BIOS 1710 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Thoracic Cavity, Epiphyseal Plate, Visual Cortex

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Inactivation gates for inactivating na channels close very slowly. 1: action potential, k+ channels are open (spike, na+ channels are open (spike, na+ channels close (down, k+ channels remain open (down, voltage gated k+ channel also opens (undershoot/refractory period, voltage gated k+ channel closes (resting potential) Junctions between 2 neurons or a neuron and effector (glands/muscles) a. i. Postsynaptic cell: action potentials cause voltage-gated ca2+ vesicles filled with chemical to merge with the synaptic membrane and release chemicals into the synapse b. i. Exocytosis of synaptic vesicles b. v. neurotransmitter into cleft b. vi. Very slowly diffuses out of synapse =long stimulation b. x. 2. Can be pumped back into presynaptic cell (a lot in. G-protein-linked receptor (cardiac muscle-acetylcholine: effect determined by the receptor not the neurotransmitter, endocrine system slow, presynaptic cell, synaptic terminal, voltage-gated ca2+ channels, synaptic vesicles w/neurotransmitter, postsynaptic cell, receptors b. Ion channels: neurotransmitters, acetylcholine (curare (block), black widow spider venom (block), monoamines b. i.

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