The Plasma Membrane Membrane Transport. Figure 5.1.

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The Plasma Membrane Membrane Transport

Transcript of The Plasma Membrane Membrane Transport. Figure 5.1.

Page 1: The Plasma Membrane Membrane Transport. Figure 5.1.

The Plasma Membrane

Membrane Transport

Page 2: The Plasma Membrane Membrane Transport. Figure 5.1.

Figure 5.1

Page 3: The Plasma Membrane Membrane Transport. Figure 5.1.

The Fluid Mosaic Model

• Phospholipids- the main “fabric”– amphipathic= they have both hydrophilic AND a

hydrophobic regions• Proteins- embedded in the phospholipid

membrane– Also amphipathic– Determine the function of the membrane– Proteins are not distributed randomly or evenly,

but rather according to function

Page 4: The Plasma Membrane Membrane Transport. Figure 5.1.

How fluid is fluid?

• The membrane is held together my hydrophobic interactions-weaker than covalent bonds

• Constant lateral movement• Proteins larger than lipids therefore move

more slowly

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Viscosity

• A measure of a fluid’s resistance to flow; how “thick” or “sticky” it is

• Due to molecular makeup and internal friction• Honey is more viscous than water

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What determines a membrane’s viscosity?

• Hydrocarbon tails on its phospholipids– Saturated- more viscous– Unsaturated- less viscous, more fluid

• Temperature– Decrease in temp more viscous; may eventually

solidify – Increase in temp less viscous; too fluid, cannot

support proteins and their function

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What determines a membrane’s viscosity?

• Cholesterol- helps membranes resist changes in fluidity with changes in temperature – High temps- restricts movement of phospholipids– Low temps- prevents phospholipids from packing

together

• Evolution– Membrane composition evolves to meet specific

environmental needs• Cold

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Figure 5.5

Fluid

Unsaturated tails preventpacking.

Cholesterol

Viscous

Saturated tails packtogether.

(a) Unsaturated versus saturated hydrocarbon tails

(b) Cholesterol reducesmembrane fluidity atmoderate temperatures,but at low temperatureshinders solidification.

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What determines a membrane’s viscosity?

• Evolution– Membrane composition evolves to meet specific

environmental needs• Cold water fish• Archea that live at 90°C (194°F)• Some alter their composition seasonally

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Membrane Proteins and Their Functions

• The proteins within the phospholipid bilayer determine the function of the membrane.

• Different cells different membrane proteins• Different organelles with a specific cell

different membrane proteins

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Two Major Types of Proteins

• Integral

• Peripheral

• Can you see the difference?

Page 12: The Plasma Membrane Membrane Transport. Figure 5.1.

Figure 5.2

Glyco-protein

Glycolipid

Fibers of extra-cellular matrix (ECM)

Carbohydrate

Cholesterol

Microfilamentsof cytoskeleton

Peripheralproteins Integral

protein

EXTRACELLULARSIDE OF

MEMBRANE

CYTOPLASMIC SIDE OF MEMBRANE

Page 13: The Plasma Membrane Membrane Transport. Figure 5.1.

Integral

• Penetrates the membrane– Transmembrane- through to both surfaces– Partially embedded- only exposed on one surface

• The embedded portions have hydrophobic amino acids, often in an α helix

• Some have hydrophilic channels through them to allow for passage of substances through the membrane

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Figure 5.6

N-terminus

C-terminus

helixCYTOPLASMICSIDE

EXTRACELLULARSIDE

Page 15: The Plasma Membrane Membrane Transport. Figure 5.1.

Peripheral

• Not embedded• Bound to either surface

– Extracellular matrix (outside)– Cytoskeletal elements (inside)

• Provide extra support for the membrane

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Figure 5.2

Glyco-protein

Glycolipid

Fibers of extra-cellular matrix (ECM)

Carbohydrate

Cholesterol

Microfilamentsof cytoskeleton

Peripheralproteins Integral

protein

EXTRACELLULARSIDE OF

MEMBRANE

CYTOPLASMIC SIDE OF MEMBRANE

Page 17: The Plasma Membrane Membrane Transport. Figure 5.1.

