1 / 31

Changes in electrical gradients

Changes in electrical gradients. Electrical disequilibrium Consequences of electrical disequilibrium Resting membrane potential Equilibrium potential Membrane depolarization and hyperpolarization. Cell in the body are:. In chemical disequilibrium In osmotic equilibrium

freya
Download Presentation

Changes in electrical gradients

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Changes in electrical gradients • Electrical disequilibrium • Consequences of electrical disequilibrium • Resting membrane potential • Equilibrium potential • Membrane depolarization and hyperpolarization

  2. Cell in the body are: • In chemical disequilibrium • In osmotic equilibrium • In electrical disequilibrium – few extra negative ions inside cells and their matching positive ions are outside

  3. Na+ Cl- Organic Anions K+ Na+ Cl- Organic anions K+ Distribution of main ions

  4. 3 Na+ Na+ Cl- Organic Anions K+ Na+ Cl- Organic anions K+ ATPase 2 K+ Anionic proteins are trapped Inside the cell Electrical disequilibrium across the cell membrane  membrane potential difference

  5. How does electrical charge separation occur?

  6. The cell membrane Is an insulator There are more positive charges outside and more negative charges inside

  7. Na+ Cl- Organic Anions K+ Na+ Cl- Organic anions K+ Electrochemical gradient is a combination of the electrical and chemical gradients

  8. Electrochemical gradient • Electrical gradients and chemical gradients across the cell membrane • Electrical force moves K+ into the cell (cell has more neg. charges) • Chemical gradient favors K+ to leave the cell (K+ concentration is low outside) • These forces reach a steady state

  9. Membrane Resting Potential • The voltage difference across the cell membrane when there is an electrochemical gradient at a steady state • There is a voltage difference between the inside and the outside (potential difference)

  10. The value for the resting membrane potential

  11. Membrane Potential • Vm is the membrane potential (millivolts) • Resting membrane potential for nerves and muscles is -40 mV to -90 mV • The resting membrane potential is determined by K+

  12. K+ channels are open during the resting membrane potential.

  13. If K+ channels are open.

  14. Equilibrium Potential • The membrane potential when the channels for a particular ion are open is called the equilibrium potential for that particular ion. • At EK+ the rate of ions moving in due to the electrical gradient equals the rate of ions leaving because of the concentration gradient. • EK+ is close to the resting membrane potential

  15. Factors that are important for the equilibrium potential for an ion: • Only channels for that ion are open • The charge of the ion • Concentration of the ion inside the cell • Concentration of the ion outside the cell

  16. At the equilibrium potential for Na+ Artificial cell, Na+ is leaving because the inside became + after the inward Movement of Na+

  17. Currents during resting membrane potential K+ outward current is much stronger than Na+ inward current. Lots of K+ channels are open, few Na+ channels are open at rest.

  18. Currents during resting membrane potential K+ outward current is much stronger than Na+ inward current. Lots of K+ channels are open, few Na+ channels are open at rest.

  19. The value for the resting membrane potential

  20. Membrane potential changes when channels open or close.

  21. Changes in membrane potential • Resting membrane is polarized • Depolarization positive charges move in membrane potential moves toward 0 0 mV -70 time

  22. Membrane potential changes when channels open or close.

  23. Changes in membrane potential • Repolarization membrane potential returns to polarized state (+ charges leave cell) • Hyperpolarizationmembrane potential becomes more negative than at rest (extra + charges leave the cell)

  24. During changes in membrane potential • Very few ions move to cause changes in membrane potential.

  25. Large molecules can cross in vesicles. • Cell expends metabolic energy

  26. Phagocytosis – cell engulfs a particle into a vesicle

  27. Vesicular traffic across cell membranes • Endocytosis • Pinocytosis, cell engulfs extracellular fluid • Receptor-mediated endocytosis

  28. Receptor mediated endocytosis LDL (which is a cholesterol carrier) is a ligand that enters by receptor mediated endocytosis

  29. Exocytosis • Some molecules leave a cell by exocytosis • E.g. proteins leave cells by exocytosis

  30. Integrated membrane activity during insulin secretion Resting membrane potential

  31. Integrated membrane activity during insulin secretion

More Related