membrane potentials

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Membrane potentials. XIA Qiang, MD & PhD Department of Physiology Room 518, Block C, Research Building School of Medicine, Zijingang Campus Email: xiaqiang@zju.edu.cn Tel: 88206417 (Undergraduate school), 88208252 (Medical school). OUTLINE. Resting potential Graded potential - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Membrane potentials

XIA Qiang, MD & PhD

Department of PhysiologyRoom 518, Block C, Research BuildingSchool of Medicine, Zijingang Campus

Email: xiaqiang@zju.edu.cnTel: 88206417 (Undergraduate school),

88208252 (Medical school)

OUTLINE

Resting potentialGraded potentialAction potentialRefractory period

ElectrocardiogramECG

ElectroencephalogramEEG

ElectromyogramEMG

Extracellular Recording

Intracellular Recording

Opposite charges attract each other andwill move toward each other if not separatedby some barrier.

Only a very thin shell of charge differenceis needed to establish a membrane potential.

Resting membrane potential

A potential difference across the membranes of inactive cells, with the inside of the cell negative relative to the outside of the cell

Ranging from –10 to –100 mV

Depolarization occurs when ion movement reduces the charge imbalance.

A cell is “polarized” because its interior is more negative than its exterior.

Overshoot refers to the development of a charge reversal.

Repolarization is movement back toward the resting potential.

Hyperpolarization is the development of even more negative charge inside the cell.

•unequal ion distribution (chemical gradient) across the membrane

•selective membrane permeability (cell membrane is more permeable to K+)

•Na+-K+ pump

chemical driving force

electrical driving force

++++++++++++++++

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -electrochemic

al balance

The Nernst Equation:

K+ equilibrium potential (EK) (37oC)i

o

Ion

Ion

ZF

RTE

][

][log

R=Gas constantT=TemperatureZ=ValenceF=Faraday’s constant

)(][

][log60 mV

K

KEk

i

o

Begin: K+ in Compartment 2, Na+ in Compartment 1; BUT only K+ can move.

Ion movement: K+ crosses into Compartment 1; Na+ stays in Compartment 1.

buildup of positive charge in Compartment 1 produces an electrical potential that exactly offsets the K+ chemical concentration gradient.

At the potassium equilibrium potential:

Begin: K+ in Compartment 2, Na+ in Compartment 1; BUT only Na+ can move.

Ion movement: Na+ crosses into Compartment 2; but K+ stays in Compartment 2.

buildup of positive charge in Compartment 2 produces an electrical potential that exactly offsets the Na+ chemical concentration gradient.

At the sodium equilibrium potential:

Mammalian skeletal muscle cell -95 mV-90 mV

Frog skeletal muscle cell -105 mV -90 mV

Squid giant axon -96 mV -70 mV

Ek Observed RP

Difference between EK and directly

measured resting potential

Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation

)(][][][

][][][60 mV

PClPKPNa

PClPKPNaEm

CloKiNai

CliKoNao

•Electrogenic

•Hyperpolarizi

ng

Role of Na+-K+ pump:

Establishment of resting membrane potential:Na+/K+ pump establishes concentration gradientgenerating a small negative potential; pump uses up to 40% of the ATP produced by that cell!

Origin of the normal resting membrane potential

K+ diffusion potential

Na+ diffusion

Na+-K+ pump

Electrotonic Potential

Graded potential

Graded potentials are changes in membrane potential that are confined to a relative small region of the plasma membrane

The size of a graded potential(here, graded depolarizations) is proportionate to the intensity of the stimulus.

Graded potentials can be: EXCITATORY or INHIBITORY (action potential (action potential is more likely) is less likely)

The size of a graded potential is proportional to the size of the stimulus.

Graded potentials decay as they move over distance.

Graded potentials decay as they move over distance.

