resting membrane potential

(noun)

The potential difference in a resting neuron that causes its membrane to be polarized.

Related Terms

  • Goldman equation
  • ion

Examples of resting membrane potential in the following topics:

  • Resting Membrane Potentials

    • The potential difference in a resting neuron is called the resting membrane potential.
    • The potential difference in a resting neuron is called the resting membrane potential.
    • The value of the resting membrane potential varies from -40mV to -90mV in a different types of neurons.
    • The resting membrane potential exists only across the membrane.
    • Consequently, the resting potential is usually close to the potassium reversal potential.
  • Nerve Impulse Transmission within a Neuron: Resting Potential

    • For quiescent cells, the relatively-static membrane potential is known as the resting membrane potential.
    • The resting membrane potential is at equilibrium since it relies on the constant expenditure of energy for its maintenance.
    • The difference in the number of positively-charged potassium ions (K+) inside and outside the cell dominates the resting membrane potential.
    • Voltage-gated ion channels are closed at the resting potential and open in response to changes in membrane voltage.
    • The (a) resting membrane potential is a result of different concentrations of Na+ and K+ ions inside and outside the cell.
  • Electric Potential in Human

    • Electric potentials are commonly found in the body, across cell membranes and in the firing of neurons.
    • Thus, a potential, called the resting potential, is created on either side of the membrane.
    • Typical ions used to generate resting potential include potassium, chloride, and bicarbonate.
    • Resting membrane potential is approximately -95 mV in skeletal muscle cells, -60 mV in smooth muscle cells, -80 to -90 mV in astroglia, and -60 to -70 mV in neurons.
    • Potentials can change as ions move across the cell membrane.
  • Nerve Impulse Transmission within a Neuron: Action Potential

    • As soon as depolarization is complete, the cell "resets" its membrane voltage back to the resting potential.
    • The diffusion of K+ out of the cell hyperpolarizes the cell, making the membrane potential more negative than the cell's normal resting potential.
    • At this point, the sodium channels return to their resting state, ready to open again if the membrane potential again exceeds the threshold potential.
    • Eventually, the extra K+ ions diffuse out of the cell through the potassium leakage channels, bringing the cell from its hyperpolarized state back to its resting membrane potential.
    • The hyperpolarized membrane is in a refractory period and cannot fire. (5) The K+ channels close and the Na+/K+ transporter restores the resting potential.
  • Stages of the Action Potential

    • Neural impulses occur when a stimulus depolarizes a cell membrane, prompting an action potential which sends an "all or nothing" signal.
    • "Resting potential" is the name for the electrical state when a neuron is not actively being signaled.
    • A neuron at resting potential has a membrane with established amounts of sodium (Na+) and potassium (K+) ions on either side, leaving the inside of the neuron negatively charged relative to the outside.
    • The sodium gates cannot be opened again until the membrane is repolarized to its normal resting potential.
    • Therefore, the neuron cannot reach action potential during this "rest period."
  • Mechanics of the Action Potential

    • Resting potential.
    • If the membrane potential reaches -55 mV, it has reached the threshold of excitation.
    • This expulsion acts to restore the localized negative membrane potential of the cell.
    • The sodium gates cannot be opened again until the membrane has completely repolarized to its normal resting potential, -70 mV.
    • Some of it escapes, but the rest of it binds to chemical receptor molecules located on the membrane of the postsynaptic cell.
  • Membrane Potentials as Signals

    • Membrane potential (also transmembrane potential or membrane voltage) is the difference in electrical potential between the interior and the exterior of a biological cell.
    • The membrane potential has two basic functions.
    • In non-excitable cells, and in excitable cells in their baseline states, the membrane potential is held at a relatively stable value, called the resting potential.
    • The opening and closing of ion channels can induce a departure from the resting potential.
    • The action potential is a clear example of how changes in membrane potential can act as a signal.
  • Nerve Conduction and Electrocardiograms

    • A voltage is created across the cell membrane of a neuron in its resting state.
    • In its resting state, the cell membrane is permeable to K+ and Cl−, and impermeable to Na+.
    • The depolarization causes the membrane to again become impermeable to Na+, and the movement of K+ quickly returns the cell to its resting potential, referred to as repolarization.
    • The action potential is a voltage pulse at one location on a cell membrane.
    • Top: view of an idealized action potential shows its various phases as the action potential passes a point on a cell membrane.
  • The Action Potential and Propagation

    • Action potential is a brief reversal of membrane potential where the membrane potential changes from -70mV to +30mV.
    • When the membrane potential of the axon hillock of a neuron reaches threshold, a rapid change in membrane potential occurs in the form of an action potential.
    • This moving change in membrane potential has three phases.
    • As a result, the membrane permeability to sodium declines to resting levels.
    • The action potential is a clear example of how changes in membrane potential can act as a signal.
  • Postsynaptic Potentials and Their Integration at the Synapse

    • Postsynaptic potentials are excitatory or inhibitory changes in the graded membrane potential in the postsynaptic terminal of a chemical synapse.
    • Postsynaptic potentials are changes in the membrane potential of the postsynaptic terminal of a chemical synapse.
    • Chemical synapses are either excitatory or inhibitory depending on how they affect the membrane potential of the postsynaptic neuron.
    • Unlike the action potential in axonal membranes, chemically-gated ion channels open on postsynaptic membranes.
    • EPSPs and IPSPs are transient changes in the membrane potential.
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