Plasma Membranes

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CN: PAGE 22 EQ: HOW DOES THE STRUCTURE OF A MEMBRANE ENABLE IT TO CONTROL WHAT GOES IN & OUT OF CELL Plasma Membranes

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Plasma Membranes. CN: page 22 Eq : How does the structure of a membrane enable it to control what goes in & out of cell. EARLY FLUID MOSAIC MODEL. UPDATED MODEL of ANIMAL CELL PLASMA MEMBRANE. PHOSPHOLIPID BILAYER. HOW TO MAKE A PHOSPHOLIPID. GLYCEROL . + phosphate group = “head”. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Plasma Membranes

Page 1: Plasma Membranes

CN: PAGE 22EQ: HOW DOES THE

STRUCTURE OF A MEMBRANE ENABLE IT TO CONTROL WHAT GOES IN &

OUT OF CELL

Plasma Membranes

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EARLY FLUID MOSAIC MODEL

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UPDATED MODEL of ANIMAL CELL PLASMA MEMBRANE

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PHOSPHOLIPID BILAYER

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HOW TO MAKE A PHOSPHOLIPID

GLYCEROL

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+ phosphate group = “head”

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+ 2 fatty acid “tails”

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PHOSPHOLIPID

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Fluidity of Membranes

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Fluidity in Membranes

the more unsaturated tails the more fluid the membrane (cannot pack the tails as close together as straight saturated tails)

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Fluidity in Membranes: Cholesterol

only in animal cell membraneswedged in between hydrophobic tails

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Cholesterol in Membranes

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Cholesterol’s Effect

@ 37ºC cholesterol makes membrane less fluid by restraining phospholipid movement

lowers temp required for membrane to solidify

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Membrane Proteins

>50 membrane proteins 2 main categories:1. Integral Proteins

penetrate the hydrophobic inside of lipid bilayer

most are transmembrane proteins2. Peripheral Proteins

appendages loosely bound to either surface

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Membrane Proteins

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Membrane Proteins

on cytoplasmic side some proteins held in place by attachment to cytoskeleton

on ECF side some proteins attached to fibers in extracellular matrix

both give animal cells stronger framework

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Major Functions of Membrane Proteins

1. TRANSPORT provides hydrophilic channel thru

hydrophobic interior of lipid bilayer some use passive some active transport

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Transport Proteins

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Major Functions of Membrane Proteins

2. ENZYMATIC ACTIVITYall enzymes are proteins so a membrane

protein could have all or part of its structure function as an enzyme

in some membranes several enzymes organized to carry out sequential steps in a metabolic pathway

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Membrane Protein as Enzyme

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Major Functions of Membrane Proteins

3. SIGNAL TRANSDUCTIONmembrane protein acts as receptor has

binding site with specific shape that exactly fits shape of the chemical messenger (signal molecule or ligand)

when signal enters receptor site usually the membrane protein changes shape (configuration) which relays message into cell, usually binding to a cytoplasmic protein

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Signal Transduction

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Major Functions of Membrane Proteins

4. CELL-CELL RECOGNITIONsome glycoproteins act as ID tags

recognized by membrane proteins of other cells which may bind to them

attachment short-lived

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Cell-Cell Recognition

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Major Functions of Membrane Proteins

5. INTERCELLULAR JOININGmembrane proteins of adjacent cells may

hook together in different types of cell jcts

tends to be long-lasting

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Cell Junctios

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Major Functions of Membrane Proteins

6. ANCHORINGcytoskeletal elements may be

noncovalently bound to membrane proteins: helps maintain cell shape & stabilizes location of membrane proteins

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Cell Surface Proteins

medically important:1. some pathogens use them to

adhere/enter cell2. some medications designed to take

advantage of using them

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Glycocalyx

glycoproteins + glycolipids usually ~15 sugar units

exterior surface of cell membranekey to cell-to-cell recognition

sorting cells in embryo Immune System

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Plasma Membrane Asymmetry

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like cell membrane exterior surface

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Selective Permeability

plasma membrane example of emergent properties: each individual membrane protein, lipid, or carb together become a “supermolecule”

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Selective Permeability

essential to cell’s existencesFluid Mosaic Model helps explain how

regulation occurs

24/7 steady stream on ions & small molecules in/out cell; each at their own rate

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Selective Permeability

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Selective Permeability

depends on:1. lipid bilayer2. specific transport protein built into

membrane

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Selective Permeability

In general:small, nonpolar molecules get inions and polar molecules don’t get in

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Transport Proteins

hydrophilic substances get thru hydrophobic lipid bilayer by going thru center of a transmembrane, transport protein

