This document discusses the resting membrane potential of neurons. It begins by explaining that the membrane potential is the difference in electrical charge between the inside and outside of a cell. It then describes how intracellular and extracellular electrodes are used to record a neuron's membrane potential. At rest, the potential inside the neuron is about -70mV less than outside, called the resting potential. This polarization is caused by an unequal distribution of ions across the neural membrane, driven both passively by concentration gradients and actively through energy-consuming ion pumps and transporters. Specifically, sodium-potassium pumps actively transport 3 sodium ions out in exchange for 2 potassium ions in, helping to maintain the -70mV resting potential.
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Resting Membrane Potential
This document discusses the resting membrane potential of neurons. It begins by explaining that the membrane potential is the difference in electrical charge between the inside and outside of a cell. It then describes how intracellular and extracellular electrodes are used to record a neuron's membrane potential. At rest, the potential inside the neuron is about -70mV less than outside, called the resting potential. This polarization is caused by an unequal distribution of ions across the neural membrane, driven both passively by concentration gradients and actively through energy-consuming ion pumps and transporters. Specifically, sodium-potassium pumps actively transport 3 sodium ions out in exchange for 2 potassium ions in, helping to maintain the -70mV resting potential.
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CHAPTER 4:
NEURAL CONDUCTION AND SYNAPTIC
TRANSMISSION
RESTING MEMBRANE POTENTIAL Frenalyne B. Tabernilla AB - Psychology III-A
The key to understanding how neurons
work and how they malfunction- is the membrane potential.
MEMBRANE POTENTIAL- the difference
in electrical charge between the inside and the outside of a cell.
RECORDING THE MEMBRANE POTENTIAL
To record a neurons membrane
potential, it is necessary to position the tip of one electrode inside the neuron and the tip of another electrode outside the neuron in the extracellular fluid.
Although the size of the extracellular
electrode is not critical, it is paramount that the tip of the intracellular electrode be fine enough to pierce the neural membrane without severely damaging it.
Intracellular electrodes are called
MICROELECTRODES; their tips are less than one-thousandth of a millimeter in diameter much too small to be seen by the naked eye.
RESTING MEMBRANE POTENTIAL
When the tip of the intracellular
electrode is inserted into a neuron, a steady potential of about -70 millivolts (mV) is recorded. This indicates that the potential inside the resting neuron is about 70 mV less than that outside the neuron.
The steady membrane potential of
about -70 Mv is called the neurons resting potential.
In its resting state, with the -70 mV
charge built up across its membrane, a neuron is said to be polarized.
IONIC BASIS OF THE RESTING
POTENTIAL
Why are resting neurons polarized?
--Like all salts in solution, the salts in neural tissue separate into positively and negatively charged particles called IONS.
Two homogenizing factors that act to
distribute ions equally throughout the intracellular and extracellular fluids of the nervous system are the; Random Motion Electrostatic Pressure
For random motion, they are more likely to
move from areas of high concentration to areas of low concentration than vice versa.
For electrostatic pressure, any accumulation
of charges, positive or negative, in one area tends to be dispersed by the repulsion among the like charges in the vicinity and the attraction of opposite concentrated elsewhere.
There are four kinds of ions contribute
significantly to the resting potential.
Sodium Ions (Na+)
Potassium Ions (K+) Chloride Ions (Cl-), and; Various negatively charged protein ions
Two properties of the neural membrane
are responsible for the unequal distribution of sodium ions (Na+), potassium ions (K+), chloride ions (Cl-), and protein ions in resting neurons.
One of these properties is PASSIVE- it does not
involve the consumption of energy.
The other is ACTIVE- does involve the
consumption of energy.
Ions pass through the neural membrane at
specialized pores called ion channels, each type of which is specialized for the passage of particular ions.
In its resting state, more sodium ions
(Na+) and chloride ions (Cl-) are outside the neuron than inside, and more potassium ions (K+) and negatively charged protein ions are inside the neuron than outside.
In the 1950s, the classic experiments of
neurophysiologists Alan Hodgkin and Andrew Huxley provided the first evidence that an energy consuming process is involved in the maintenance of the resting potential.
THE PASSIVE AND ACTIVE FACTORS THAT INLFUENCE THE DISTRIBUTION
OF SODIUM IONS, POTASSIUM IONS AND CHLORIDE IONS ACROSS THE NEURAL MEMBRANE.
Passive factors continuously drive
potassium ions (K+) out of the resting neuron and sodium ions (Na+) ions in; therefore, potassium ions (K+) must be actively pumped in and sodium ions (Na+) must be actively pumped out to maintain the resting equilibrium.
It was subsequently discovered that the
transport of sodium ions out of neurons and the transport of potassium ions into them are not independent processes.
Sodium-potassium Pumps- performed
by energy consuming mechanisms in the cell membrane that continually exchange three sodium ions (Na+) inside the neuron for two potassium ions (K+) outside.
Transporters- mechanisms in the
membrane of a cell that actively transport ions or molecules across the membrane.