Answer:
A membrane channel that opens when some chemical binds to it, allowing sodium to cross the cell
Step-by-step explanation:
Chemically gated sodium channels are transmembrane channel proteins which let sodium ion pass through the membrane when a ligand like a neurotransmitter binds to it.
On exciting a presynaptic neuron, it releases neurotransmitter from vesicles into synaptic cleft. The neurotransmitter binds to receptors present on post synaptic neuron. If the receptors are chemically gated channels, they undergo a confirmational change due to which they open. The ions can then flow across these channels.
The channels are made of at least two domains. There is a transmembrane domain containing a pore through which ions can pass through. There is also an extracellular domain which binds to the ligand.