action potential

(noun)

A short term change in the electrical potential that travels along a cell such as a nerve or muscle fiber.

Related Terms

  • action potential.
  • repolarization
  • axodendritic synapse
  • hyperpolarization
  • axoaxonal synapse
  • absolute refractory period
  • dendrodendritic
  • somatodendritic
  • graded potentials
  • hormone
  • neuroglia cells
  • neural tube
  • neural crest
  • axon
  • dorsal root
  • grey matter
  • neurotransmitters
  • saltatory conduction
  • node of Ranvier
  • depolarization
  • synapse
  • postsynaptic

Examples of action potential in the following topics:

  • 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.
    • The propagation of action potential is independent of stimulus strength but dependent on refractory periods.
    • Schematic and B. actual action potential recordings.
    • 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 graded potentials and should not be confused with action potentials, although their function is to initiate or inhibit action potentials.
    • Unlike the action potential in axonal membranes, chemically-gated ion channels open on postsynaptic membranes.
    • Neurotransmitter binding at inhibitory synapses reduces a postsynaptic neuron's ability to generate an action potential.
    • A single EPSP at one synapse is generally far too small to trigger an action potential in the postsynaptic neuron.
    • This figure depicts the mechanism of temporal summation in which multiple action potentials in the presynaptic cell cause a threshold depolarization in the postsynaptic cell.
  • Membrane Potentials as Signals

    • In neurons, a sufficiently large depolarization can evoke an action potential in which the membrane potential changes rapidly.
    • In excitable cells, a sufficiently large depolarization can evoke an action potential , in which the membrane potential changes rapidly and significantly for a short time (on the order of 1 to 100 milliseconds), often reversing its polarity.
    • Action potentials are generated by the activation of certain voltage-gated ion channels.
    • Schematic and B. actual action potential recordings.
    • The action potential is a clear example of how changes in membrane potential can act as a signal.
  • Microscopic Anatomy

    • Intercalated disks transmit electrical action potentials between sarcomeres.
    • Intercalated discs are gap junctions that link cardiomyocytes so that electrical impulses (action potentials) can travel between cells.
    • In cardiac muscle tissue, they are also responsible for transmission of action potentials and calcium during muscle contraction.
    • Gap junctions, which connect proteins to the cytoplasm of different cells and transmit action potentials between both cells, required for cellular depolarization.
    • Skeletal muscle contracts following activation by an action potential.
  • Interactions of Skeletal Muscles

    • When stimulated by a single action potential a muscle contracts and then relaxes.
    • If an additional action potential were to stimulate a muscle contraction before a previous muscle twitch had completely relaxed then it would sum onto this previous twitch increasing the total amount of tension produced in the muscle.
    • For skeletal muscles, the force exerted by the muscle can be controlled by varying the frequency at which action potentials are sent to muscle fibers.
    • Action potentials do not arrive at muscles synchronously, and, during a contraction, only a certain percentage of the fibers in the muscle will be contracting at any given time.
    • If the frequency of action potentials generated increases to such a point that muscle tension has reached its peak and plateaued and no relaxation is observed then the muscle contraction is described as a tetanus.
  • Peripheral Motor Endings

    • The highly excitable region of muscle fiber plasma membrane is responsible for initiation of action potentials across the muscle's surface, ultimately causing the muscle to contract.
    • Upon the arrival of an action potential at the presynaptic neuron terminal, voltage-dependent calcium channels open and Ca2+ ions flow from the extracellular fluid into the presynaptic neuron's cytosol.
    • These receptors open to allow sodium ions to flow in and potassium ions to flow out of the muscle's cytosol, producing a local depolarization of the motor end plate, known as an end-plate potential (EPP).
    • The action potential spreads through the muscle fiber's network of T-tubules, depolarizing the inner portion of the muscle fiber.
    • Skeletal muscle contracts following activation by an action potential.
  • Mechanism and Contraction Events of Cardiac Muscle Fibers

    • The gap junctions spread action potentials to support the synchronized contraction of the myocardium.
    • Action potentials are the electrical stimulus that elicits the mechanical response in ECC.
    • An action potential, induced by the pacemaker cells in the sinoatrial (SA) and atrioventricular (AV) nodes, is conducted to contractile cardiomyocytes through gap junctions.
    • As the action potential travels between sarcomeres, it activates the calcium channels in the T-tubules, resulting in an influx of calcium ions into the cardiomyocyte.
  • Principles of Electricity

    • This process, called action potential, underlies many nervous system functions.
    • Voltage is the measure of potential energy generated by separated charge.
    • Voltage may represent either a source of energy (electromotive force) or lost or stored energy (potential drop).
    • Differences in concentration of ions on opposite sides of a cellular membrane lead to a voltage called the membrane potential.
    • These concentration gradients provide the potential energy to drive the formation of the membrane potential.
  • Types of Neurotransmitters by Function

    • Release of neurotransmitters usually follows arrival of an action potential at the synapse, but may also follow a graded electrical potential.
    • The neurotransmitters can also be classified based on function (excitatory or inhibitory) and action (direct or neuromodulatory).
    • The most prevalent transmitter in the human brain is glutamate, which promotes excitatory effects by  increasing the probability that the target cell will fire an action potential.
  • Muscles that Cause Movement at the Hip Joint

    • Movement at the hip is similar to that of the shoulder joint, but due to increased weight-bearing requirements the range of potential movements is reduced.
    • Actions – Extends of the thigh and assists with rotation.
    • Actions: Adduction and flexing at the thigh at the hip joint.
    • Actions: Extends and laterally rotates at the hip.
    • The main action is flexing of the lower leg at the knee.
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