The process of depolarization is entirely dependent upon the intrinsic electrical nature of most cells. When a cell is at rest, the cell maintains what is known as a
resting potential. The resting potential generated by nearly all cells results in the interior of the cell having a negative charge compared to the exterior of the cell. The transport of the ions across the plasma membrane is accomplished through several different types of transmembrane proteins embedded in the cell's plasma membrane that function as pathways for ions both into and out of the cell, such as
ion channels,
sodium potassium pumps, and
voltage-gated ion channels.
Resting potential The resting potential must be established within a cell before the cell can be depolarized. There are many mechanisms by which a cell can establish a resting potential, however there is a typical pattern of generating this resting potential that many cells follow. The generation of a negative resting potential within the cell involves the utilization of ion channels, ion pumps, and voltage-gated ion channels by the cell. However, the process of generating the resting potential within the cell also creates an environment outside the cell that favors depolarization. The
sodium potassium pump is largely responsible for the optimization of conditions on both the interior and the exterior of the cell for depolarization. This pump is an
ATPase that pumps three sodium ions out of the cell and two potassium ions into the cell with every ATP consumed. By pumping three positively charged sodium ions (Na+) out of the cell for every two positively charged potassium ions (K+) pumped into the cell, not only is the resting potential of the cell established, as the interior of the cell becomes less positive due to the +1 charge that is lost with each ATP molecule, but an unfavorable
concentration gradient is created by increasing the concentration of sodium outside the cell and increasing the concentration of potassium within the cell. While there is an excessive amount of potassium in the cell and sodium outside the cell, the generated resting potential maintains the closure of voltage-gated ion channels in the plasma membrane. This not only prevents the diffusion of ions pumped across the membrane but also involves the activity of potassium leak channels, allowing a controlled passive efflux of potassium ions, which contributes to the establishment of the negative resting potential. For this rapid change to take place within the interior of the cell, several events must occur along the plasma membrane of the cell. While the sodium–potassium pump continues to work, the
voltage-gated sodium and
calcium channels that had been closed while the cell was at resting potential are opened in response to an initial change in voltage. Sodium channels possess an inherent inactivation mechanism that prompts rapid reclosure, even as the membrane remains depolarized. During this equilibrium, the sodium channels enter an inactivated state, temporarily halting the influx of sodium ions until the membrane potential becomes negatively charged again. Once the cell's interior is sufficiently positively charged, depolarization concludes, and the channels close once more.
In Summary •
Trigger: an excitatory signal makes the membrane potential less negative •
Upstroke: once threshold is reached, voltage-gated sodium channels open, causing sodium influx and rapid depolarization •
Peak and Inactivation: sodium channels quickly inactivate, stopping the sodium influx even if the membrane remains depolarized •
Repolarization: voltage-gated potassium channels open, mostly with a delay, potassium exits the cell, and the membrane potential returns toward rest •
Hyperpolarization: potassium can remain elevated briefly, making the membrane more negative than resting before it settles back ==Hyperpolarization==