How many moles of Na + must m ove per unit area of membrane to change V

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How many moles of Na+ must m ove per unit area of membrane to change Vm from -70 mV to +30 mV, if we assume that the membrane behaves purely as a capacitor?

(a) 10-4 mol/cm2;

(b) 10-9 mol/cm2;

(c) 10-12 mol/cm2;

(d) 10-14 mol/cm2.


Upon fertilization, the eggs of many species undergo a rapid change in potential difference across their outer membrane. This change affects the physiological development of the eggs. The potential difference across the membrane is called the membrane potential, Vm , which is the potential inside the membrane minus the potential outside it. The membrane potential arises when enzymes use the energy available in ATP to expel three sodium ions (Na+) actively and accumulate two potassium ions (K+) inside the membrane—making the interior less positively charged than the exterior. For a sea urchin egg, Vm is about -70 mV; that is, the potential inside is 70 mV less than that outside. The egg membrane behaves as a capacitor with a capacitance of about 1 µF/cm2. The membrane of the unfertilized egg is selectively permeable to K+; that is, K+ can readily pass through certain channels in the membrane, but other ions cannot. When a sea urchin egg is fertilized, Na+ channels in the membrane open, Na+ enters the egg, and Vm rapidly increases to +30 mV, where it remains for several minutes. The concentration of Na+ is about 30 mmol/L in the egg’s interior but 450 mmol/L in the surrounding seawater. The K+ concentration is about 200 mmol/L inside but 10 mmol/L outside. A useful constant that connects electrical and chemical units is the Faraday number, which has a value of approximately 105 C/mol; that is, Avogadro’s number (a mole) of monovalent ions, such as Na+ or K+, carries a charge of 105 C.

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University Physics with Modern Physics

ISBN: 978-0133977981

14th edition

Authors: Hugh D. Young, Roger A. Freedman

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