Steady state (biochemistry)

In ionic steady state, cells maintain different internal and external concentrations of various ionic species.[1]

Cells are said to be in a steady state, NOT in an equilibrium. This means that there is a differential distribution of ions on either side of the cell membrane - that is, the amount of ions either side is not equal and therefore a charge separation exists. However, ions move across the cell membrane and almost constantly maintain a resting membrane potential; this is known as 'steady state.'

References

  1. http://www.okcu.edu/biology/BIOL3403/diffusion.pdf


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