nobahar said:
Thanks for the response atyy. I have some understanding (I think) of the source for the current in a cell, but the circuit representation is confusing. If it was an actual circuit, then the electrons moving through the wire have no complete circuit, is this correct? You said it flows across the battery, in which case the cell battery representation is not analogous to the more 'familiar' circuit and battery and how it functions? Either that or I've misunderstood how a battery functions. I do not see how current can flow through a battery: I imagine it to be like a modified capacitor: current can't flow between the two parallel plates, and the same is true with a battery. By connecting a wire to the plates of a capacitor, current can flow and the potential difference depleted, the same is true for a battery. Except the battery generates the potential difference, whereas a capacitor has to be charged.
A battery consists of two electrodes dipped in a solution, and the potential is generated electrochemically, so we get "real" current flow from one electrode into the solution and then into the other electrode. The potential is generated differently in cells by means of a semi-permeable membrane and a concentration difference in ions across the membrane. Nonetheless, in both there is "real" current flow across a battery. This is different from a capacitor, which only permits "effective" current flow for changing currents, not constant currents.
nobahar said:
The other thing is currents. The textbooks I have read seem to suggest that the channels and carriers are responsible for the current. From my understanding, the Na-K+ ATPase is also important. Since I mentioned currents... does anyone know how current is "injected" in a voltage or current clamp experiment? All the sources I have read merely state that current is injected. What does that even mean?! I saw a diagram that suggested nothing is injected, just that the electrodes provide a charge, essentially altering the voltage across the membrane, as opposed to actually injecting anything.
You can think of the Na-K ATPase as just setting up the concentration gradient across the membrane. The concentration gradient and the semi-permeability of the membrane together generate the membrane potential, which is represented as the battery in the circuit. Subsequent current flows change the concentration gradient, but usually so little that the change in the concentration gradient can be ignored over an experiment lasting just a few minutes. Over the course of several hours, current flows change the concentration gradient, if there is no Na-K ATPase. You can think of the Na-K ATPase as replenishing the concentration gradient, or rechargeing the battery.
You can think of a voltage or current clamp experiment as simply taking two wires (R1,R2), one which is poked into the inside of the cell, while the other is placed in the extracellular fluid. A battery is connected across the two wires in a voltage clamp experiment, while a current source is connected across the two wires in a current clamp experiment. There are more refined versions of such experiments, but this is the basic idea.
So the circuit diagram for a voltage clamp experiment becomes a complete ciruit of these elements in series:
external battery for voltage clamp - R1 - cell - R2.
R2 is connected back to the external battery, and the cell represented as in your OP. In a current clamp experiment, the external battery is replaced with an external current source. Additionally, a voltage clamp experiment has an ammeter in series with R1 to measure current flow, while a current clamp experiment has a voltmeter in series with R1 and R2, ie. across the the membrane resistance, to measure membrane voltage. Since the voltage across the membrane resistance is wanted, but we have R1 and R2 in the way, the errors from the R1 and R2 have to be taken into account in trying to determine the voltage across the membrane resistance.