Q.64 Resting membrane potential is conducted by: A. Active transport B. Selective permeability of phospholipid bilayer C. Passive diffusion across lipid bilayer D. Differential distribution of ions across membrane Choose the correct answer from the options given below. A, B and D only B, C and D only A, B and C only A, C and D only

Q.64 Resting membrane potential is conducted by:

A. Active transport
B. Selective permeability of phospholipid bilayer
C. Passive diffusion across lipid bilayer
D. Differential distribution of ions across membrane

Choose the correct answer from the options given below.

  1. A, B and D only
  2. B, C and D only
  3. A, B and C only
  4. A, C and D only

    Resting membrane potential arises primarily from ion concentration gradients and selective membrane permeability, with the Na+/K+ pump maintaining these gradients. The correct answer is B, C, and D only.

    Option Analysis

    • A. Active transport: Partially involved but not directly “conducted by” it. The Na+/K+ ATPase pump uses active transport to establish ion gradients (high K+ inside, high Na+ outside), but the potential itself results from passive ion movements down these gradients.

    • B. Selective permeability of phospholipid bilayer: True. The bilayer is more permeable to K+ than Na+ due to leak channels, allowing K+ efflux that drives the negative potential (~-70 mV).

    • C. Passive diffusion across lipid bilayer: True. K+ and other ions diffuse passively through channels (not directly across the bilayer for charged ions, but via lipid-soluble paths and channels), contributing to the equilibrium.

    • D. Differential distribution of ions across membrane: True. Unequal ion concentrations (e.g., [K+] high inside, [Na+] high outside) create electrochemical gradients essential for the potential, per the Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation.

    Introduction to Resting Membrane Potential

    Resting membrane potential conducted by ion gradients and permeability is fundamental in neurons and excitable cells. This ~ -70 mV charge difference (inside negative) enables action potentials. It relies on K+, Na+, and Cl- distributions with membrane properties.

    Role of Selective Permeability

    The phospholipid bilayer’s selective permeability favors K+ leak channels over Na+, allowing K+ efflux. This permeability difference dominates the potential via Nernst equilibrium for K+ (~ -90 mV), balanced slightly by Na+ influx.

    Passive Diffusion Mechanism

    Passive diffusion across lipid bilayer (via channels) lets ions follow gradients: K+ out, contributing negativity; minor Na+ in. No energy required, unlike pumps; this diffusion establishes steady-state potential.

    Ion Distribution and Active Maintenance

    Differential distribution of ions (high intracellular K+, extracellular Na+) creates driving forces. Na+/K+ pump (active transport) sustains gradients indirectly, but potential is “conducted” by passive factors.

    Exam Insights for Biology Students

    In questions like “Resting membrane potential is conducted by,” B, C, D hold as core mechanisms; A supports but isn’t primary. Key for GATE Life Sciences, NEET prep on electrophysiology.

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