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Resting Membrane Potential • Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential • Written as Vr
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Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 1: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Resting Membrane Potential

• Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential

• Written as Vr

Page 2: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Ionic Equilibrium Potential

• Membrane Potential (potential difference across the plasma membrane) at which the net flow of an ion type = zero

• The number of ions moving into the cell = the number of ions moving out of the cell for a particular species of ion

Page 3: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Nernst Equation Variables

• Assumes that membrane is permeable to that ion

• As temperature increases the diffusion increases

• As charge on the molecule increases, it decreases the potential differences needed to balance diffusion forces.

Page 4: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Simplified Eion (at 37°C)

• Ena = 61.54mV log [Na]o/[Na]I = 62 mV

• EK = 61.54mV log [K]o/[K]I = -80 mV

• ECa = 30.77mV log [Ca]o/[Ca]I = 123 mV

• CCl = -61.54mV log [Cl]o/[Cl]I = - 65 mV

•Eion = 2.303 RT/zF log [ion]o/[ion]in

Page 5: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 6: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 7: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Goldman Equation

• Vr= RT/F ln Pk[K]o+Pna[Na]o+PCl[Cl]i Pk[K]I+Pna[Na]I+PCl[Cl]o

Also known as the constant field equation because it assumes that electrical field of the membrane potential is equal across the span of the membrane

Page 8: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Membrane Permeability

• Membrane is 50 more permeable to K than to Na

• Pk/Pna = 50

• PCl/Pk = 0

• The membrane is so impermeable to Chloride that you drop it from the equation

Page 9: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Goldman Equation

• Eion = 2.303 RT/zF log Pk[K]o+Pna[Na]o Pk[K]I+Pna[Na]I

• Vr= 61.54 mV log 50[5]o +1[150]o 50[100]i+1[15]I

• = - 65mV

•Vr= RT/F ln Pk[K]o+ Pna[Na]o+ PCl[Cl]i

Pk[K]I+ Pna[Na]I+ PCl[Cl]o

Page 10: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 11: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Not to study

• Donnans equilibrium

• Osmolarity considerations

Page 12: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Action Potential

Changes in Ion Permeability allows inward Na flux and triggers an increased outward K flux through voltage gated ion channels

Causes transient change in Membrane Potential

The change in ion permeability is triggered by transient depolarization of the membrane

Page 13: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 14: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 15: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 16: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Conductance = g• How many charges (ions) enters or leaves

cell (inverse of resistance)

• due to:– number of channels/membrane area

• Highest density at axon hillock

– number of open channels – ion concentration on either side of

membrane – Measured in Siemens (S), in cells pS (pico; -12)

Page 17: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 18: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Historical Figures• Hodgkin and Huxley

won Nobel Prize for Voltage clamp in 1961

• used to identify the ion species that flowed during action potential

• Clamped Vm at 0mv to remove electric driving force than varied external ion concentration and observed ion efflux during a voltage step

• Sakman and Nehr won Nobel Prize for Patch Clamp in 1991

• measured ion flow through individual channels

• shows that each channel is either in open or closed configuration with no intermediate. The sum of many recordings gives you the shape of sodium conductance.

Page 19: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Information Coding

• Is NOT in shape of action potential

• Is in the action potential frequency of firing —how many are triggered

• In the action potentials pattern or timing of propagation

Page 20: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Conductance = g• How many charges (ions) enters or

leaves cell (inverse of resistance)• due to:

– number of channels/membrane area• Highest density at axon hillock

– number of open channels – ion concentration on either side of

membrane – Measured in Siemens (S), in cells pS (pico; -12)

Page 21: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 22: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 23: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Generation of Resting Membrane Potential (-70mV)

• Plasma membrane

• Selective permeability, permeable to K, not Na

• Unequal distribution of ions across membrane– Due to open potassium channels and closed

sodium and chloride channels

• Action of ion pumps 3Na/2K ATPase

Page 24: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Ion Inside Outside Cross PM

K+ 125 5 yes

NA+ 12 120 no

Cl- 5 125 yes

H2O 55,000 55,000 yes

Anion- 108 0 no

Page 25: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Ionic Equilibrium Potential

• The membrane potential that balances the ions concentration gradient so that there is no net current for that ion.

• No permeability factor.

Page 26: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Equilibrium Potential of An Ion

• The membrane potential at which the net driving force propelling the ion in = the net driving force propelling the ion out.

• Written Eion; ENa, ECl, EK

Page 27: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 28: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 29: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Nernst Equation

• Eion = 2.303 RT/zF log [ion]o/[ion]in

• Eion = ionic equilibrium potential

• Z= charge of ion

• F= Faraday’s constant

• T= absolute temperature (0Kelvin/-273°C)

• R= gas constant

Page 30: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Action PotentialsCan travel up to100 meters/second

Usually 10-20 m/s0.1sec delay between muscle and sensory neuron action potential

Action Potential: a transient and rapid sequence of changes in the membrane potential

Page 31: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Membrane Permeability

• Membrane is 50 more permeable to K than to Na

• Pk/Pna = 50

• PCl/Pk = 0

• The membrane is so impermeable to Chloride that you drop it from the equation

Page 32: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Goldman Equation

• Eion = 2.303 RT/zF log Pk[K]o+Pna[Na]o Pk[K]I+Pna[Na]I

• Vr= 61.54 mV log 50[5]o +1[150]o 50[100]i+1[15]I

• = - 65mV

•Vr= RT/F ln Pk[K]o+ Pna[Na]o+ PCl[Cl]i

Pk[K]I+ Pna[Na]I+ PCl[Cl]o

Page 33: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 34: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Ion Permeability• Changes during action potential

• The plasma membrane becomes permeable to sodium ions– Permeability increases from 0.02 to 20=1000

fold increase

• Causes Em aka Vr to approach Ena at positive voltages = +20mV

Page 35: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

rising

overshoot

Falling

undershoot

Page 36: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

6 Characteristics of an Action Potential

• #1 Triggered by depolarization

• a less negative membrane potential that occurs transiently

• Understand depolarization, repolarization and hyperpolarization

Page 37: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

#2 Threshold

• Threshold depolarization needed to trigger the action potential

• 10-20 mV depolarization must occur to trigger action potential

Page 38: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

#3 All or None

• Are all-or- none event

• Amplitude of AP is the same regardless of whether the depolarizing event was weak (+20mV) or strong (+40mV).

