Top Banner
Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2 .
35
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane PotentialPart 2

.

Page 2: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Action potential

Page 3: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Action Potential

An action potential can be thought of as the “firing” of the neuron.

Action potentials will propagate down the length of a neuron’s axon

Action potentials are the electrical signals that move down a neuron

Page 4: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Magnitude of resting potential

Range : -10 to -100 mV

Neurons - 70 mV

Skeletal muscle cells - 90 mV

Smooth muscle cells - 55 mV

Red blood cells - 10 mV.

4

Page 5: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Action Potential (A.P.)

When an impulse is generated

Inside becomes positive

Causes depolarisation

Nerve impulses are transmitted as AP

Page 6: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Dep

olar

isat

ion R

epolarisation

-90

+35

RMP

Hyperpolarisation

Page 7: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Inside of the membrane is

Negative

During RMP

Positive

When an AP is generated

-90

+35

Page 8: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Initially membrane is slowly depolarised

Until the threshold level is reached

(This may be caused by the stimulus)

-90

+35

Threshold level

Page 9: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Then a sudden change in polarisation causes sharp upstroke (depolarisation) which goes beyond the zero level up to +35 mV

-90

+35

Page 10: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Then a sudden decrease in polarisation causes initial sharp down stroke (repolarisation)

-90

+35

Page 11: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

When reaching the Resting level rate slows down

Can go beyond the resting level

hyperpolarisation

-90

+35

Page 12: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Spike potential

Sharp upstroke and downstroke

Time duration of AP

1 msec

-90

+35

1 msec

Page 13: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Until the threshold level the potential is graded

Once the threshold level is reached

AP is set off and no one can stop it !

Like a gun

Page 14: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Physiological basis of AP When the threshold level is reached

Voltage-gated Na channels open up

Since Na conc outside is more than the inside

Na influx will occur

Positive ion coming inside increases the positivity of the membrane potential and causes depolarisation

When it reaches +35, Na channels closes

Then Voltage-gated K channels open up

K efflux occurs

Positive ion leaving the inside causes more negativity inside the membrane

Repolarisation occurs

Page 15: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Film

Voltage Gated Channels

Page 16: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Physiological basis of AP Since Na has come in and K has gone out

Membrane has become negative

But ionic distribution has become unequal

Na/K pump restores Na and K conc slowly

By pumping 3 Na ions outward and 2 K ions inward

Page 17: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

VOLTAGE-GATED ION CHANNELS

Na channel

This has two gates

Activation and inactivation gates

outside

inside

Activation gate

Inactivation gate

Page 18: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

At rest: the activation gate is closed At threshold level: activation gate opens

Na influx will occur Na permeability increases to 500 fold

when reaching +35, inactivation gate closes Na influx stops

Inactivation gate will not reopen until resting membrane potential is reached

outside

inside

outside

inside

-90 Threshold level +35Na+ Na+

outside

inside

Na+m gate

h gate

Page 19: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

VOLTAGE-GATED K Channel

K channel

This has only one gate

outside

inside

Page 20: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

At rest: K channel is closed

At +35

K channel open up slowly

This slow activation causes K efflux

After reaching the resting still slow K channels may remain open: causing further hyperpolarisation

outside

inside

outside

inside

-90 At +35

K+ K+

n gate

Page 21: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Summary

Page 22: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Refractory Period Absolute refractory period

During this period nerve membrane cannot be excited again

Because of the closure of inactivation gate

-90

+35

outside

inside

Page 23: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Refractory Period Relative refractory period

During this period nerve membrane can be excited by supra threshold stimuli

At the end of repolarisation phase inactivation gate opens and activation gate closes

This can be opened by greater stimuli strength

-90

+35

outside

inside

Page 24: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Propagation of AP

When one area is depolarised

A potential difference exists between that site and the adjacent membrane

A local current flow is initiated

Local circuit is completed by extra cellular fluid

Page 25: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Propagation of AP

This local current flow will cause opening of voltage-gated Na channel in the adjacent membrane

Na influx will occur

Membrane is deloparised

Page 26: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Propagation of AP

Then the previous area become repolarised

This process continue to work

Resulting in propagation of AP

Page 27: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Propagation of AP

Page 28: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Propagation of AP

Page 29: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Propagation of AP

Page 30: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Propagation of AP

Page 31: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Propagation of AP

Page 32: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Propagation of AP

Page 33: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Propagation of AP

Page 34: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Propagation of AP

Page 35: Excitable Tissues and Resting Membrane Potential Part 2.

Review

Action potential is the fast change of TP from negative to positive and back

Summary

1. Depolarization

1. Slow depolarization, -70 to -60 mV, Na+ in [to threshold]

2. Fast depolarization, -60 to +30 mV, Na+ in

2. Repolarization, +30 to -70 mV, K+ out

3. Hyperpolarization, -70 to -90 mV, K+ out

RP (-70 mV) is restored