AP Biology - Membrane Structure
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Transcript AP Biology - Membrane Structure
Membrane Structure
& Function
RAVEN & JOHNSON CHAPTER 5
CAMPBELL CHAPTER 8
Membrane Structure
Lipids (phospholipids) & proteins
They
are amphipathic – both
hydrophobic & hydrophilic
Fluid-mosaic model
(Singer &
Nicolson,
1972)
Fluidity
Held by weak hydrophobic interactions
Movement is lateral
Fluidity
Membrane must be fluid to work
properly
Cholesterol is wedged into
phospholipid tails – restrains
movement in warm temp (less fluid),
but also lowers solidifying temp
(more fluid)
Fluidity
Mosaic
Embedded proteins (over 50 types)
determine specific function of the
membrane
Integral proteins
Transmembrane
(-helical
amino acids) &
hydrophilic regions
Hydrophobic
Mosaic
Peripheral proteins
On the surface of membrane
Protein Functions
Cell Recognition
Crucial
Determined by surface molecules
(carbohydrates) on plasma membrane
Cell Recognition
Oligosaccharides (polysaccharide
fewer than 15 units) vary for
different types of cells
Used as
markers to
distinguish
Example
– A, B, AB, O
Molecular Movement
Hydrophobic molecules move
across easily
Hydrocarbons, CO2, O2
Hydrophilic have trouble moving
through hydrophobic core (ions,
polar molecules, water, glucose,
sugars)
Need transport proteins
(facilitated diffusion)
Molecular Movement
Proteins are specific to molecule it
transports
Function: move molecules across the
membrane that would not be able to do
so otherwise
Two types:
Molecular Movement
Molecular Movement
1) Channel Proteins
Water or small ions
If water, called aquaporins
If needs electrical or chemical
stimulus to open & close, called
gated channel
Molecular Movement
2) Other carrier proteins
Some
transport proteins change shape
to transport molecules
Molecular Movement
Review:
Passive transport (diffusion)
Active transport
Concentration gradient
Equilibrium
Osmosis
Hypertonic, Hypotonic, Isotonic ( &
what happens to the cell)
Molecular Movement
Molecular Movement
Molecular Movement
Animal cells need isotonic environment
If not, cells must adapt for
osmoregulation (water balance)
Ex – Paramecium’s
contractile vacuole
Active Transport
Against concentration gradient –
requires energy (ATP)
Ability to have cell with
concentrations very different from
surroundings
Ex) Animal cell has much K+ and
little Na+ compared to
surroundings
Active Transport
Accomplished by membrane proteins
ATP
transfers P to transport protein,
protein changes shape, molecule
moves in or out
Ex) Sodium-Potassium pump
One ATP pumps three Na+ out and
two K+ in
Active Transport
Cotransport
Coupling of the “downhill” diffusion of
one substance to the “uphill” transport
of another against its own
concentration gradient
Exocytosis & Endocytosis
For macromolecules
Exocytosis – cell secretes
macromolecules by fusion of vesicles
with plasma
membrane
Exocytosis & Endocytosis
Endocytosis – cells takes in
macromolecules by forming new
vesicles
Three types:
Phagocytosis (particles)
Pinocytosis (any liquid)
Receptor-mediated endocytosis
(specific)
Exocytosis & Endocytosis
Exocytosis & Endocytosis
Receptor-mediated endocytosis
Proteins embedded in membrane –
specific receptor sites (area where they
are – coated pits)
Extracellular substances (ligands) bind
to sites – triggers vesicle formation
Process enables cell to acquire bulk
quantities of specific substances
(cholesterol)
Review
Review Website
(http://www.wiley.com/college/pratt/0471393878
/student/animations/membrane_transport/index.
html)