Depolarisation: Difference between revisions

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When something is polarised its ends are oppositely charged. So, depolarisation is when the difference is balanced, the ends no longer have different charges.  
When something is polarised its ends are oppositely charged. So, depolarisation is when the difference is balanced, the ends no longer have different charges.  


An example of depolarisation is when the [[Sodium voltage-gated ion channels|sodium voltage-gated ion channels]] open in the neuronal membrane to undo the polarisation of the [[Resting membrane potential|resting membrane potential]].
A depolarised neuron is when the cells membrane potentail becomes more postive. This occurs when the cell is stimulated; the membrane becomes more permeable to sodium gated ion channels allowing them to move into the cell, making it less negative.&nbsp;<ref>West One. A depolarised neuron (a stimulated neuron). [ONLINE] Available at: http://tle.westone.wa.gov.au/content/file/969144ed-0d3b-fa04-2e88-8b23de2a630c/1/human_bio_science_3b.zip/content/002_nervous_control/page_11.htm. [Accessed 23 November 14].</ref>
 
An example of depolarisation is when the [[Sodium voltage-gated ion channels|sodium voltage-gated ion channels]] open in the neuronal membrane to undo the polarisation of the [[Resting membrane potential|resting membrane potential]].  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
References
 
<references />

Revision as of 22:25, 23 November 2014

When something is polarised its ends are oppositely charged. So, depolarisation is when the difference is balanced, the ends no longer have different charges.

A depolarised neuron is when the cells membrane potentail becomes more postive. This occurs when the cell is stimulated; the membrane becomes more permeable to sodium gated ion channels allowing them to move into the cell, making it less negative. [1]

An example of depolarisation is when the sodium voltage-gated ion channels open in the neuronal membrane to undo the polarisation of the resting membrane potential.




References

  1. West One. A depolarised neuron (a stimulated neuron). [ONLINE] Available at: http://tle.westone.wa.gov.au/content/file/969144ed-0d3b-fa04-2e88-8b23de2a630c/1/human_bio_science_3b.zip/content/002_nervous_control/page_11.htm. [Accessed 23 November 14].