A&P Lecture Exam 2
Which of the following statements about the action potential is FALSE?
*** The rapid depolarization phase is caused by the entry of potassium ions. *** TRUE: - During the depolarization phase, membrane potential becomes positive. - During the repolarization phase, sodium channels close and potassium channels open. - Repolarization occurs as potassium ions leave the axon. - In the after-hyperpolarization phase, membrane potential approaches the potassium equilibrium potential.
Functions of astrocytes include all of the following, EXCEPT:
*** conducting action potentials *** FUNCTIONS: - maintaining the blood-brain barrier - responding to neural tissue damage - forming a three-dimensional framework for the CNS - guiding neuron development
Which of the following is NOT a function of the neuroglia?
*** memory *** FUNCTION: - support - maintenance of the blood-brain barrier - secretions of cerebrospinal fluid -phagocytosis
Which of the following would NOT cause the membrane potential to change from -70mV to +30mV?
*** potassium ions leaving the cell *** WOULD CAUSE CHANGE: - phosphate ions leaving the cells - calcium ions entering the cell - sodium ions entering the cell
Which of the following is NOT true of graded potentials?
*** they increase amplitudes as they move away from the stimulus point**** TRUE: - they are short lived - they can be called postsynaptic potentials - they can form on receptor endings
which of the following is NOT a function of the nervous system?
***direct long-term functions, such as growth*** IT DOES: - integrate sensory information - sense the internal and external environments - coordinate voluntary and involuntary activities - control peripheral effectors
Which of the following is NOT a recognized structural classification for neurons?
***pseudopolar*** RECOGNIZED - bipolar ( very rare mostly in the eyes ) - unipolar (sensory neurons) - multipolar (motor neurons) - anaxonic
Any stimulus that opens a _______ ion channel will produce a graded potential.
- sodium - chemically gated - voltage-gated - mechanically gated
On which structure do most neuron to neuron communications occur?
1
Which part of the neuron can propagate an action potential?
3
The following are the main steps in the generation of an action potential. 1. Sodium channels are inactivated. 2. Voltage-gated potassium channels open and potassium moves out of the cell, initiating repolarization. 3. Sodium channels regain their normal properties. 4. A graded depolarization brings an area of an excitable membrane to threshold. 5. A temporary hyperpolarization occurs. 6. Sodium channel activation occurs. 7. Sodium ions enter the cell and depolarization occurs. The proper sequence of these events is
4, 6, 7, 1, 2, 3, 5.
Which is the correctly written Nernst equation?
61/z × log [ion]out / [ion]in
The structures labeled "1' are dendrites. Their membranes contain numerous chemically-gated ion channels.
Both statements are true and relate to synaptic transmission
What type of conduction takes place in unmyelinated axons?
Continuous conduction
What changes occur to voltage-gated Na+ and K+ channels at the peak of depolarization?
Inactivation gates of voltage-gated Na+ channels close, while activation gates of voltage-gated K+ channels open.
Where do most action potentials originate?
Initial segment
The resting membrane potential (Vm) of a neuron ___________.
Is generated by a difference of electrical charges across the plasma membrane
Which of the following is the clearest example of a neuronal membrane's selective permeability?
K+ ions can diffuse across the membrane more easily than Na+ ions
Sodium and potassium ions can diffuse across the plasma membranes of all cells because of the presence of what type of channel?
Leak channels
In which type of axon will velocity of action potential conduction be the fastest?
Myelinated axons with the largest diameter
What prevents the Na+ and K+ gradients from dissipating?
Na+ - K+ ATPase
Clusters of RER and free ribosomes in neurons are called:
Nissl bodies
What characterizes repolarization, the second phase of the action potential?
Once the membrane depolarizes to a peak value of +30 mV, it repolarizes to its negative resting value of -70 mV.
If the soma of a neuron became more permeable to potassium, which statement below best describes the graded potential that would be generated in the soma?
Potassium would leave the cell, causing the membrane to hyperpolarize
Ions are unequally distributed across the plasma membrane of all cells. This ion distribution creates an electrical potential difference across the membrane. What is the name given to this potential difference?
Resting membrane potential (RMP)
The neurilemma of axons in the peripheral nervous system is formed by:
Schwann cells
Which of the following statements is correct regarding the polarization of a neuronal membrane and the formation of a resting membrane potential?
Sodium/Potassium pumps maintain concentration gradients; sodium and potassium move down their concentration gradients through leakage channels
Which of the following best describes the Na+ and K+ concentration across a neuron's plasma membrane?
The Na+ concentration is higher outside the cell compared to inside. The K+ concentration is higher inside the cell compared to outside
Why does regeneration of the action potential occur in one direction, rather than in two directions?
The inactivation gates of voltage-gated Na+ channels close in the node, or segment, that has just fired an action potential.
If the potassium permeability of a resting neuron increases above the resting permeability, what effect will this have on the transmembrane potential?
The inside of the membrane will become more negative.
On average, the resting membrane potential is -70 mV. What does the sign and magnitude of this value tell you?
The inside surface of the plasma membrane is much more negatively charged than the outside
What characterizes depolarization, the first phase of the action potential?
The membrane potential changes from a negative value to a positive value.
What event triggers the generation of an action potential?
The membrane potential must depolarize from the resting voltage of -70 mV to a threshold value of -55 mV.
What is the function of the myelin sheath?
The myelin sheath increases the speed of action potential conduction from the initial segment to the axon terminals.
The resting membrane potential depends on two factors that influence the magnitude and direction of Na+ and K+ diffusion across the plasma membrane. Identify these two factors.
The presence of concentration gradients and leak channels
Suppose a drug is developed that blocks K+ leakage channels. The drug prevents ions from passing through those channels. If this drug was applied to a neuron, what would be the most immediate effect on that neuron?