6 Major Functions of Plasma Membrane Proteins

1. Transport2. Enzymatic activity3. Attachment to the cytoskeleton and ECM4. Cell-cell recognition5. Intercellular joining6. Signal transduction

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Figure 5.7

Signalingmolecule

(a) Transport (b) Enzymatic activity

ATP

(c) Attachment to thecytoskeleton and extra-cellular matrix (ECM)

Receptor

(f) Signal transduction(e) Intercellular joining(d) Cell-cell recognition

Glyco-protein

Enzymes

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Membrane Carbohydrates• Cell-cell recognition• Can be covalent bound to either lipids or

proteins on the extracellular side of the membrane– Glycoproteins– Glycolipids

• Act as markers to distinguish cells– Ex. ABO blood types

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Membrane Synthesis

• Proteins and lipids- ER • Carbohydrates added –Golgi

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Selective permeability

• 2 aspects of “selectivity”– The membrane takes up some small ions and

molecules, but not others– Substances that are allowed through, do so at

different rates

• How does the membrane accomplish this selectivity?

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Figure 5.3

Hydrophobictail

Hydrophilichead

WATER

WATER

Form Follows Function

Page 23: The Plasma Membrane Membrane Transport. Figure 5.1.

• Nonpolar substances= hydrophobic– Cross easily– Ex. Hydrocarbons, CO2 ,O2

• Ions & polar substances= hydrophilic– Hard to pass– Ex. Glucose, H2O, Na+, Cl-

– Ions especially have a hard time as they tend to be surrounded by a “shell” of water molecules

Page 24: The Plasma Membrane Membrane Transport. Figure 5.1.

Transport Proteins

•Channel proteins vs. carrier proteins

– Channel proteins create a channel through which hydrophilic substances may pass. Ex. Aquaporins

– Carrier proteins hold onto substances, change shape and redeposit them on the other side

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Figure 5.14

[K] high

EXTRACELLULARFLUID

CYTOPLASM

[Na] low

[K] low[Na] high

ADP1 2

3

45

6

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Directionality of transport• Controlled by

– Passive transport• Diffusion• Osmosis• Facilitated diffusion

– Active transport• Ion pumps, membrane potential• Cotransport

– Bulk transport• Exocytosis• Endocytosis

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Active transport

• Moves substances against their gradient; from an area of low concentration to one of high concentration

• Requires energy- supplied by ATP• Allows cells to maintain a different

environment inside vs. outside the cell

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An example is the sodium- potassium pump

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Figure 5.14a

[K] high

EXTRACELLULARFLUID

CYTOPLASM

[Na] low

[K] low

[Na] high

21 Na binding stimulatesphosphorylation by ATP.

Cytoplasmic Na bindsto the sodium-potassiumpump. The affinity for Na

is high when the proteinhas this shape.

ADP

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The new shape has ahigh affinity for K, whichbinds on the extracellularside and triggers releaseof the phosphate group.

Figure 5.14b

43 Phosphorylation leadsto a change in proteinshape, reducing its affinityfor Na, which is releasedoutside.

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Figure 5.14c

65 Loss of the phosphategroup restores the protein’soriginal shape, which has alower affinity for K.

K is released; affinityfor Na is high again, andthe cycle repeats.

Page 32: The Plasma Membrane Membrane Transport. Figure 5.1.

Ion pumps maintain voltage across membranes

• Membrane potential= the voltage across a membrane

• Cytoplasmic side relatively negative• Creates electrical potential energy that drives

passive transport of cations into the cell and anions out

• Electrochemical gradient= chemical (concentration gradient) and electrical forces that drive diffusion across membranes

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Main electrogenic pumps

• Animals-– Sodium-potassium pump

• Plants-– Proton pump

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Figure 5.16

EXTRACELLULARFLUID

CYTOPLASM

Proton pump

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Cotransport

• A process by which one protein transports 2 molecules or ions at a time. It uses the diffusion of solute to force the other against it’s gradient.

• It does not use ATP directly, but often is coupled with an ion pump that does use ATP

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Figure 5.17

Sucrose

Proton pump

Sucrose-H

cotransporterDiffusion of H

Sucrose

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Bulk Transport

• Exocytosis• Endocytosis

– Phagocytosis– Pinocytosis– Receptor-mediated endocytosis

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Figure 5.18

Phagocytosis Pinocytosis Receptor-MediatedEndocytosis

ReceptorPlasmamembrane

Coatprotein

Coatedpit

CoatedvesicleFood

vacuole

“Food”or otherparticle

CYTOPLASM

Pseudopodium

Solutes

EXTRACELLULARFLUID