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sodium - dependent glucose cotransporters as an example of indirect act…

Question

sodium - dependent glucose cotransporters as an example of indirect active transport (b2.1.16)
sodium - potassium pumps as an example of exchange transporters (b2.1.15)
gated ion channels in neurons (b2.1.14)
outline the function of the following, include examples

functionexamples
ligand gated ion channels
anti transporter
secondary active transporter

Explanation:

Brief Explanations
  1. Voltage - gated ion channels: Function: Open or close in response to changes in membrane potential. Allows specific ions (e.g., Na⁺, K⁺, Ca²⁺) to flow across the cell membrane, which is crucial for generating and propagating action potentials in neurons and muscle cells. Example: Sodium voltage - gated channels in neurons open during the depolarization phase of an action potential, allowing Na⁺ ions to rush into the cell.
  2. Ligand - gated ion channels: Function: Open or close when a specific ligand (such as a neurotransmitter) binds to the channel protein. This allows ions to pass through, changing the electrical potential of the cell. Example: The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor is a ligand - gated ion channel in the neuromuscular junction. When acetylcholine binds to it, it opens to allow Na⁺ ions to enter the muscle cell, leading to depolarization.
  3. Anti - transporter: Function: Moves two or more different ions or molecules in opposite directions across the cell membrane. It is a type of secondary active transport that uses the energy from an electrochemical gradient of one substance to move another substance against its concentration gradient. Example: The sodium - calcium exchanger in cardiac muscle cells moves 3 Na⁺ ions into the cell and 1 Ca²⁺ ion out of the cell, using the sodium electrochemical gradient.
  4. Secondary Active Transporter: Function: Uses the energy from an established electrochemical gradient (usually of Na⁺ or H⁺) to transport other substances against their concentration gradients. It can be symport (both substances move in the same direction) or antiport (substances move in opposite directions). Example: Sodium - dependent glucose cotransporters (SGLT) are secondary active transporters that use the sodium gradient to move glucose into cells, such as in the intestinal epithelium and kidney tubules.

Answer:

FunctionExamples
Ligand gated ion channelsOpen/close upon ligand binding, allow ion flow to change cell potentialNicotinic acetylcholine receptor in neuromuscular junction
Anti - transporterMove substances in opposite directions using electrochemical gradientSodium - calcium exchanger in cardiac muscle cells
Secondary Active transporterUse established electrochemical gradient to transport substances against gradientSodium - dependent glucose cotransporters (SGLT)