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Cellular Physiology and Neurophysiology. Mosby Physiology Series. Edition No. 3. Mosby's Physiology Monograph

  • Book

  • June 2019
  • Elsevier Health Science
  • ID: 4659948
Gain a foundational understanding of complex physiology concepts with this thoroughly revised text. Cellular Physiology and Neurophysiology, a volume in the Mosby Physiology Series, explains the fundamentals of these multi-faceted areas in a clear and concise manner. It helps bridge the gap between basic biochemistry, molecular and cell biology, and neuroscience, and organ and systems physiology, providing the rich, clinically oriented coverage needed to master the latest concepts in neuroscience and how cells function in health and disease.

- Helps you easily master the material in a systems-based curriculum with learning objectives, Clinical Concept boxes, highlighted key words and concepts, chapter summaries, self-study questions, and a comprehensive exam.
- Focuses on clinical implications with frequent examples from systems physiology, pharmacology, and pathophysiology.
- Provides a solid depiction of transport processes?an integral topic often treated superficially in other cell biology texts.
- Enhanced eBook version included with purchase. Your enhanced eBook allows you to access all of the text, figures, and references from the book on a variety of devices.

Complete the Mosby Physiology Series! Systems-based and portable, these titles are ideal for integrated programs.

- White, Harrison, & Mehlmann: Endocrine and Reproductive Physiology
- Johnson: Gastrointestinal Physiology
- Koeppen & Stanton: Renal Physiology
- Cloutier: Respiratory Physiology
- Pappano & Weir: Cardiovascular Physiology
- Hudnall: Hematology: A Pathophysiologic Approach

Table of Contents

SECTION I, Fundamental Physicochemical Concepts

CHAPTER 1, INTRODUCTION: HOMEOSTASIS AND CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY

Homeostasis Enables the Body to Survive in Diverse Environments

The Body Is an Ensemble of Functionally and Spatially Distinct Compartments

Transport Processes Are Essential to Physiological Function

Cellular Physiology Focuses on Membrane-Mediated Processes and on Muscle Function

Summary

Key Words and Concepts

CHAPTER 2, DIFFUSION AND PERMEABILITY

Diffusion Is the Migration of Molecules down a Concentration Gradient

Fick's First Law of Diffusion Summarizes our Intuitive Understanding of Diffusion

Essential Aspects of Diffusion Are Revealed by Quantitative Examination of Random, Microscopic Movements of Molecules

Fick's First Law Can Be Used to Describe Diffusion across a Membrane Barrier

Summary

Key Words and Concepts

Study Problems

CHAPTER 3, OSMOTIC PRESSURE AND WATER MOVEMENT

Osmosis Is the Transport of Solvent Driven by a Difference in Solute Concentration Across a Membrane That Is Impermeable to Solute

Water Transport during Osmosis Leads to Changes in Volume

Osmotic Pressure Drives the Net Transport of Water during Osmosis

Osmotic Pressure and Hydrostatic Pressure Are Functionally Equivalent in Their Ability to Drive Water Movement Through a Membrane

Only Impermeant Solutes Can Have Permanent Osmotic Effects

Summary

Key Words and Concepts

Study Problems

CHAPTER 4, ELECTRICAL CONSEQUENCES OF IONIC GRADIENTS

Ions Are Typically Present at Different Concentrations on Opposite Sides of a Biomembrane

Selective Ionic Permeability Through Membranes Has Electrical Consequences: The Nernst Equation

The Stable Resting Membrane Potential in a Living Cell Is Established by Balancing Multiple Ionic Fluxes

The Cell Can Change Its Membrane Potential by Selectively Changing Membrane Permeability to Certain Ions

The Donnan Effect Is an Osmotic Threat to Living Cells

Summary

Key Words and Concepts

Study Problems

SECTION II, Ion Channels and Excitable Membranes

CHAPTER 5, ION CHANNELS

Ion Channels Are Critical Determinants of the Electrical Behavior of Membranes

Distinct Types of Ion Channels Have Several Common Properties

Ion Channels Share Structural Similarities and Can Be Grouped into Gene Families

Summary

Key Words and Concepts

Study Problems

CHAPTER 6, PASSIVE ELECTRICAL PROPERTIES OF MEMBRANES

The Time Course and Spread of Membrane Potential Changes Are Predicted by the Passive Electrical Properties of the Membrane

