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BIOA01 MODULE 1 Lec 07
Lecture 7 Module 1 Cell membranes
36
Biology
Undergraduate 1
09/28/2013

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Term
Why are membranes important for living organisms?
Definition

They seperate cell interior from external environment 

 

They enclose organelles inside cells - concentrate molecules

 

They make cells and organelles selectively permeable

Term
Read and look at the fluid mosaic model page 4 lecture 07
Definition
page 4 lecture 07
Term

List what is composed in a phospholipid (its structure)

List whether its hydrophilic, or hydrophobic

 

What does ampiphipathic mean?

Definition

Polar Unit, Phosphate group and Glycerol make up the HYDROPHILIC head

 

The Fatty acid chains make up the HYDROPHOBIC tail

 

 

Amphipathic means that the structure has both a hydrophilic and hydrophobic region

Term
What is the hydrophobic effect?
Definition

The hydrophobic effect is the tendency of polar molecules like water to exclude hydrophobic molecules (repel, non polar molecules aggregate)

 

 

Term

Look at lec 7 pg 6 and remember what micelle and stuff look like

 

Look at pg 7 and remember the frye-edinin expirement! (Youtube if have to)

Definition
micelle
Term
What makes a more fluid cell membrane?
Definition

All fatty acids start out as saturated (ONLY single bonds)

 

A more fluid cell membrane is an unsaturated cell membrane. (Has double bonds and maybe triple) C=C instead of C-C. AND THE ELEMENTS ARE C AND H

Term

Can organisms regulate their fatty acid saturation (Cell membrane fluidity)?

 

How?

Definition

Yes they can.

 

They do this by regulating the proportion of unsaturated fatty acids via the desaturase transcript.

 

Decrease the temperature -> Increase the desaturase mRNA -> Increase unsaturated fatty acids.

 

TL;DR The lower the temp, the higher the fluidity. 

Term

What do sterols do?

 

What are their three main parts?

Definition

Sterols act as membrane buffers 

 

At high temperatures they help restrain movement of lipids

 

At low temperatures they disrupt fatty acid association

 

 

 

Sterols have a hydrophilic end (OH group)

Hydrophobic end

Hydrophobic tail - Pg.11 for diagram

Term

Pg 13 lec 7

 

memorize this model!

Definition
pg 13
Term

What are integral membrane protein?

 

What are they also called?

Definition

Integral membrane protein traverse the lipid bilayer 

 

They have three distinct domains : Extracellular (outside cell), Transmembrane (TM), and Intracellular (Cytoplasmic)

 

The TM domain is a stretch of 17-20 nonpolar amino acids that form an alpha helix

 

They are also called transmembrane protein. Remember INtegral are IN the cell membrane

 

 

Term

What are peripheral membrane protein?

 

How do they stay attached to the cell?

Definition

Peripheral are positioned on the membrane surface - THEY ARE OUTSIDE OF THE CELL MEMBRANE. = Do not interact with the hydrophobic section

 

 

They are held to the membrane by interacting with integral membrane protein or lipids

 

 

Term
What are the four functions of membrane protein?
Definition

1. Transport

2. Enzymatic activity

3. Signal Transduction

4. Attachment

Term

Why do we need transport through the cell membrane?

 

What are the two main types of transports and their subtypes?

Definition

Hydrophobic nature of membrane prevents free movement of molecules.

 

O2 can diffuse in, but Ions, macromolecules etc cannot come in.

 

1. Active Transport

a) Primary

b) Secondary

 

2. Passive transport

a) Simple

b) Facilitated

Term
What is passive transport? How does it do what it does?
Definition

Passive transport is movement across a membrane without using energy

 

It does this via diffusion : A net movement of a substance from a higher concentration to a lower concentration.

 

Rate of diffusion depends on how large the concentration gradient is ; The higher the gradient, the faster the rate.

Term

What is simple diffusion?

 

 

Definition

Simple diffusion is the movement of things through the membrane without the use of a transporter 

 

Rate depends on molecular size and lipid solubility

 

Nonpolar molecules can use

Small polar uncharged molecules can use

Large polar unchared molecules cannot use

Ions cannot use

Term
What is osmosis?
Definition
Osmosis is the diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane from a solution of lesser solute concentration to a solution of greater solute concentration. (Solute = NOT water)
Term

What is facilitated diffusion?

