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Transmission of Nerve Impulses. Nerve Impulse. An electrical current, travels along dendrites or axons Ions move through voltage-gated channels Channels open/close in response to changes in electrical charge around them. Resting Membrane Potential.
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Nerve Impulse • An electrical current, travels along dendrites or axons • Ions move through voltage-gated channels • Channels open/close in response to changes in electrical charge around them
Resting Membrane Potential • Polarized = charge difference between inside and outside of cell membrane • At rest, net negative charge on inside of cell
Resting Membrane Potential • Selectively permeable ion channels • Maintained by sodium potassium pumps (active transport) • let Potassium (K+) in easily • weak permeability to Sodium (Na+)
Resting Membrane Potential • Net Result: • more Potassium (K+) inside neuron • more Sodium (Na+) outside neuron
Stimulated Neuron • Stimulated neuron: (Example: light, sound, pressure) • Nerve Impulse begins when stimulus disturbs dendrite • Result: Membrane permeability changes
Stimulated Neuron • Sodium channels open andsodium ions flow into neuron • Lessens charge difference • Net charge inside neuron more positive • Called Depolarization
Depolarization • Local region inside the neuron has net positive charge and outside is net negative • Neighboring voltage-gated sodium channels open • If depolarization above threshold, there is complete reversal of membrane potential
Action Potential • Depolarization moves along the membrane = action potential • Called Action potential or nerve impulse
Action Potential • “All-or-none” response – either conducted over entire axon, or doesn’t happen at all
Repolarization • Sodium channels close & potassium channels open • Potassium (K+) floods out of the cell • Result: restores internal negative charge
Hyperpolarization • If K+ channels stay open after reaching resting potential • MorePotassium (K+) outsidecell than necessary • Result: Leaves greater negative charge inside cell
Refractory period • Potassium and Sodium on wrong sides of membrane • ‘Recovery period’ • Action: Sodium and Potassium channels restore them