to communicate between different parts of the same neuron and between neurons. How this works is one of the most fascinating stories in all science.
The story starts with transporter pumps (refer to “Talking about transporters,”earlier in this chapter) in the membrane that create ionic imbalances between the inside and outside of the cell. Not all ions get to move through the membrane, and the ligand-gated and voltage-gated channels act as the membrane’s “bouncers,” allowing only specific ions to move through. Then, voltage-gated channels amplify the effects caused by ligand binding so that distant parts of the cell’s dendritic tree communicate these events to the cell’s soma. The cell’s soma then communicates the dendritic events to the axon terminal, which releases neurotransmitters that affect other neurons, and the symphony of brain activity plays on.
Believe it or not, every neuron in your body is actually a little battery that can make electric current flow. Think of the regular batteries you use every day. In these manmade batteries, chemical reactions in an electrolyte (salt solution) cause electrons to flow in an external circuit between two different electrodes that are immersed in the electrolyte.
Pumping Ions for Information
One of the most important kinds of molecular pumps are ion transporter pumps. These pumps use energy derived from adenosine triphosphate (ATP) to move specific ions through the membrane.
Sodium-potassium pump
One transporter pump is the sodium-potassium ATPase transporter. It creates a large imbalance between — you guessed it — the concentrations of sodium and potassium inside and outside the cell. It also causes the inside of neurons to be negatively charged inside versus outside, which is necessary for neurons to work.
The sodium-potassium pump pushes sodium ions outside the cell and potassium ions inside. The exchange ratio is three sodium ions pumped out for every two potassium ions pumped in. These pumps are ubiquitously expressed in neurons and run constantly. By always running, they create a disequilibrium or imbalance in sodium/potassium concentrations across the membrane, as you can see in Figure 3-1.
Figure 3-1: The sodium-potassium pump creates a disequilibrium between sodium and potassium concentrations inside versus outside the cell.
Here are two important facts about the sodium/potassium imbalance:
Compared to the extracellular fluid, which has high sodium and low potassium concentrations, the cell’s cytoplasm has almost the opposite: very low sodium and high potassium.
Because the sodium exit to potassium entry ratio is 3:2, a net loss of positive charge occurs inside the cell compared to outside. That is, neurons are negatively charged inside.
Other important pumps
Discovering Diffusion and Voltage
Ask any neurobiologist, and she’ll tell you that a big challenge in understanding the flow of currents through neural membranes is having to account for the two forces of imbalances: diffusion and voltage. Diffusion causes ions to move from regions of higher to lower concentration. As for voltage, the electrostatic force causes ions to move away from a like charge toward an opposite charge. Neurons have a net negative charge inside with respect to outside, and different concentrations of ions like sodium and potassium inside compared to outside. The following sections explore these ideas in more detail.
What about potassium? Potassium has a higher concentration inside than out, so diffusion tends to move it outside if potassium channels are opened. On the other hand, the negative charge inside the cell attracts positively charged potassium, just like it does sodium.
The Nernst equation