 

What are the two things that help this type of diffusion?

Definition

Facilitated diffusion is a form of passive transport that uses a transmembrane protein.

 

1. Channel Protein 

- Form hydrophilic pathways in the membrane

- Molecules are shielded from hydrophobic core of bilayer

- Transport of water and ions ( Aquaporin - water, voltage gated channels - ions )

 

2. Carrier proteins

 

Both of those are integral protein

Term

What are aquaporin?

 

Definition

Aquaporin are highly specific channel protein that do not allow ions to pass through. They do this by a positive charges in its centre repelling transport of protons.

 

They only let water through, at a single file line. This is through a VERY narrow channel.

Term
What are voltage gated channel protein?
Definition

They are channel protein that move ions (Na+, K+ Cl-)

 

They OPEN and CLOSE through changes in their protein shape

 

They take part in helping in nerve conduction and muscle contraction 

Term
Carrier protein - How do they work?
Definition

1) Protein binding site exposed to region of higher concentration

2) Solute molecule binds to protein

3) Protein change shape, binding site now exposed to lower concentration region

4) Solute molecules is released to lower concentration site, and protein changes shape back to where its site faces higher concentration region

Term
What does the rate of facilitated diffuse depend on?
Definition

1. Size of concentration gradient

2. Number of channel and carrier protein in membrane

Term

What is active transport?

 

What are its three main functions?

 

What are its two main classes?

Definition

Active transport is transport of a molecule across a membrane AGAINST a concentration gradient therefore requiring energy

 

Almost 25% of a cell's ATP is used for active transport 

 

Functions :

1) Uptake of essential nutrients

2) Removal of secretary or waste materials

3) Maintenance of intracellular concentration of ions 

(H+, Na+, K+, Ca2+)

 

Two main classes : 1) Primary actve transport,  2)Secondary active trasport

Term

What is Primary active transport?

 

What do they only transport?

Definition

Primary active transport - Transports a substance and also hydrolizes ATP to power its own transport

 

ALL primary active transport proteins transport ONLY positively charged ions

 

H+ pumps pushes hydrogen ions from cytoplasm to outside of cell membrane - Keeping lysosome PH low, also generate membrane potential

 

Ca2+ pumps Calcium ions from cytoplasm to the cell 

exterior and from the cystol to the ER

 

NA+ / K+ pumps - Pushes 3 Na+ ions out and 2 K+ ions in creating a membrane potential (Voltage)

Term

What is secondary active transport?

 

What are the two types of secondary active transports? Briefly describe?

Definition

Transport proteins use ion concentration (caused by primary transport) to transport another molecule

 

IE. Concentration gradient of Phosphate, transports Mercury (not a real world example!)

 

1) Symport - Transports driving ion from higher concentration to lower concentration , also brings the target solute from low to high concentration (TOGETHER)

 

2) Antiport - Transports driving ion from higher concentration to lower concentration, which brings target solute from higher concentration to lower concentration (Opposite)

 

What's high concentration for one substance will be low for the other substance and vice versa! 

Term
PAGE 33 NEED TO SOLVE THIS (FILL THE BLANKS)
Definition
PAGE 33
Term
PAGE 33 NEED TO SOLVE THIS (FILL THE BLANKS)
Definition
PAGE 33
Term

Explain exocytosis

 

 

Definition

Exocytosis is a form of transportation to the outside of a cell

 

1) Secretory Vesicle approaches a cell membrane

2) Vesicle fuses with cell membrane

3) Protein inside vesicle are released and proteins attached to vesicle are part of membrane now

Term
Explain pinocytosis
Definition

Pinocytosis is a bulk/fluid phase form of endocytosis

 

1) Solute molecules and water molecules are outside of cell membrane

2) Cell membrane pockets inwards and encloses the solute and water molecules 

3) Pocket piches off as endocytotic vesicle

 

 

Term
Receptor mediated endocytosis - Explain it
Definition

1) Substances attach to membrane receptors 

2) Membrane pockets inwards

3) Pocket pinches off as endocytotic vesicle

Term

pg 37 for junction types

 

Definition
pg 37
Term

Membrane protein respond to environmental stimuli

 

Definition

1) Ligand attatches to cell receptor, causing a signal

2) Different molecules transfer the signal in a chain down a pathway 

3) Signal finally hits the molecule that causes a response

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