Paul Atreides Posted December 16, 2017 Posted December 16, 2017 (edited) Hello everyone. I have been steadily reading through a book on human physiology and I have come across a problem related to the Goldman Equation that I am trying to understand, which is the following: Quote If the membrane potential is -90 mV at rest and +30 mV at the peak of the action potential what changes in the relative permeability of Na+ and K+ take place in a chloride-free medium? Because of the fact that we are working with a chloride-free medium, chloride ions are ignored from the Goldman Equation which gives the following: Quote E = RT/F * ln((PNa[Na+]o + PK[K+]o)/(PNa[Na+]i + PK[K+]i)) Where E is the membrane potential, RT/F is a constant that is equal to 26.7 at 37 degrees Celsius, P with respective subscripts represent coefficients of different ions, and the ions in square brackets are the concentrations in mmol/L. Subscripts "o" and "i" represent extracellular and intracellular concentrations respectively. Intracellular Sodium Ion Concentration = 20 mmol/L Extracellular Sodium Ion Concentration = 145 mmol/L Intracellular Potassium Ion Concentration = 150 mmol/L Extracellular Potassium Ion Concentration = 4 mmol/L I understand that in order to answer this question I need to show that the membrane potential for the sodium-potassium ion coefficient (Na+1/K+1) is higher at +30 mV than to -90 mV to illustrate that the membrane will be more permeable to sodium during the action potential since +30 mV is closer to the equilibrium potential of sodium at +53 mV and vice versa for potassium. But the solution given is the following: Quote -90 = 26.7 * ln((a[145] + [4])/(a[20] + [150]) where "a" equals the sodium-ion coefficient (Na+1/K+1) I understand most of the substitutions that take place, except I do not understand how the Goldman Equation is transformed into the solution equation for one membrane potential. Therefore, I would be much obliged if someone could indicate to me how it was accomplished. Edited December 16, 2017 by Paul Atreides typo, "in" should be "if"
Paul Atreides Posted December 18, 2017 Author Posted December 18, 2017 Dear all, I think I have found the solution to my problem. Firstly, the sodium-potassium coefficient is not Na+1/K+1 but rather PNa/PK. From then on, it is a simple case of multiplying the numerator and the denominator of the original equation by 1/PK. Thus, the following steps are obtained where PNa/PK can be represented by the arbitrary variable "a" to simplify when solving: E = RT/F * ln((PNa[Na+]o + PK[K+]o)/(PNa[Na+]i + PK[K+]i)) E = RT/F * ln((PNa[Na+]o * 1/PK + PK[K+]o * 1/PK)/(PNa[Na+]i * 1/PK + PK[K+]i * 1/PK)) E = RT/F * ln((PNa/PK[Na+]o + [K+]o)/(PNa/PK[Na+]i + [K+]i)) E = RT/F * ln((a[Na+]o + [K+]o)/(a[Na+]i + [K+]i))
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