded potentials?
    Neurotransmitters, mechanical, and thermal forces
  • Do all ligand-gated ion channels produce depolarising graded potentials?
    No, it depends on ion flow
  • Where do graded potentials mainly occur in neurons?
    Dendrites or cell body
  • What is the axon hillock's role in action potentials?
    Site of initiation of action potential
  • What does it mean that graded potentials are decremental?
    They weaken as they move away from origin
  • What are the two types of summation for graded potentials?
    • Temporal summation: Same stimulus, repeated quickly
    • Spatial summation: Different stimuli, applied simultaneously
  • What triggers action potentials?
    Graded potentials, drugs, and neurotransmitters
  • What is the nature of action potentials?
    Rapid large depolarisation for communication
  • What are the three phases of action potentials?
    Depolarisation, repolarisation, after-hyperpolarisation
  • What happens during the depolarisation phase of an action potential?
    Sodium channels open, Na+ rushes into cell
  • What are the two gating mechanisms of voltage-gated sodium channels?
    Activation gate and inactivation gate
  • What is the summary of membrane permeability during resting potential and action potential?
    • Resting potential: K+ channels open, K+ > Na+
    • Action potential: Na+ and K+ permeability changes, Na+ > K+
  • What occurs during the repolarisation phase of an action potential?
    Potassium ions rush out of neuron
  • What is the role of potassium channels during hyperpolarisation?
    They stay open longer than sodium channels
  • What is tetrodotoxin (TTX) and its effect?
    Neurotoxin that blocks sodium channels
  • What is the effect of tetraethylammonium (TEA)?
    Blocks voltage-gated potassium channels
  • What are the key differences between graded potentials and action potentials?
    • Graded potentials: Local, variable, can summate
    • Action potentials: All-or-nothing, propagate without loss
  • What is the all-or-nothing principle in action potentials?
    Threshold stimuli elicit action potentials
  • What are the two types of refractory periods?
    Absolute and relative refractory periods
  • What occurs during the absolute refractory period?
    No action potential possible due to inactivation
  • What is the consequence of the relative refractory period?
    Action potential possible with stronger stimulus
  • How do refractory periods affect action potential frequency?
    Limits frequency of action potentials generated
  • What is frequency coding in relation to stimulus intensity?
    Stronger stimulus increases action potential frequency
  • What influences the propagation velocity of action potentials?
    Axon diameter and myelination
  • What is saltatory conduction?
    Action potential jumps between nodes of Ranvier
  • What are the characteristics of conduction velocities in neurons?
    • Fast conduction: 100 m/s
    • Slow conduction: 0.5 m/s
    • Influenced by axon diameter and resistance
  • What are the key points summarising action potentials?
    • All-or-nothing principle
    • Refractory periods encode firing frequency
    • Saltatory conduction allows rapid transmission
  • What is the resting potential of a cell?
    Unequal distribution of ions across membrane
  • What is the role of ion channels and pumps in membrane potential?
    Move ions across a membrane
  • What forces act on ions moving across a membrane?
    Concentration and electrical gradients
  • What is the upstroke of an action potential primarily due to?
    Inflow of Na+ ions
  • What is the role of refractory periods in action potentials?
    Prevent immediate re-excitation of neuron
  • What are the properties of action potentials?
    Rapid, large depolarisation, all-or-nothing