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Channel Proteins

hydrophilic channel hydrophobic a.a. in portion of protein

that interfaces with lipid bilayerAquaporins: allow water molecules to

crosschannel open, allows up to 3 billion

water molecules/swater follows its concentration

gradient by osmosis

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Aquaporins

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Carrier Proteins

attach to their “passenger” change in shape so that passenger is shuttled thru membrane

very specific: 1 substance or small group of similar substances

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Passive Transport

is diffusion of substance across membrane w/no nrg investment

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Diffusion

In the absence of other forces, a substance will diffuse from where it is more concentrated to where it is less concentrated. (it will move down its concentration gradient)

No work required: spontaneous because particles have KE and are in constant motion ex: O2 & CO2

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Osmosis

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Isotonic Solutions

concentration of solutes same inside as outside cell

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Hypotonic & Hypertonic Solutionsw/out a Cell Wall

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Facilitated Diffusion

channel or carrier proteins that allow hydrophilic substances to cross membranes moving down their concentration gradients

if transport ions called ion channelsmany are Gated Ion Channels

open/close mechanism works in response to stimuli (electrical, specific ligand)

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Facilitated Diffusion

http://programs.northlandcollege.edu/biology/Biology1111/animations/passive3.swf

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Gated Ion Channels

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Glucose Transporters

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Cystinuria

example of disorder due to absence of carrier protein for cysteine & other a.a. in kidney cells

normally a.a. reabsorbed in kidneys using carrier proteins

in this disorder the a.a. accumulate kidney stones

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Active Transport

moves substances against their concentration gradient

requires energyallows cell to maintain concentration

gradients

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Na+/K+/ATPase Pump

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How Ion Pumps Maintain Membrane Potential

all cells have voltages across the plasma membrane

(-) because cytoplasmic side (-) relative to ECF side

overall inside/outside cell neutral but just inside (-) & just outside (+)

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Membrane Potential

like any battery has potential energy cell uses it to control movement of all

charged particles across plasma membrane

inside (-) compared to outside so passive movement of cations into cell & anions out of cell favored

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Ions Move Down Electrochemical Gradient

2 forces drive diffusion:1. chemical gradient

concentration gradient2. electrical gradient

cations move into cell, anions out

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Example: Absorption in Small Intestine

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Electrogenic Pumps

transport protein that generates voltage across a membrane

major one in animal cells is Na+/K+/ATPase pump

major one in plants, fungi, & bacteria is a proton pumpactively transports protons (H+) out of

cells increases + charge outside and

increases – charge inside cell

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Proton Pumps

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Electrogenic Pumps

by generating voltage across a membrane potential energy is increasedcan be used for cellular workused in mitochondria to make ATPused in cotransport

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cotransport

a substance that has been pumped against its concentration gradient holds potential energy

that energy can be used to do work as it moves back across the membrane down its concentration gradient

2nd protein (not the pump) called a cotransporter can couple the downhill diffusion this substance with a 2nd substance moving up its own concentration gradient

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cotransporters

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Bulk Transport Across the Membrane

used by large macromolecules or large volumes of smaller molecules

1. Exocytosis2. Endocytosis

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Exocytosis

transport vesicles from Golgi move along microtubules to plasma membrane

membrane of vesicle comes in contact with plasma membrane

proteins in membranes rearrange lipids in vesicle membrane & plasma membrane so that they fuse

contents released into ECF

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Exocytosis

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Exocytosis

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Endocytosis

cell takes in substances vesicle made with membrane from cell membrane

uses different membrane proteins than in exocytosis but looks like reverse of exocytosis

3 types:1. phagocytosis2. pinocytosis3. receptor-mediated endocytosis

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Phagocytosis

“cell-eating”wraps pseudopods around substance

creating a membranous sac = food vacuole lysosome to be digested

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Pinocytosis

“cell-drinking”cell takes “gulps” of ECF for solutesnonspecific

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Receptor-Mediated Endocytosis

allows cells to take in specifically what it needs

specific ligands bind to specific membrane proteins

receptor proteins with ligands in place cluster together into “coated pits” (on cytoplasmic side)

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