Graded potentials(Local response, local excitation, local

potential)

•Not “all-or-none”

•Electrotonic

propagation: spreading

with decrement

•Summation: spatial &

temporal

Threshold Potential: level of depolarization needed to trigger an

action potential (most neurons have a threshold at -50 mV)

Action potential

Some of the cells (excitable cells) are capable to rapidly reverse their resting membrane potential from negative resting values to slightly positive values. This transient and rapid change in membrane potential is called an action potential

Excitable cells: a cell in which the membrane response to depolarisations is nonlinear, causing amplification and propagation of the depolarisation (an action potential).

Negative after-

potential

Positive after-

potential

Spike potential After-potential

A typical neuron action potential

Ionic basis of action potential

(1) Depolarization:

Activation of voltage-gated Na+ channel

Blocker:

Tetrodotoxin

(TTX)

(2) Repolarization:

Inactivation of Na+ channel

Activation of K+ channel

Blocker:

Tetraethylammoni

um

(TEA)

The rapid opening of voltage-gated Na+ channels explains the rapid-depolarization phase at the beginning of the action potential.

The slower opening of voltage-gated K+ channels explains the repolarization and after hyperpolarization phases that complete the action potential.

An action potentialis an “all-or-none”sequence of changesin membrane potential.

Action potentials result from an all-or-none sequence of changes in ion permeability due to the operation of voltage-gated Na+ and K + channels.

The rapid opening of voltage-gated Na+ channels allows rapid entry of Na+, moving membrane potential closer to the sodium equilibrium potential (+60 mv)

The slower opening of voltage-gated K+ channels allows K+ exit, moving membrane potential closer to the potassium equilibrium potential (-90 mv)

Click here to play theVoltage Gated Channels

and Action PotentialFlash Animation

Mechanism of the initiation and termination of AP

Re-establishing Na+ and K+ gradients after AP

Na+-K+ pump

“Recharging”

process

Properties of action potential (AP)

•Depolarization must exceed threshold

value to trigger AP

•AP is all-or-none

•AP propagates without decrement

Voltage Clamp

How to study ?

Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1963

"for their discoveries concerning the ionic mechanisms involved in excitation and inhibition in the peripheral and central portions of the nerve cell membrane"

Eccles Hodgkin

Huxley

Currents recorded under voltage

clamp condition

Patch Clamp

Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1991

"for their discoveries concerning the function of single ion channels in cells"

Erwin Neher Bert

Sakmann

Conduction of action potentialContinuous propagation in the unmyelinated axon

Click here to play theAction Potential Propagationin an Unmyelinated Neuron

Flash Animation

Saltatory propagation in the myelinated axon

http://www.brainviews.com/abFiles/AniSalt.htm

Saltatorial Conduction: Action potentials jump from one node to thenext as they propagate along a myelinated axon.

Click here to play theAction Potential Propagation

in Myelinated NeuronsFlash Animation

Excitation and Excitability

To initiate excitation (AP) Excitable cells Stimulation

Intensity

Duration

dV/dt

Excitability: the ability to generate action potentials is known as EXCITABILITY

Strength-duration Curve

Four action potentials, each the result of a stimulus strong enough to cause depolarization, are shown in the right half of the figure.

Threshold intensity & Threshold stimulus

Refractory period following an AP:

1. Absolute Refractory Period: inactivation of Na+ channel

2. Relative Refractory Period: some Na+ channels open

A refractory period is a period of time during which an organ or cell is incapable of repeating a particular action potential

Factors affecting excitability

Resting potential

Threshold

Channel status

The propagation of the action potential from the dendritic to the axon-terminal end is typically one-way because the absolute refractory period follows along in the “wake” of the moving action potential.

SUMMARY

Resting potential: K+ diffusion potential Na+ diffusion Na+ -K+ pump

Graded potential Not “all-or-none” Electrotonic propagation Spatial and temporal summation

Action potential Depolarization: Activation of voltage-

gated Na+ channel Repolarization: Inactivation of Na+

channel, and activation of K+ channel

Refractory period Absolute refractory period Relative refractory period

THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION!

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