The Equivalent Circuit of a Membrane Has a Resistor in Parallel with a Capacitor

Passive Membrane Properties Produce Linear Current-Voltage Relationships

Membrane Capacitance Affects the Time Course of Voltage Changes

Membrane and Axoplasmic Resistances Affect the Passive Spread of Subthreshold Electrical Signals

Summary

Key Words and Concepts

Study Problems

CHAPTER 7, GENERATION AND PROPAGATION OF THE ACTION POTENTIAL

The Action Potential Is a Rapid and Transient Depolarization of the Membrane Potential in Electrically Excitable Cells

Ion Channel Function Is Studied with a Voltage Clamp

Individual Ion Channels Have Two Conductance Levels

Na+ Channels Inactivate during Maintained Depolarization

Action Potentials Are Generated by Voltage-Gated Na+ and K+ Channels

Action Potential Propagation Occurs as a Result of Local Circuit Currents

Summary

Key Words and Concepts

Study Problems

CHAPTER 8, ION CHANNEL DIVERSITY

Various Types of Ion Channels Help to Regulate Cellular Processes

Voltage-Gated Ca2+ Channels Contribute to Electrical Activity and Mediate Ca2+ Entry into Cells

Many Members of the Transient Receptor Potential Superfamily of Channels Mediate Ca2+ Entry

K+-Selective Channels Are the Most Diverse Type of Channel

Ion Channel Activity Can Be Regulated by Second-Messenger Pathways

Summary

Key Words and Concepts

Study Problems

SECTION III, Solute Transport

CHAPTER 9, ELECTROCHEMICAL POTENTIAL ENERGY AND TRANSPORT PROCESSES

Electrochemical Potential Energy Drives All Transport Processes

Summary

Key Words and Concepts

Study Problems

CHAPTER 10, PASSIVE SOLUTE TRANSPORT

Diffusion across Biological Membranes Is Limited by Lipid Solubility

Channel, Carrier, and Pump Proteins Mediate Transport across Biological Membranes

Carriers Are Integral Membrane Proteins That Open to Only One Side of the Membrane at a Time

Coupling the Transport of One Solute to the "Downhill" Transport of Another Solute Enables Carriers to Move the Cotransported or Countertransported Solute "Uphill" against an Electrochemical Gradient

Net Transport of Some Solutes across Epithelia Is Effected by Coupling Two Transport Processes in Series

Na+ Is Exchanged for Solutes Such as Ca2+ and H+ by Countertransport Mechanisms

Multiple Transport Systems Can Be Functionally Coupled

Summary

Key Words and Concepts

Study Problems

CHAPTER 11, ACTIVE TRANSPORT

Primary Active Transport Converts the Chemical Energy from ATP into Electrochemical Potential Energy Stored in Solute Gradients

The Plasma Membrane Na+ Pump (Na+, K+-ATPase) Maintains the Low Na+ and High K+ Concentrations in the Cytosol

Intracellular Ca2+ Signaling Is Universal and Is Closely Tied to Ca2+ Homeostasis

Several Other Plasma Membrane Transport ATPases Are Physiologically Important

Net Transport across Epithelial Cells Depends on the Coupling of Apical and Basolateral Membrane Transport Systems

Summary

Key Words and Concepts

Study Problems

SECTION IV, Physiology of Synaptic Transmission

CHAPTER 12, SYNAPTIC PHYSIOLOGY I

The Synapse Is a Junction Between Cells That Is Specialized for Cell-Cell Signaling

Neurons Communicate with Other Neurons and with Muscle by Releasing Neurotransmitters

The Synaptic Vesicle Cycle Is a Precisely Choreographed Process for Delivering Neurotransmitter into the Synaptic Cleft

Short-Term Synaptic Plasticity Is a Transient, Use-Dependent Change in the Efficacy of Synaptic Transmission

Summary

Key Words and Concepts

Study Problems

CHAPTER 13, SYNAPTIC PHYSIOLOGY II

Chemical Synapses Afford Specificity, Variety, and Fine Tuning of Neurotransmission

