Are Electrochemical Gradients the Driving Force for Ion Movement?

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The discussion centers on the interaction between chemical and electrical gradients in a postsynaptic membrane. The postsynaptic space is negatively charged and contains a high concentration of Na+ ions compared to the extracellular space. When a channel opens, the electrical gradient tends to retain Na+ ions inside, while the chemical gradient drives some Na+ ions outside. The chemical gradient operates based on diffusion principles, suggesting that configurations with equal Na+ distribution are more probable than those with a high concentration on one side. The conversation also posits that the electrical gradient may act more quickly than the chemical gradient, as electric forces (attraction and repulsion) are faster than the slower process of diffusion. The analogy of two vehicles pulling in opposite directions illustrates the concept of opposing forces, with one being significantly stronger than the other.
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Or, the combination of a chemical gradient and an electric gradient.

So suppose you have a postsynaptic membrane. The postsynaptic space is negatively charged, but it also has a huge number of Na+ ions relative to the extracellular space. So if you open up a channel, the electrical gradient is going to try to keep the Na+ inside. But the chemical gradient is going to drive some Na+ ions outside.

Does the chemical gradient simply act on the laws of diffusion/mere probability? Probability meaning that there are *far* more configurations with equal amounts of Na+ ions on both sides than one side having almost all of the Na+ ions?

And because of this, is the electrical gradient intrinsically "faster" than the chemical gradient? Diffusion is slow. But electric repulsion/attraction is very fast.
 
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Don't quote me on this, as it is just my own ideas, but yes I think it is simply a case of two opposing forces acting in different directions, and one being simply stronger than another. It's like two vehicles pulling the same load in opposite directions, except one vehicle is a truck, and the other is a motorcycle.
 
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