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BSR - Gonsalves - Midterm Exam Latest Update

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August 26, 2024
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BSR - Gonsalves - Midterm Exam
Latest Update
phospholipid bilayer - Answer What makes up a cell membrane?

Gasses (O2, CO2) and other small lipid soluble molecules (steroid hormones) - Answer
what substances can cross a cell membrane without using a pore or transport protein?

integral protein, transmembrane pore - Answer How does water cross a cell
membrane?

Simple diffusion

Facilitated diffusion - Answer Which transport mechanisms do NOT require metabolic
energy? OR, which transport mechanisms are driven solely by concentration gradient of
the molecule? (Do not require ATP or a concentration gradient of Na+)

Primary active transport

co-transport

counter transport. - Answer which transport mechanisms transport molecules against
their concentration gradients?

Symport or co-transport - Answer What transport mechanisms uses the energy provided
by sodium gradient to transport a substance against its concentration gradient and into
the cell with sodium?

Stereospecificity, saturation, competition. - Answer What are the characteristics or
limitations of carrier mediated transport

facilitated diffusion - Answer What is glucose transport into muscle an example of

Primary active transport (Not co-transport or counter transport because sodium is
moved AGAINST its concentration gradient) - Answer What is the sodium potassium
pump and example of?

primary active transport - Answer What is the calcium pump in the sarcoplasmic
reticulum an example of?

primary active transport - Answer what is the proton pump in gastric parietal cells an
example of?

hydrostatic pressure and osmosis - Answer What 2 mechanisms drive water across a
membrane?

# of particles in the comparable solutions - Answer what has the greatest affect on
osmotic pressure?

,albumin - Answer what provides the colloid osmotic pressure of blood?

transduction - Answer What changes physical energy into electrical impulses?

transmission - Answer when an electrical impulse is carried along a nerve, it is called
_____.

perception - Answer the identification of what is seen, heard, felt, or tasted is called
_____.

modulation - Answer inhibition of the transmission of an electrical impulse is called
_______

interpretation - Answer higher cortical pathways make sense of what is perceived. This
is called _____.

Voltage gated channels (Sodium channels, calcium channels in the synapse) - Answer
what are opened or closed by changes in the membrane potential?

Ligand-gated channels. (nicotinic ACH receptors, adrenergic receptors) - Answer what
are opened or closed by a hormone, second messenger, or neurotransmitter?

Connections between cells allowing bidirectional exchange of electrical current and/or
molecules - Answer what are gap junctions

tight junctions - Answer Connections between cells that do not communicate and
prevent passage of molecules between the cells.

-70mv - Answer what is the normal resting membrane potential for a typical neuron?

Sodium potassium pump. Permeability to K+, Impermeability to Na+ - Answer What
creates the -70 mV resting membrane potential for a typical neuron

threshold - Answer the membrane potential at which an action potential is inevitable is
called _____.

hyperpolarized - Answer as the inside of the cell becomes more negative, the cell
becomes _____.

rapid opening of sodium channels, rapid influx of sodium - Answer what occurs in the
neuron cell membrane during the upstroke of the action potential?

overshoot - Answer when the membrane potential becomes positive at the peak of the
action potential, it is called ____.

• Stimulus: Input reaches threshold

• Depolarization: rapid opening of sodium channels, sodium rushes in, membrane
depolarizes

• Peak: Slow closing of sodium channels, sodium conductance returns to 0

, • Repolarization: Slow opening of K+ channels, outward flow of K+,

• Hyperpolarization: K+ channels remain open and sodium potassium pump is active,
membrane potential driven down toward K+ equilibrium potential (-85 mV)

• Resting: Membrane potential gradually returns to -70mV - Answer what is the order of
events for a typical action potential of a neuron?

absolute refractory period - Answer the period of time during which another action
potential cannot be elicited, regardless of magnitude of stimulation is called _____.

depolarization and peak - Answer what stages of the action potential correspond to the
absolute refractory period?

sodium channels already open. sodium inactivation gates are closed - Answer what ion
channel prevents another action potential from occurring during absolute refractory
period?

relative refractory period - Answer the period of time when an action potential could be
elicited if a larger than usual stimulus is received is called _______.

hyperpolarization - Answer what stage of the action potential corresponds to the
relative refractory period?

K+ - Answer what ion is responsible for undershoot of the action the potential?

myelination/salutatory conductance, and larger fiber size (diameter) - Answer what
increases conduction velocity of action potentials along an axon?

Cardiac muscle, smooth muscle, embryonic tissue - Answer Where are gap junctions
used in the body?

Rapid, bidirectional, direct transfer of electrical activity/conductance between cells -
Answer what are characteristics of gap junction transmission?

neurons and skeletal muscles - Answer where are synaptic clefts used in the body?

synaptic delay - Answer the time needed for transmission of a neurotransmitter across
the synaptic cleft is called ____.

synaptic fatigue - Answer what occurs when the synaptic terminal has run out of
vesicles of neurotransmitters?

calcium entering the cell - Answer hich ion triggers the release of neurotransmitters
from the pre-synaptic terminal (bouton, axon terminal, synaptic knob) in response to an
action potential?

hyper polarization of the postsynaptic membrane - Answer binding of neurotransmitter
to an inhibitory receptor on the post-synaptic cell causes _______ .

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