Experiment Techniques
Membranes
Action potentials
Postsynapse
Cell signaling
100

Technique used to visualize proteins

Western blot

100

What kind of molecules can diffuse across the membrane the easiest?

Small and non-polar molecules

100

What does it mean when a membrane is depolarized?

Membrane potential is less negative

100

Since electrical signals can't jump the synapse, what is the purpose of neurotransmitters?

Turn an electrical signal into a chemical signal

100

What kinds of effects do cell signaling pathways lead to?

altered metabolism, altered gene expression, altered cell shape or movement

200

Technique used to see if proteins are interacting

Co-IP

200

How many Na+ are let out and how many K+ are brought in?

3 Na+ out and 2 K+ in
200

What allows action potentials to travel in one direction?

Inactivation of voltage gated channels/refractory period

200

What kind of receptors are primarily found in postsynaptic cells?

Ionotropic receptors

200

Rank the effects of cell signaling from fastest to slowest

Cell shape/movement, metabolism, gene expression

300

What 2 techniques are involved in a Co-IP?

SDS PAGE and Western Blot

300

What is the charge of a resting membrane potential?

Negative

300

What kinds of ions are excitatory and which are inhibitory?

Na+ and Ca2+ are excitatory and Cl- and K+ are inhibitory

300

What kinds of receptors do not have their binding site and channel associated with one another?

Metabotropic receptors

300

List the 3 kinds of receptors

Ion-coupled receptors, GPCR, Enzyme coupled receptors

400

What is the purpose of the alternative step?

Overexpress a protein of interest so there is more available and is more cost effective

400

What controls the resting membrane potential?

The sodium/potassium pump and potassium leak channels

400

What are the steps of an action potential?

1. Resting state

2. Local depolarization

3. Rising phase

4. Falling phase

5. Undershoot

400

How does cocaine function in the brain?

Inhibits dopamine reuptake transporters so it accumulates in the synapse

400

The amino acid _____________ acts as a _____________

Aspartic acid, phosphomimetic

500

List the steps (in order) of a Co-IP

1. Lyse cells.

2. Incubate lysate with antibody to protein

3. Spin down, remove supernatant, rinse breads, spin down again

4. SDS PAGE and western blot for the other protein

500

What are the steps of the Sodium potassium pump?

1. Pump in E1 conformation, Na+ ions bind to inside

2. Gate closes

3. ATP hydrolysis

4. ADP released, E2 conformation and Na+ released

5. K+ binds inside

6. Pump occluded, Aspartic acid dephosphorylated

7. ATP bound

8. Back to E1 conformation, K+ released


500
What happens when an action potential reaches the terminal of the axon?

1. VG Ca2+ channel closed on a presynaptic cell

2. Action potential arrival open VG channel, Ca2+ enters cell and helps vessicle w/ neurotransmitters fuse to membrane, neurotransmitters enter synapse

3. Neurotransmitters bind ligand gated channels in postsynaptic cell, channel opens, ions rush and propagate action potential in postsynaptic cell

500

What are the steps to the propagation of an action potential in the postsynaptic cell?

1. Glutamate binds AMPA and NMDA channels

2. Na+ entry through AMPA depolarizes postsynaptic cell

3. Depolarization ejects Mg2+ from NMDA, channel opens

4. Ca2+ enters through NMDA

5. Ca2+ activates secondary messenger pathway and further depolarizes membrane and action potential is generated

500

How are G proteins inactivated?

Intrinsic GTP hydrolysis