Physiology Exam 1
equilibrium potential for Na+
+65 mV
Key functions of the Endocrine System
- Regulation of metabolic functions - Regulation of chemical reactions - Regulation of transport of substances through cell membranes
ways to stop G-protein coupled receptor action:
- remove ligand - phosphodiesterase to degrade cAMP -protein phosphatases to dephosphorylate
equilibrium potential for Cl-
-65 mV
Resting Membrane Potential (RMP)
-70 mV
equilibrium potential for K+
-90mV
neurohormones
-produced and released by neurons in the brain -delivered to organs and tissues through the bloodstream
Hormones
-released by endocrine glands or cells into the blood - only target cells with receptors for the specific hormone will respond to it
factors that influence membrane potential
1. The concentration gradients of different ions across the membrane 2. The permeability of the membrane to those ions
gated channel proteins
A protein channel in a cell membrane that opens or closes in response to a particular stimulus (ligand binding, changes in membrane potential, and mechanical stimuli)
G-protein coupled receptors
A special class of membrane receptors with an associated GTP binding protein; activation of a G protein-coupled receptor involves dissociation and GTP hydrolysis
Phagocytosis
A type of endocytosis in which a cell engulfs large particles or whole cells
primary active transport
Active transport that relies directly on the hydrolysis of ATP; goes against gradient; ATP binds to carrier proteins
Paracrine
Referring to a secreted molecule that acts on a neighboring cell.
tonic control
Regulates physiological parameters in an up-down fashion. The signal is always present but changes in intensity.
Specificity of receptors
Signals only stimulate cells that have receptors for them.
membrane potential
The voltage across a cell's plasma membrane.
carrier proteins
bind to molecules and change shape to shuttle them across the membrane
active transport uses ____ proteins
carrier
Agonists
chemical substances that mimic or enhance the effects of a neurotransmitter on the receptor sites of the next cell, increasing or decreasing the activity of that cell
feedforward control
control that allows managers to anticipate problems before they arise
how are ligand actions terminated:
degradation
Baroreceptors
detect changes in blood pressure
integrator/control center
determine a set value for the variable, analyzes input from the receptor, commands effector
antagonists
drugs that block the function of a neurotransmitter
secondary active transport
Form of active transport which does not use ATP as an energy source; rather, transport is coupled to ion diffusion down a concentration gradient established by primary active transport. - uses carrier protein -doesn't use ATP, goes against gradient -no ATP bound to carrier protein
positive feedback
enhances original stimulus; causes rapid change in th variable; ex: childbirth uterus stretching, action potentials
channel proteins
have a hydrophilic channel that certain molecules or ions can use as a tunnel; open vs gated
Physiology is the study of
how the body functions
Upregulation of receptors
increase in receptor number in response to low concentration of hormone
G-protein coupled receptors cascade
ligan binds to G-protein -> activated adynylyl dfghskjf -> converts ATP to cAMP -> binds and activates protein kinase A -> phosphorylation cascade -> cellular response
receptor enzyme
ligand binding to a receptor-enzyme activates an intracellular enzyme
hypotonic
more water inside the cell than out
hypertonic
more water outside of the cell than in
simple diffusion
movement of a solute from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration
Antiport carrier protein
moves two substrates across the cell membrane in opposite directions
penetrating solutes
solute particles that can enter the cell
osmolarity
solute:water ratio, has units
autocrine
term for hormones that act on same cells that secrete them
Tonicity
the ability of a surrounding solution to cause a cell to gain or lose water; impact of osmotic pressure on the shape of cells ; no units
equilibrium potential
the membrane potential at which chemical and electrical forces are balanced for a single ion.
active transport
the movement of materials through a cell membrane using energy (ATP)
passive transport
the movement of substances across a cell membrane without the use of energy by the cell (simple and facilitated diffusion, osmosis)
antagonistic control
two controllers with opposite effects
Competition (receptors)
two ligands competing to bind to the same receptor
Neurotransmitter
-diffuses from the neuron across a narrow extracellular space to a target cell -has a rapid-onset effect
equilibrium potential for Ca++
134mV
Endocytosis
A process in which a cell engulfs extracellular material through an inward folding of its plasma membrane.
Downregulation of receptors
Decrease in receptor number in response to high concentration of hormone
intracellular receptors
Ligands move directly across the membrane to bind to the intracellular receptor
facilitated diffusion
Movement of molecules across cell membranes through protein channels and using concentration gradient
Symport Carrier Protein
Moves two substrates across the cell membrane in the same direction
receptor saturation
The maximum intensity that a sensory receptor will respond to stimuli
uniport carrier proteins
Transfer molecules one at a time Driven by concentration gradient Bring molecules from outside to inside Facilitated diffusion Example: glut 1 transporter
membrane receptors
Transmembrane protein molecules that act enzymatically or as ion channels to participate in signal transduction
ligand-gated ion channel
Type of membrane receptor that has a region that can act as a "gate" when the receptor changes shape.
proprioreceptors
Type of sensory receptor that monitors the body's position in space.
Juxtacrine
a form of cell-cell communication in which a cell releases a substance that binds to receptors on cells directly adjacent to the releasing cell
Stimulus
a signal to which an organism responds
neuromodulator
acts like a neurotransmitter, but slower through an autocrine or paracrine signal
Isotonic
no net water lost
nonpenetrating solutes
particles that cannot cross the cell membrane
Receptor
protein that detects a changes in the variable and send info to the integrator
Gap junctions (communicating junctions)
provide cytoplasmic channels between adjacent cells
effector
receives output from the control center and produces a response
Exocytosis
release of substances out a cell by the fusion of a vesicle with the membrane
Thermoreceptors
respond to changes in temperature
Chemoreceptors
respond to chemicals
Osmoreceptors
respond to the osmolarity of the blood
Mechanoreceptors
respond to touch, pressure, vibration, stretch, and itch
negative feedback
reverses original stimulus, maintains variable in a narrow range, ex: temp, pressure, glucose levels
Regulated variable (homeostasis)
variable which is maintained
saturation of receptors
when all available proteins have bound a substrate