Receptors Mediate the Actions of Neurotransmitters in Postsynaptic Cells

Acetylcholine Receptors Can Be Ionotropic or Metabotropic

Amino Acid Neurotransmitters Mediate Many Excitatory and Inhibitory Responses in the Brain

Neurotransmitters That Bind to Ionotropic Receptors Cause Membrane Conductance Changes

Biogenic Amines, Purines, and Neuropeptides Are Important Classes of Transmitters with a Wide Spectrum of Actions

Unconventional Neurotransmitters Modulate Many Complex Physiological Responses

Long-Term Synaptic Potentiation and Depression Are Persistent Changes in the Efficacy of Synaptic Transmission Induced by Neural Activity

Summary

Key Words and Concepts

Study Problems

SECTION V, Molecular Motors and Muscle Contraction

CHAPTER 14, MOLECULAR MOTORS AND THE MECHANISM OF MUSCLE CONTRACTION

Molecular Motors Produce Movement by Converting Chemical Energy into Kinetic Energy

Single Skeletal Muscle Fibers Are Composed of Many Myofibrils

The Sarcomere Is the Basic Unit of Contraction in Skeletal Muscle

Muscle Contraction Results from Thick and Thin Filaments Sliding Past Each Other (The "Sliding Filament" Mechanism)

The Cross-Bridge Cycle Powers Muscle Contraction

In Skeletal and Cardiac Muscles, Ca2+ Activates Contraction by Binding to the Regulatory Protein Troponin C

The Structure and Function of Cardiac Muscle and Smooth Muscle Are Distinctly Different from Those of Skeletal Muscle

Summary

Key Words and Concepts

Study Problems

CHAPTER 15, EXCITATION-CONTRACTION COUPLING IN MUSCLE

Skeletal Muscle Contraction Is Initiated by a Depolarization of the Surface Membrane

Direct Mechanical Interaction Between Sarcolemmal and Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Membrane Proteins Mediates Excitation-Contraction Coupling in Skeletal Muscle

Ca2+-Induced Ca2+ Release Is Central to Excitation-Contraction Coupling in Cardiac MuscleSmooth Muscle Excitation-Contraction Coupling Is Fundamentally Different from That in Skeletal and Cardiac Muscles

Summary

Key Words and Concepts

Study Problems

CHAPTER 16, MECHANICS OF MUSCLE CONTRACTION

The Total Force Generated by a Skeletal Muscle Can Be Varied

Skeletal Muscle Mechanics Is Characterized by Two Fundamental Relationships

There Are Three Types of Skeletal Muscle Motor Units

The Force Generated by Cardiac Muscle Is Regulated by Mechanisms That Control Intracellular Ca2+

Mechanical Properties of Cardiac and Skeletal Muscle Are Similar but Quantitatively Different

Dynamics of Smooth Muscle Contraction Differ Markedly from Those of Skeletal and Cardiac Muscle

The Relationships among Intracellular Ca2+, Myosin Light Chain Phosphorylation, and Force in Smooth Muscles Is Complex

Summary

Key Words and Concepts

Study Problems

SEction VI Epilogue and Appendicies

EPILOGUE

APPENDIX A, ABBREVIATIONS, SYMBOLS, AND NUMERICAL CONSTANTS

Abbreviations

Symbols

Numerical Constants

APPENDIX B, A MATHEMATICAL REFRESHER

Exponents

Logarithms

Solving Quadratic Equations

Differentiation and Derivatives

Integration: The Antiderivative and the Definite Integral

Differential Equations

APPENDIX C, ROOT-MEAN-SQUARED DISPLACEMENT OF DIFFUSING MOLECULES

APPENDIX D, SUMMARY OF ELEMENTARY CIRCUIT THEORY

Cell Membranes Are Modeled with Electrical Circuits

Definitions of Electrical Parameters

Current Flow in Simple Circuits

APPENDIX E, ANSWERS TO STUDY PROBLEMS

APPENDIX F, REVIEW EXAMINATION

Answers to Review Examination

Authors

Mordecai P. Blaustein Professor & Chairman, Department of Physiology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD. Joseph P. Y. Kao Associate Professor, Department of Physiology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD. Donald R. Matteson Associate Professor, Department of Physiology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.