View Full Version : GABA(A) Receptors
garytse86
Nov4-05, 11:38 AM
In the lecture handout it says "When cells are hyperpolarised the result is a depolarisation towards threshold." What does this mean?:confused:
DocToxyn
Nov7-05, 07:39 AM
Not quite sure, can you give us some more context from your notes - where do the GABA receptors fit in?
quasi426
Nov8-05, 11:05 PM
In the lecture handout it says "When cells are hyperpolarised the result is a depolarisation towards threshold." What does this mean?:confused:
A voltage gated Na+ channel will transiently open upon depolarization and a rush of Na+ will come into the cell. The channel will then inactivate via the ball and and chain mechanism, (basically the channel is plugged is its in the open conformation but plugged up so no ions can flow through.) In order for the inactivation to go away there must be a decrease in voltage or hyperpolarization. So it turns that channel opening and closing is basically a probability game. At the resting membrane potential some of the Na channels have the inactivation turned on, however upon hyperpolarization these channels will have the inactivation turned off. Now when you put the cell back to the resting potential some of the channels will open and Na will rush in.
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