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  2. Voltage-gated sodium channel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voltage-gated_sodium_channel

    When the membrane's voltage becomes low enough, the inactivation gate reopens and the activation gate closes in a process called deinactivation. With the activation gate closed and the inactivation gate open, the Na + channel is once again in its deactivated state, and is ready to participate in another action potential.

  3. Sodium channel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_channel

    When the membrane's voltage becomes low enough, the inactivation gate reopens and the activation gate closes in a process called deinactivation. With the activation gate closed and the inactivation gate open, the Na + channel is once again in its deactivated state, and is ready to participate in another action potential.

  4. Gating (electrophysiology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gating_(electrophysiology)

    In electrophysiology, the term gating refers to the opening or closing (by deactivation or inactivation) of ion channels. [1] This change in conformation is a response to changes in transmembrane voltage. [2] When ion channels are in a 'closed' (non-conducting) state, they are impermeable to ions

  5. Refractory period (physiology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Refractory_period_(physiology)

    The refractory periods are due to the inactivation property of voltage-gated sodium channels and the lag of potassium channels in closing. Voltage-gated sodium channels have two gating mechanisms, the activation mechanism that opens the channel with depolarization and the inactivation mechanism that closes the channel with repolarization.

  6. Persistent sodium current - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persistent_Sodium_Current

    Persistent sodium current generation is hypothesized to occur by the incomplete inactivation of the voltage-gated sodium channel current (INa), where the channel becomes constitutively active and conducts sodium, creating a "persistently active" inward sodium current. Upon depolarization, the four identical motifs of the sodium channel (which ...

  7. Action potential - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Action_potential

    [38] [i] For example, although raising V m opens most gates in the voltage-sensitive sodium channel, it also closes the channel's "inactivation gate", albeit more slowly. [39] Hence, when V m is raised suddenly, the sodium channels open initially, but then close due to the slower inactivation.

  8. Depolarizing prepulse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depolarizing_prepulse

    where ¯ + is the maximum sodium conductance, m is the activation gate, and h is the inactivation gate (both gates are shown in the adjacent image). [4] The values of m and h vary between 0 and 1, depending upon the transmembrane potential. Transmembrane voltage response of a space-clamped mammalian node of Ranvier

  9. Ball and chain inactivation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ball_and_chain_inactivation

    Ball and chain inactivation can only happen if the channel is open. In neuroscience, ball and chain inactivation is a model to explain the fast inactivation mechanism of voltage-gated ion channels. The process is also called hinged-lid inactivation or N-type inactivation. A voltage-gated ion channel can be in three states: open, closed, or ...