The resting membrane potential would become less negative (more positive)
The plasma membrane is much more permeable to K+ than to Na+. Why?
There are many more K+ leak channels than Na+ leak channels in the plasma membrane
What opens first in response to a threshold stimulus?
Voltage-gated Na+ channels
What is the first change to occur in response to a threshold stimulus?
Voltage-gated Na+ channels change shape, and their activation gates open.
If the axolemma becomes more permeable to potassium ion:
a stronger stimulus will be required to cause an action potential
Graded potentials can
act as signals over short distances and make an action potential more or less likely
The part of the peripheral nervous system that carries sensory information to the CNS is designated:
afferent
The all-or-none principle states that
all stimuli great enough to bring the membrane to threshold will produce identical action potentials.
A stimulus that changes a postsynaptic neuron's membrane from resting potential to -85 mV is:
an inhibitory stimulus
Neurons that are rare, small, and lack features that distinguish dendrites from axons are called:
anaxonic
The neuroglial cells that participate in maintaining the blood-brain barrier are the
astrocytes
Action potentials are mainly associated with the membranes of
axons only
Neurons that have one axon and one dendrite, with the soma in between, are called:
bipolar
Raising the potassium ion concentration in the extracellular fluid surrounding a nerve cell will have which effect?
both hyperpolarize it and decrease the magnitude of the potassium equilibrium potential
The _____________ nervous system is composed of the brain and spinal cord
central
If acetylcholine (ACh) causes inhibition of a postsynaptic neuron, to what type of membrane channel did the ACh bind?
chemically-regulated potassium channel
Branches that may occur along an axon are called:
collaterals
Which of the following is the correct term for the movement of an electrical charge across a membrane?
current
An action potential is self-regenerating because __________.
depolarizing currents established by the influx of Na+ flow down the axon and trigger an action potential at the next segment
____________ line the brain ventricles and spinal cord
ependymal cells
Damage to ependymal cells would most likely affect the
formation of cerebrospinal fluid
A(n) _____________ is a subthreshold change in membrane potential within the cell body that decays as it travels away from its point of origin
graded potential
Loss of positive charges (or gain of negative charges) makes the inside of the cell more negative.
hyperpolarization
The boxed region represents what?
hyperpolarization
Which of the following correctly describes a graded potential?
it can have amplitudes of various sizes
What would happen to a patient's cellular Ek+ if a nurse accidentally administered a potassium solution that caused the patient's extracellular potassium ion concentration to rise to 6.01 mM? Assume a body temperature of 37C.
it would become less negative, -85mV
What would happen to the membrane potential if a resting cell suddenly becomes more permeable to Na+?
it would depolarize
Which of the following ion channels located in the plasma membrane of the neuron are always open and are largely responsible for the resting membrane potential?
leak channels
Which of the following is the primary factor in the maintenance of a cell's negative charge during resting membrane potential?
leak channels
Extensive damage to oligodendrocytes in the CNS could result in
loss of sensation and motor control
In most cells, the concentration of ions contributing to the membrane potential are ____________ in the intracellular fluid compared to the extracellular fluid, with the exception of _____________ ions.
lower; potassium
What is the major role of the Na+-K+ pump in maintaining the resting membrane potential?
maintaining the concentration gradients for Na+ and K+ across the cell membrane
Small, wandering cells that engulf cell debris and pathogens in the CNS are called
microglia
Which of the following would increase the membrane permeability to K+?
more K+ leakage channels
Neurons that have several dendrites and a single axon are called
multipolar
The most abundant class of neuron in the central nervous system is:
multipolar
How would a chemical that prevents the opening of voltage-regulated Na+ channels affect the function of a neuron?
neuron will only be capable of producing graded potentials
What is contained inside the structure labeled "5:?
neurotransmitter molecules
The same ________ can have different effects depending on the properties of the ________.
neurotransmitter; receptor
The myelin sheath that covers many CNS axons is formed by
oligodendrocytes
During repolarization of a neuron
potassium ions move out of the cell.
At the resting membrane potential, the membrane is most permeable to ________, which moves __________ the cell due to its electrochemical gradient.
potassium: out of
The rabies virus travels to the CNS via
retrograde axoplasmic transport
Glial cells that surround the neurons in ganglia are
satellite cells
The structure labeled "2" is a
soma (cell body)
The ____________ nervous system controls the skeletal muscles
somatic
identify the structure labeled "5"
synaptic terminals
Axons terminate in a series of fine extensions known as:
telodendria
Identify the structure labeled "4"
telodendria
Imagine you changed the concentration of K+ outside a neuron such that the resting membrane potential changed to -80 mV (from the normal resting value of -70 mV). What have you changed?
the electrical gradient for K+ and the concentration gradient for K+
Many medications introduced into the bloodstream cannot directly affect the neurons of the CNS because
the endothelium of the CNS capillaries forms a blood-brain barrier
Which of the following best describes the electrochemcial forces acting on sodium and potassium ions at the resting membrane potential?
the force on sodium ions is to move into the cell, and the force on potassium ions is to move out of the cell
The Nernst equation can be used to predict
the membrane potential resulting from permeability to a single ion
Hypothetically, what would be the most immediate effect of doubling the number of Na+ leakage channels in the plasma membrane?
the resting membrane potential would become less negative (more positive)
What determines the strength of a graded potential?
the size of the stimulus
What is the electrochemical gradient of an ion?
the sum of the electrical and concentration gradients for that ion
What is the basic condition when a neuron is described as polarized?
there is a separation of positive and negative charges across a membrane
Neurotransmitters ready for release are stored in synaptic _______________
vesicles
Most CNS neurons lack centrioles. This observation explains:
why CNS neurons cannot divide to regenerate damaged tissue