Chapter 7

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CHAPTER 7 MEMBRANE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION

Transcript of Chapter 7

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CHAPTER 7

MEMBRANE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION

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OVERVIEW

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FLUID MOSAICS

CONCEPT 7.1

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Phospholipids are amphipathic:Two regions.

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Fluid mosaic model: phospholipids + various proteins embedded

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Freeze-fracture supported theory.

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FLUIDITY OF MEMBRANES

Movement

Drifting

Flip-flop

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Temperature and type of fatty acids affect fluidity.

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Cholesterol molecules help maintain fluidity.

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MEMBRANE PROTEINS

Variety of proteins.

Determine most of membrane’s specific functions.

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SIX MAJOR FUNCTIONS (1-3)

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SIX MAJOR FUNCTIONS (4-6)

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SIDEDNESS OF MEMBRANESMembranes have distinct inside and outside determined when build by ER and Golgi

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SELECTIVE PERMEABILITY

CONCEPT 7.2

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PERMEABILITY

Material exchange controlled by membrane.

Hydrophobic (nonpolar) dissolve in lipid bilayer and pass through rapidly.

Polar molecules (sugars) do not cross easily.

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TRANSPORT PROTEINS

Allow passage of hydrophilic substances.

Channel proteins – hydrophilic channel used as a tunnel.

Aquaporins – facilitate passage of water.

Carrier proteins – change shape to move (specific for substance it moves.)

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PASSIVE TRANSPORT

CONCEPT 7.2

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Down concentration gradient.

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OSMOSIS

Diffusion of water.

Moves from area of lower solute concentration to an area of higher solute concentration.

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TONICITY

The ability of a solution to cause a cell to gain or lose water.

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TONICITY

Isotonic solution: Solute concentration is the same as that inside the cell; no net water movement across the plasma membrane

Hypertonic solution: Solute concentration is greater than that inside the cell; cell loses water

Hypotonic solution: Solute concentration is less than that inside the cell; cell gains water

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Osmoregulation, the control of water balance

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Facilitated diffusion.

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ACTIVE TRANSPORT

CONCEPT 7.4

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ACTIVE TRANSPORT

Needs energy.

Sodium-potassium pump is an example.

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Fig. 7-16-1

EXTRACELLULAR

FLUID [Na+] high [K+] low

Na+

Na+

Na+ [Na+] low[K+] high CYTOPLASM

Cytoplasmic Na+ binds to

the sodium-potassium pump. 1

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Na+ binding stimulatesphosphorylation by ATP.

Fig. 7-16-2

Na+

Na+

Na+

ATP P

ADP

2

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Fig. 7-16-3

Phosphorylation causesthe protein to change itsshape. Na+ is expelled tothe outside.

Na+

P

Na+ Na+

3

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Fig. 7-16-4

K+ binds on theextracellular side andtriggers release of thephosphate group.

P P

K+

K+

4

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Fig. 7-16-5

Loss of the phosphaterestores the protein’s originalshape.

K+

K+

5

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Fig. 7-16-6

K+ is released, and thecycle repeats.

K+

K+

6

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MEMBRANE POTENTIAL

Voltage difference of positive and negative ions.

Electrochemical gradient.

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Electrogenic pump: generates voltage across membrane.

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Cotransport

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BULK TRANSPORT

CONCEPT 7.5

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EXOCYTOSIS

Large release of materials in a transport vesicle.

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ENDOCYTOSIS

Taking in large molecules by forming vesicles.

Three Types:

• Phagocytosis• Pinocytosis• Receptor-mediated endocytosis.

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