Pharmacology 2060A/B Lecture Notes - Lecture 14: Cellular Respiration, Catechol-O-Methyl Transferase, Myelin

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In neuropharmacology, we attempt to treat this biochemical imbalance with drugs: unfortunately the drugs treat the symptoms of disease but not the cause. The brain: the brain is composed of literally millions of neurons. Action potentials: action potentials play a key role in cell to cell communication in neurons, pulse travels down one axon and crosses the synapse to the next neurons, the resting membrane potential of cells is approximately -70 mv. Potassium (blue dots) can move in and out of cells. Note that for every potassium molecule that moves into the cell, another one moves out. Extra: neurons have a negative concentration gradient most of the time, meaning there are more positively charged ions outside than inside the cell. These gated channels are different from the leakage channels, and only open once an action potential has been triggered. We say these channels are voltage-gated because they are open and closed depends on the voltage difference across the cell membrane.

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