alez said:
Bit confused on what happens when a nerve impulse is sent down a neuron. Got notes and 2 sheets which all contradict each other.
What happens with the Na+ and K+ ions? Notes say that Na+ goes into the neuron and K+ leaves but wouldnt that lead to only Na+ ions inside and no K+ so it wouldn't work? Also read that K+ can move freely (contradicting the notes) but it then wouldn't it still leave large amounts of Na+ inside the neuron which keep building up?
Anyone have a definitive answer?
This reply may come a bit too late...but I'll give you a bit of an overview anyway.
Basically, once an action potential has been triggered (once a stimulus causes the neuron to reach
threshold potential of
-55mV), all of the sodium ion channels on the neuron open, causing an
influx of Na+ ions into the neuron, making the neuron more positive (hence, it has
depolarized).
When the neuron reaches a membrane potential of
+30 mV, Na+ ion channels close, and therefore Na+ influx stops. At this point, K+ ion channels of the neuron open, which cause
K+ ions to move out of the neuron, thus, the inside of the neuron becomes more negative (hence, the neuron is
repolarizing). The movement of K+ ions outside of the neuron, making the inside of the cell more negative, resets the membrane potential to -70 mV, once it reaches this, K+ ion channels close. The membrane potential may also become a little bit more negative than -70 mV as some extra K+ may leak out of the cell.
I've rattled on a bit there, sorry, but now to get to your actual question as to what happens to Na+ and K+ ions. There isn't a build up of Na+ and deficiency of K+ ions inside the neuron due to an
active process (mediated by sodium-potassium pump, also known as sodium-potassium-ATPase), whereby 3 Na+ ions move out of the cell, and 2 K+ ions move into the cell. So essentially, its 3 Na+ out, 2 K+ in, so there's no build up of Na+ and no absence of K+ inside the neuron. Note that because it's an active process, it requires ATP (as a source of energy).
This enables reestablishment of intracellular K+ and Na+ ion concentrations, to keep resting membrane potential at -70 mV, until a stimulus strong enough to alter the membrane potential to threshold starts the whole action potential cycle again.
Not sure what you mean by K+ ions moving freely...I guess very very few may move through the cell by diffusion but that's really not going to be of any significance. Essentially ions such as Na+ and K+ move into and out of the cell through
gated-channels, so movement of these ions into and out of the cell is regulated quite well.
A useful way to think about it is just think of it in terms of the positive charges affiliated with the Na+ and K+ ions, so if there's an Na+ coming in the cell, it's gonna be more postive, if there's K+ moving out, its gonna be less postive, or more negative, however way you choose to view it.
Hopefuly this makes a bit of sense, I'm not sure if this goes outside the scope of HSC bio as its been a year since I done it, but its a pretty broad concept. I found that a flow chart helped me breakdown this process. PM me if you have any queries.
Good luck with your studies!