The ionic basis of electrical signals
Ions are atoms or groups of atoms that gain an electrical charge by losing or acquiring electrons. For example, in the reaction that forms salt from sodium and chlorine, each sodium atom donates an electron, which is negatively charged, to a chlorine atom. The result is sodium chloride (NaCl), composed of one positively charged sodium ion (Na+) and one negatively charged chloride ion (Cl−). A positively charged ion is called a cation; a negatively charged ion, an anion. The electrical events that constitute signaling in the nervous system depend upon the distribution of such ions on either side of the nerve membrane. Underlying these distributions and their change are crucial physical-chemical principles.
Diffusion of ions across a membrane
Uncharged molecules
Molecules in solution move randomly; the energy for their movement is derived from thermal energy. When a permeable membrane (a membrane that allows molecules to cross it) divides a heavily concentrated solution from a less-concentrated solution, there occurs a diffusion of molecules through the membrane and down their concentration gradient—that is, from the fluid with the higher concentration to that with the lower concentration. The number of molecules moving per unit of time is called the flow rate, or flux rate. Diffusion continues until the concentrations on both sides of the membrane are equal. A condition of no net flux is then established with an equal, random diffusion of molecules in both directions. This is called the equilibrium state.
A membrane with pores allowing passage of molecules of only a particular size is called a semipermeable membrane. The semipermeable membrane imposes a condition of restricted diffusion in which the flux rate of the diffusing material is controlled by the permeability of the membrane, which in turn is dictated by the size of the pores and is given a unit of measure called the permeability coefficient.
Water
The water molecule, like other molecules, diffuses down its concentration gradient. If a rigid vessel contains water on one side of a semipermeable membrane and an impermeant substance (a substance that cannot cross the membrane) on the other side, the water tends to cross the membrane, diluting the substance and increasing the hydrostatic pressure on the other side, as shown in the . The pressure then will tend to push water back across the membrane in opposition to the net flux. When the pressure built up equals the diffusion of water in the opposite direction, no net flux occurs and equilibrium is established. The migration of water (or any solvent) across a membrane is called osmosis, and the pressure necessary to establish equilibrium is called osmotic pressure. Water moves from a region of low osmotic pressure to a region of high osmotic pressure.
The above example refers to water in a container with rigid walls. The neuron, however, has somewhat flexible walls, so that as water enters it, the cell tends to increase in volume, or swell. There is a direct relation between osmotic pressure across the plasma membrane and the final volume of a cell at equilibrium, so that if the osmotic pressure of the cell exterior is halved, the equilibrium volume of the cell will be twice its original volume.
Ions
When potassium chloride (KCl) is placed into solution, the elements separate into potassium cations (K+) and chloride anions (Cl−). Ions follow much the same principles of diffusion as uncharged molecules. For example, if a highly concentrated solution of KCl is separated from a lower concentration by a semipermeable membrane—one that is permeable to cations only—then K+ from the higher concentration diffuses across the membrane, following its concentration gradient to the region of lower concentration. Cl−, being blocked by the membrane, remains behind. At this point the diffusion of ions creates conditions quite different from the diffusion of uncharged molecules and water molecules. The movement of cations toward the less-concentrated solution creates a separation of electrical charge across the membrane—that is, a greater number of positively charged ions will have moved to the side with the less-concentrated solution of KCl, and the side of the membrane with the higher concentration will have a more negative charge. This separation of charge—actually a difference in electrical potential—is called the potential difference, and it is the starting point of all electrical events in nervous systems. When present in the plasma membrane of the neuron, the potential difference transforms the neuron into an electrolytic cell that is capable, upon stimulation, of generating and transmitting electrical impulses.
Complicating the ionic diffusion process is the phenomenon that opposite charges attract. This means that, in the example above, some of the K+ diffusing across the membrane is electrostatically drawn back up its concentration gradient toward the Cl−. This creates a situation in which two tendencies oppose each other: (1) the diffusing tendency of the cation down its concentration gradient; and (2) the electrostatic voltage force tending to draw the cation back. These two forces eventually reach a state of no net flux, when the number of cations that they draw in each direction across the membrane is equal. The system is then in electrochemical equilibrium. At equilibrium, one side of the membrane may still have a more negative charge than the other. The potential difference is then called the equilibrium potential. (It is also called the Nernst potential, after Walther Nernst, a German physical chemist who, in the late 19th century, developed equations for calculating the electrical potential at which there is no longer a net flux of a specific ion across a membrane.)
The law of electroneutrality states that in any single ionic solution a sum of negative electrical charges attracts an equal sum of positive electrical charges. If a solution of KCl is divided into two parts by a membrane that is permeable to both ions, then the equal concentration of KCl across the membrane preserves chemical equilibrium between the two sides, while the equal concentrations of K+ and Cl− on each side preserve electroneutrality on each side as well. This equilibrium can be upset by the addition to side 1 of a large number of K+ and an equal charge of impermeant anions (that is, negatively charged ions other than Cl− that cannot permeate the membrane). In this case electroneutrality on side 1 is preserved, since the sum of positive charges added to that side is equaled by the sum of added negative charges. However, chemical equilibrium between side 1 and side 2 is not preserved, since side 1 now has a greater concentration of ions than side 2. Therefore, K+ diffuses down its concentration gradient, crossing the membrane to side 2 while drawing Cl− with it to preserve electroneutrality. Diffusion continues until a new state of electrochemical equilibrium is reached; this occurs when the ratio of K+ concentration (on side 2 to that on side 1) is equal to the ratio of Cl− concentration (on side 1 to that on side 2). Stated mathematically, equilibrium is reached when
This is known as the Donnan equilibrium, after Frederick George Donnan, a British chemist who, in 1911, first measured the changes brought about by adding an impermeant substance to one side of a divided solution at equilibrium.
In the new state of equilibrium, both sides are electrically neutral, since the impermeant anions added to side 1 are equaled by the added K+, and the K+ that has diffused to side 2 is balanced by the Cl− electrostatically drawn along with it. But the entire solution is not at osmotic equilibrium, because the larger amount of ions on side 1 tends to draw water from side 2. Osmotic equilibrium can be established by the addition of ions to side 2. Indeed, in the neuron, osmotic equilibrium is maintained partly because large amounts of K+ and impermeant anions inside the cell are balanced by large amounts of salt outside the cell.