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Exam 3
Unit 2
35
Other
Undergraduate 4
11/15/2016

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Term
What are the two voltages used in voltage clamp experiments?
Definition
command & recording
Term
If membrane potential < command potential, VCA passes ______ current
Definition
+ current (depolarizing it)
Term
If membrane potential > command potential, VCA passes ______ current
Definition
- current (hyperpolarizing it)
Term
What is the goal of VCA function?
Definition
to make membrane potential = command potential
Term
If membrane potential = command potential, what two currents are equal?
Definition
clamp current = membrane current
Term
What is the implication of no leak current existing at a certain voltage?
Definition
the resting membrane potential must be that voltage
Term
Is a positive driving force inward or outward?
Definition
outward
Term
As outside [Na] decreases, the AP peak decreases - why?
Definition
because decreasing sodium decreases sodium's reversal potential; since the depolarizing phase of the action potential [upstroke] is due to increasing sodium conductance, the most positive the peak could ever get is sodium's reversal potential
Term
describe the 3 currents associated with a depolarization step of the squid giant axon
Definition
1. capacitive current (transient) inward to quickly ramp up to depolarization
2. early inward sodium current
3. later but longer outward potassium current
Term
How was the ionic identity of the early current discovered?
Definition
if you replace sodium with another positive ion that can't cross the membrane, you don't get the "early current"
Term
How can the early current be isolated?
Definition
by subtracting the remaining current in sodium-free solution from the total current recorded in the control case
Term
Why could H&H not definitively identify the ion responsible for the late current (however, based on empirical observations, they speculated that it was potassium)?
Definition
testing was hard because it would involve altering the cytoplasm of the cell (not the outside solution like for extracellular sodium)
Term
Tetrodotoxin (TTX)
Definition
blocks voltage-gated sodium channels
Term
Tetraethylamonium (TEA)
Definition
blocks voltage-gated potassium channels
Term
H&H: 5 step strategy to determine the ionic basis of the action potential
Definition
1. measure ionic current over wide range of membrane potentials
2. isolate sodium & potassium current - H&H technique, we can use pharmacological methods
3. convert to sodium & potassium conductance (modified Ohm equations)
4. derive equations to describe sodium & potassium conductance as a function of membrane potential & of time!
5. reproduce AP with iterative algorithm
Term
For what did H&H receive a Nobel Prize?
Definition
their strategy to determine the ionic basis of the action potential
Term
deactivation
Definition
closing of a channel due to removal of the gating signal
Term
______ acts as a voltage sensor for voltage-gated potassium channels
Definition
S4 segment
Term
inactivation
Definition
closing of a channel in the continued presence of the gating signal
Term
describe the structure of the voltage-gated sodium channel
Definition
all one long protein with a lot of subunits
Term
What is the difference between inactivation & deactivation?
Definition
inactivation - closing of a channel in the continued presence of the gating signal

deactivation - closing of a channel due to removal of the gating signal
Term
Does a potassium current deactivate or inactivate?
Definition
deactivate!
Term
Does a sodium channel deactivate or inactivate?
Definition
inactivate
Term
What does it mean that voltage-gated sodium & potassium channel conductance have similar voltage dependencies?
Definition
the relationship between how much conductance increases & increase in membrane potential is similar?
Term
What is the main qualitative difference between voltage-gated sodium & potassium channels?
Definition
timing of increases in conductance in response to membrane potential increase
Term
If voltage-gated sodium & potassium channels are activated at similar voltages & they have similar conductance, why isn't it a wash? (Why don't the influx of sodium & efflux of potassium cancel each other out?)
Definition
because of the timing!
Term
difference in the kinetics of voltage-gated sodium & potassium channels
Definition
voltage-gated sodium channels are quickly activated & then slowly inactivated

voltage-gated potassium channels are slowly activated & then deactivated
Term
difference in speed of the sodium activation & inactivation gate movement
Definition
opening part gets to where it needs to get faster

inactivation gate starts closing at the same time activation gate starts opening, but inactivation gets to its place more slowly
Term
Is the sodium activation gate normally still open when the inactivation gate is closed?
Definition
yes! (but no conductance because inactivation gate is closed)
Term
Hyperpolarization causes sodium inactivation gate to ______ & activation gate to ______
Definition
inactivation gate opens; activation gate closes
Term
"M" gate
Definition
sodium activation gate
Term
"H" gate
Definition
sodium inactivation gate
Term
What was H&H's idea regarding activation & inactivation "gates"?
Definition
a physical event occurred that lead to a conformational change in the channel
Term
"N" gate
Definition
potassium activation gate
Term
Why is there a fourth order relationship between membrane potential & potassium voltage-gated channel opening?
Definition
each S4 voltage sensor has to move for the channel to open
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