Page 39: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

#4 No Change in Size

• Propagates without decrement along axon

The shape (amplitude & time) of the action potential does not change as it travels along the axon

Page 40: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

#5 Reverses Polarity

• At peak of action potential the membrane potential reverses polarity

• Becomes positive inside as predicted by the Ena Called OVERSHOOT

• Return to membrane potential to a more negative potential than at rest

• Called UNDERSHOOT

Page 41: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

#6 Refractory Period

• Absolute refractory period follows an action potential. Lasts 1 msec

• During this time another action potential CANNOT be fired even if there is a transient depolarization.

• Limits firing rate to 1000AP/sec

Page 42: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Stimulating electrode:Introduces current that candepolarize or hyper-polarize

Recording electrode:Records change in Potential of the membraneAt a distance away

Page 43: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Time (msec)

Voltage (mVolts) along Y axis

At Threshold Na influx equals K efflux

Page 44: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 45: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Voltage Sensitive Ion Channels

• Sodium

• Potassium

Page 46: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Ionic Equilibrium Potential

• Membrane Potential (potential difference across the plasma membrane) at which the net flow of an ion type = zero

• The number of ions moving into the cell = the number of ions moving out of the cell for a particular species of ion

Page 47: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Regenerative Process:

Once one Na channelOpens, Na enters,Depolarizes membrane, More and more NaChannels open leading toMore sodium influx & causes upward & depolarizing (more +) phase of the AP

Page 48: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

What does a sodium Channel look like?

It is one large proteinWith 4 domains thatEach loop through the Plasma membrane 7Times.

Page 49: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Property of Voltage Dependent Sodium Channel

• Sodium channel opens for 1-2 millisecond following threshold depolarization

• then inactivates and does not open even if Vm is depolarized.

• This is called sodium channel inactivation and contributes to the repolarization of Vm

Page 50: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

•M gate= activation gate on Na channel; opens quickly when membrane is depolarized

•H gate- inactivation gate on Na channel; Closes slowly after membrane is depolarized

•causes the absolute refractory period for AP propagation

Na Channel Gates

Page 51: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Potassium Channel Property

• K channels open with a delay and stay open for length of depolarization

• Repolarize the Vm to Ek= -75mV which is why you have hyperpolarization.

• Also called a delayed rectifier channel

Page 52: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

•K channels have a single gate (n) that stays open as long as Vm is depolarized.

• n gate on K channels opens very slowly this allows the Vm to depolarize due to Na influx; Na and K currents do not offset each other right away

Gate on the Delayed Rectifier Potassium Channel

Page 53: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Refractory Period

• Refractory period due to Na channel inactivation and the high gk

• Subsequent Action potential cannot be generated

Page 54: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 55: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

2 ways to increase AP propagation speed

• Increase internal diameter of axon which decreases the internal resistance to ion flow

• Increase the resistance of the plasma membrane to charge flow by insulating it with myelin.

Page 56: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 57: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 58: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

See and understandwhat happens to the formOf the action potentialWhen you add a voltageSensitive calcium channelAnd a calcium gatedPotassium channel

Test question : think aboutThis and the next 2 slides

Page 59: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 60: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 61: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 62: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 63: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Channel Density

• Density is how many channels are in a unit area of plasma membrane, ie how closely they are packed together.

• Determines the length of the membrane that will be depolarized at a given time

Page 64: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Understand

• Regenerative nature of action potential• Orthodromic and antidromic • Voltage gates in sodium channel• Threshold potential sodium and potassium fluxes

are balanced• Initial segment of axon = axon hillock• Two mechanisms for increasing speed of action

potential propagation• Saltatory conduction

Page 65: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Understand

• Action potential occurs because sodium and potassium fluxes change the charge on the cell membrane not because the fluxes change ion concentrations.

Page 66: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Definition

V=IR V=voltage, I=current, R=resistance

 • g=1/R g=conductance

• Vm=membrane voltage

 • Vr=voltage of membrane at rest

Page 67: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.
Page 68: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Permeability and Conductance

• gna is low at Vr because sodium channels are closed

• gk is higher than gna at Vr because some potassium channels are open.

• V=I/R Ohms Law

• G=conductance=1/R

Page 69: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Definitions

• Current=net flow of ions per unit time

• 1 ampere of current represents movement of 1 coulomb of charge per second

• Resistance- frictional forces that resists movement of ions or charges

• Measured in ohm

• Current (A)= V/R

Page 70: Resting Membrane Potential Membrane potential at which neuron membrane is at rest, ie does not fire action potential Written as Vr.

Definitions

• Conductance is the reciprocal of resistance and measures the ease with which current flows in an object.

• Measured in siemens (S)

• Capacitance refers to the ability of plasma membrane to store or separate charges of opposite signs.

• Myelin has high capacitance so stores charges and ions do not move across the membrane

• Measured in Farads