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Active & Passive Transport Illlustrations
Active & Passive Transport Illlustrations

The Cell Membrane
The Cell Membrane

... – Protein channels: allow objects to pass – Enzymes: speed up chemical reactions – Markers (carb chains): cell recognition; fight disease ...
Transmembrane Transportation [A] Passive method: Energy
Transmembrane Transportation [A] Passive method: Energy

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homeostasis and cell transport
homeostasis and cell transport

... b. Example: glucose- molecule too big to cross freely ...
THE NERVOUS SYSTEM CH 48 AND 49
THE NERVOUS SYSTEM CH 48 AND 49

... • all cells have a difference in charge on either side of plasma membrane called a membrane potential • Rest membrane potential: Membrane potential of unstimulated neuron • Change in resting membrane potential results in transmission of nerve impulse ...
File
File

notes
notes

... Salt is a SOLUTE, when it has a high concentration (inside or outside the cell), it will draw the water in its direction. ...
diffusion
diffusion

... The theory by which the properties of the plasma membrane are explained Mosaic: mixture of phospholipids, sterols (cholesterol), proteins, glycoproteins Fluid: the components are not fixed in place and may move or shift but are kept ordered due to hydrophobic forces ...
No Slide Title - BHSBiologyClass
No Slide Title - BHSBiologyClass

... channel proteins allow movement ...
Nervous System Notes
Nervous System Notes

... • Like most cells of the body, excitable cells have a Membrane Potential – an electrical voltage difference across the membrane • That difference can change suddenly, causing graded and action potentials (nerve impulses) • Current – the flow of charge ...
1. Name two functions of the cell membrane
1. Name two functions of the cell membrane

... 19. When proteins help molecules move across the membrane, it is called______________________________________ ACTIVE TRANSPORT 20. Active transport moves molecules [ with | against ] the concentration gradient. 21. Active transport requires _____________________________ 22. Changes in protein shape ...
Lectures 26-27 Study Guide
Lectures 26-27 Study Guide

... 6. Ion channels and the Na/K pump maintain the resting potential of neurons. a. Membrane potential: localized electrical gradient across the plasma membrane b. Resting potential: membrane potential of a resting neuron- one that is not sending signals. Two important things: i. The inside of the neuro ...
Chapter 12: Neural Tissue
Chapter 12: Neural Tissue

... 12.2: Membrane potentials compare electrical charges inside and outside the cell As you know, many of the body’s key components carry an electrical charge. These ions can range in size from individual atoms that have gained or lost electrons, like Na+ or Cl-, to large macromolecules like proteins an ...
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Resting membrane potential

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Test Your Knowledge!

... A. Neurotransmitter diffuses across the cleft. B. Release of neurotransmitter. C. Ion channel opens on postsynaptic cell. D. Neurotransmitter binds to the postsynaptic receptor. Correct order is ?→ ?→ ?→ ?. ...
Transport Across Plasma Membrane
Transport Across Plasma Membrane

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Diffusion, Osmosis, and Active Transport

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The Plasma Membrane and Membrane Potential

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BIOL241Neurophys11bJUL2012
BIOL241Neurophys11bJUL2012

... • Potential difference – voltage measured between two points • Current (I) – the flow of electrical charge between two points (carried by ions) • Resistance (R) – hindrance to charge flow • Insulator – substance with high electrical resistance (e.g. myelin) • Conductor – substance with low electrica ...
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Tracking the propagation of individual ions through ion channels

Chapter 12 - Membrane Transport . PPT - A
Chapter 12 - Membrane Transport . PPT - A

... through membranes in plants • Cell wall acidification (H+) helps to loosen the cellulose fibers so that plant cells can increase in size and elongate. • Cation ion exchange by means of secreting H+ allows roots to harvest positively charged mineral nutrients (e.g., Mg++, Ca++, K+, Na+) that are atta ...
Cell Transport - pdecandia.com
Cell Transport - pdecandia.com

... Results of cell communication 1. enables specific ions to cross cell membrane - by changing permeability in receiving cell ion channels open allowing specific molecules to pass Ex: this type receptor protein found in nervous system ...
BIO 105 Summer 2013 Chapter 3 Part I – The Cell Cell Theory
BIO 105 Summer 2013 Chapter 3 Part I – The Cell Cell Theory

... Objectives: By the end of lecture today you should be able to address the following points: 1. What is cell theory? 2. Identify the cellular organelles and their functions. 3. What is the difference between a eukaryotic and prokaryotic cell? 4. What are the major parts of a eukaryotic cell? 5. Descr ...
Name Date____________ Block ___ Movement of Materials
Name Date____________ Block ___ Movement of Materials

... Osmosis is the diffusion of water molecules through a selectively permeable membrane. Facilitated diffusion is the process in which carrier proteins help transport certain molecules across the cell membrane. This allows materials to be transported across the membrane quickly and selectively. But it ...
< 1 ... 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 ... 180 >

Membrane potential



Membrane potential (also transmembrane potential or membrane voltage) is the difference in electric potential between the interior and the exterior of a biological cell. With respect to the exterior of the cell, typical values of membrane potential range from –40 mV to –80 mV.All animal cells are surrounded by a membrane composed of a lipid bilayer with proteins embedded in it. The membrane serves as both an insulator and a diffusion barrier to the movement of ions. Ion transporter/pump proteins actively push ions across the membrane and establish concentration gradients across the membrane, and ion channels allow ions to move across the membrane down those concentration gradients. Ion pumps and ion channels are electrically equivalent to a set of batteries and resistors inserted in the membrane, and therefore create a voltage difference between the two sides of the membrane.Virtually all eukaryotic cells (including cells from animals, plants, and fungi) maintain a non-zero transmembrane potential, usually with a negative voltage in the cell interior as compared to the cell exterior ranging from –40 mV to –80 mV. The membrane potential has two basic functions. First, it allows a cell to function as a battery, providing power to operate a variety of ""molecular devices"" embedded in the membrane. Second, in electrically excitable cells such as neurons and muscle cells, it is used for transmitting signals between different parts of a cell. Signals are generated by opening or closing of ion channels at one point in the membrane, producing a local change in the membrane potential. This change in the electric field can be quickly affected by either adjacent or more distant ion channels in the membrane. Those ion channels can then open or close as a result of the potential change, reproducing the signal.In non-excitable cells, and in excitable cells in their baseline states, the membrane potential is held at a relatively stable value, called the resting potential. For neurons, typical values of the resting potential range from –70 to –80 millivolts; that is, the interior of a cell has a negative baseline voltage of a bit less than one-tenth of a volt. The opening and closing of ion channels can induce a departure from the resting potential. This is called a depolarization if the interior voltage becomes less negative (say from –70 mV to –60 mV), or a hyperpolarization if the interior voltage becomes more negative (say from –70 mV to –80 mV). In excitable cells, a sufficiently large depolarization can evoke an action potential, in which the membrane potential changes rapidly and significantly for a short time (on the order of 1 to 100 milliseconds), often reversing its polarity. Action potentials are generated by the activation of certain voltage-gated ion channels.In neurons, the factors that influence the membrane potential are diverse. They include numerous types of ion channels, some of which are chemically gated and some of which are voltage-gated. Because voltage-gated ion channels are controlled by the membrane potential, while the membrane potential itself is influenced by these same ion channels, feedback loops that allow for complex temporal dynamics arise, including oscillations and regenerative events such as action potentials.
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