Plasma Membranes
Membrane Potential & Resting Potential
Ion Distribution & Gradients
Passive Transport
Active Transport
Establishing RMP
Na⁺/K⁺ Pump
Application & Integration
Homeostasis
100

What does it mean that the plasma membrane is selectively permeable?

→ It controls what enters and exits the cell.

100

What is membrane potential?

→ The electrical charge difference across the plasma membrane. (Slide 3)

100

Which ion is more concentrated inside the cell?

→ Potassium (K⁺). (Slides 6–7)

100

What is diffusion?

→ Movement of substances from high to low concentration. (Slides 9–11)

100

What is active transport?

→ Movement of substances against their gradient, requiring energy. (Slides 8, 12)

100

Through which channels does K⁺ primarily leave the cell?

→ K⁺ leak channels. (Slide 13)

100

What does the Na⁺/K⁺ pump move in and out of the cell?

→ 3 Na⁺ out, 2 K⁺ in. (Slides 15–16)

100

Why is it important for all cells (not just nerve and muscle cells) to have a membrane potential?

→ It allows basic functions like transport and communication. (Slides 3–4)

100

What is homeostasis?

→ The state of balance within a biological system needed for proper function and survival. (Slide 18)

200

What are the two main macromolecule types that make up plasma membranes?

→ Lipids and proteins. (Slide 2)

200

What is the resting membrane potential (RMP)?

→ The electrical charge difference a cell maintains while at rest. (Slide 4)

200

Which ion is more concentrated outside the cell?

→ Sodium (Na⁺). (Slides 6–7)

200

What is osmosis?

→ Movement of water across a membrane. (Slides 9–11)

200

What molecule provides energy for primary active transport?

→ ATP. (Slide 12)

200

Why does Na⁺ enter the cell during resting conditions?

→ Both its chemical and electrical gradients favor entry. (Slide 14)

200

How many Na⁺ and K⁺ ions are exchanged per pump cycle?

→ 3 Na⁺ out, 2 K⁺ in. (Slides 15–16)

200

How does the Na⁺/K⁺ pump indirectly support secondary active transport?

→ By maintaining Na⁺ gradients used by cotransporters. (Slides 12, 15–16)

200

Why is homeostasis considered an active process?

→ Because the body is constantly in flux and must continuously adjust. (Slide 18)

300

How does the structure of the plasma membrane allow control over what enters and exits a cell?

→ Lipids form a barrier; proteins regulate transport. (Slide 2)

300

Which two gradients must be maintained for a resting membrane potential?

→ A chemical gradient and an electrical gradient, in opposite directions. (Slide 4)

300

What role do leak channels play in maintaining charge distribution?

→ They allow passive ion movement, shaping membrane potential. (Slides 6–7)

300

What is the difference between simple diffusion and facilitated diffusion?

→ Simple goes directly through the membrane; facilitated requires channels/carriers. (Slide 11)

300

How does secondary active transport differ from primary active transport?

→ Primary uses ATP directly; secondary couples one gradient to another. (Slide 12)

300

What does it mean that K⁺ movement is toward chemical equilibrium but against electrical equilibrium?

→ K⁺ moves out to balance concentration, but this increases electrical imbalance. (Slide 13)

300

Why does the Na⁺/K⁺ pump require ATP?

→ To move ions against their gradients. (Slides 15–16)

300

Why does a cell’s membrane potential represent “stored energy”?

→ Uneven ions create potential energy, like a battery. (Slides 3–4, 15)

300

What would happen if your body stopped being in flux (in states of change)?

→ You would die, since balance requires constant adjustment. (Slide 18)

400

Compare the roles of lipids and proteins in the plasma membrane.

→ Lipids create a hydrophobic barrier; proteins provide channels, carriers, and receptors. (Slide 2)

400

Why is RMP especially important in nerve and muscle cells?

→ It primes them to respond instantly with signals or contraction. (Slide 5)

400

Why do negatively charged molecules inside the cell contribute to the membrane potential?

→ They cannot leave, keeping the inside more negative. (Slide 6)

400

Why does passive transport not require energy?

→ Molecules move down their concentration gradient. (Slides 9–11)

400

Why does active transport require energy while passive transport does not?

→ Active goes up the gradient, passive goes down. (Slides 9, 12)

400

How does the balance of K⁺ leaving and Na⁺ entering set the resting membrane potential?

→ It keeps the inside negative while maintaining gradients. (Slides 13–14)

400

How does the Na⁺/K⁺ pump help maintain the resting membrane potential?

→ It restores Na⁺ and K⁺ gradients after leak movements. (Slides 15–16)

400

Apply the concept of gradients to explain how Gatorade (electrolytes) affects muscle cells.

→ It restores ion balance, helping muscles contract. (Supplemental, linked to Slides 5–7, 15–16)

400

What is the difference between negative and positive feedback loops?

→ Negative feedback slows as effects build; positive feedback increases as effects build. (Slides 19–21)

500

Why is selective permeability vital for maintaining a membrane potential?

→ It keeps ions unevenly distributed, creating electrical charge differences. (Slide 2)

500

Explain how RMP represents potential energy for a cell.

→ The uneven ion distribution creates stored energy. (Slide 3–4)

500

Explain how the unequal distribution of Na⁺ and K⁺ is maintained across the membrane.

→ By Na⁺/K⁺ pumps and leak channels. (Slides 6–7, 15–16)

500

Compare channel-mediated vs carrier-mediated diffusion.

→ Channel: always open; carrier: changes shape, sometimes closed. (Slide 11)

500

Explain how the Na⁺/K⁺ pump works as an example of active transport.

→ It uses ATP to move 3 Na⁺ out and 2 K⁺ in. (Slides 15–16)

500

Explain why the inside of the cell remains slightly negative even though Na⁺ enters.

→ More K⁺ leaves than Na⁺ enters, leaving negatives inside. (Slides 13–14)

500

Compare the Na⁺/K⁺ pump to passive leak channels in terms of function.

→ Pumps use ATP to restore gradients; leak channels allow passive flow. (Slides 6–7, 15–16)

500

Compare active vs passive transport in terms of efficiency and energy usage.

→ Passive: no energy, quick diffusion; Active: energy-dependent, maintains gradients. (Slides 8–12, 15–16)

500

Give an example of a negative feedback loop in the body.

→ Shivering when cold (Slide 20).
→ Sweating when hot (Supplemental: Textbook/Discussion).
→ Regulation of blood glucose by insulin (Supplemental: Textbook/Discussion).

600

Predict what would happen to a cell if its membrane became fully permeable to all substances.

→ The cell would lose ion gradients, membrane potential, and likely die. (Slide 2)

600

Apply the concept of RMP to explain how a neuron is “primed” for action.

→ The imbalance of ions allows rapid depolarization when channels open. (Slide 5)

600

Predict the effect on membrane potential if Na⁺ leak channels increased in number.

→ The cell would become less negative inside. (Slide 7)

600

Apply the concept of passive transport to explain how oxygen enters cells.

→ Oxygen diffuses directly through the membrane. (Slides 9–11)

600

Apply the concept of secondary active transport to explain how glucose may enter a cell.

→ Glucose moves in while Na⁺ moves down its gradient. (Slide 12)

600

Apply the concept of equilibrium to explain why K⁺ does not continue moving out indefinitely.

→ Electrical force balances chemical force at equilibrium. (Slide 13)

600

Apply the “compressed spring” analogy to explain potential energy in the Na⁺/K⁺ pump system.

→ Stored gradients are like a spring ready to release energy. (Slide 15)

600

Integrate diffusion, active transport, and pumps to explain how neurons reset after firing.

→ Diffusion moves ions, pumps restore gradients, reestablishing RMP. (Slides 12–16)

600

Give an example of a positive feedback loop in the body.

→ Platelet accumulation at a wound site (Slide 21).
→ Uterine contractions during childbirth (Supplemental: Textbook/Discussion).
→ Lactation (milk let-down reflex) (Supplemental: Textbook/Discussion).

700

How does selective permeability help a cell maintain a stable internal environment?

→ It regulates ion movement to keep balance and homeostasis. (Slide 2)

700

Why is the resting membrane potential important for nerve and muscle cells?

→ It enables rapid signaling and contraction. (Slide 5)

700

How does having more K⁺ leak channels than Na⁺ leak channels affect the inside of the cell?

→ More K⁺ leaves than Na⁺ enters, making the inside negative. (Slides 6–7)

700

What happens to a cell placed in a hypertonic solution?

→ Water leaves, and the cell shrinks. (Slides 9–11)

700

What would happen if a cell suddenly ran out of ATP?

→ Active transport would stop; gradients would collapse. (Slides 12, 15–16)

700

What would happen to the membrane potential if Na⁺ entered the cell more easily than normal?

→ The inside would become less negative. (Slide 14)

700

What would happen to ion gradients if the Na⁺/K⁺ pump stopped working?

→ Gradients would collapse, and RMP would be lost. (Slides 15–16)

700

How does drinking a sports drink with electrolytes help restore ion balance in muscle cells?

→ It replaces Na⁺ and K⁺ lost in sweat, restoring gradients. (Supplemental, linked to Slides 5–7, 15–16)

700

Why are most physiological processes controlled by negative feedback rather than positive feedback?

→ Because negative feedback stabilizes systems, while positive feedback amplifies changes. (Slides 20–21)

800

Explain how both lipids and proteins in the plasma membrane work together to control transport.

→ Lipids form the barrier, while proteins provide selective pathways for molecules. (Slide 2)

800

What would happen to a cell if it could not maintain a resting membrane potential?

→ It could not signal or contract properly. (Slides 3–5)

800

Why do cells use energy to keep Na⁺ and K⁺ unevenly distributed?

→ To maintain gradients needed for RMP and signaling. (Slides 6–7, 15–16)

800

How is facilitated diffusion different from simple diffusion?

→ Facilitated needs proteins; simple occurs through lipids. (Slide 11)

800

Why is active transport important even though it requires energy?

→ It maintains gradients for cell survival and signaling. (Slides 12, 15–16)

800

Why does the balance of Na⁺ and K⁺ leak channels keep the cell slightly negative inside?

→ More K⁺ leaks out than Na⁺ enters, leaving negatives inside. (Slides 13–14)

800

Why is the Na⁺/K⁺ pump essential for maintaining the resting membrane potential?

→ It actively restores gradients needed for stability and signaling. (Slides 15–16)

800

Why might changes in extracellular K⁺ levels (like too much K⁺ in the blood) affect muscle or nerve activity?

→ They reduce the normal gradient, making RMP unstable. (Slides 6–7, 13–14 + Supplemental)

800

How do feedback loops contribute to maintaining homeostasis?

→ They detect disturbances and trigger responses that restore balance, keeping body systems within operating parameters. (Slides 19–21)

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