Chapter 5: Biological Membranes
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Transcript Chapter 5: Biological Membranes
Chapter 5: Biological
Membranes
AP Biology
Chapter 5
Plasma Membrane
Functions:
separates the cell's insides from outside
regulates passage of materials into/out of
cell
transmitting signals and info. between the
cell and environment
participates in chemical reactions
essential part of energy transfer and storage
systems
Composition:
- lipid bilayer
- proteins
- in constant motion
Membrane Proteins
*Important area of research: how
membrane proteins function in
health/disease
many are enzymes
function in transport of
materials/information
connect cells together to form tissues
Phospholipid Bilayer
Phospholipid: 2 fatty acid chains linked to a
glycerol molecule
- nonpolar, hydrophobic ends (fatty acids)
- hydrophilic ends (phosphate group)
- hydrophobic "tails" turn to inside of
membrane
- hydrophilic "heads" turn to outer ends
of membrane
- amphipathic - have distinct
hydrophilic and hydrophobic regions
Phospholipid Bilayer
Hydrogen bonds form between the
phospholipid "heads" and the watery
environment inside and outside of the cell
Hydrophobic interactions force the "tails"
to face inward
Phospholipids are not bonded to each
other, which makes the double layer fluid
Fluid Mosaic Model
Cell membrane consists of a fluid bilayer
of phospholipid molecules in which
proteins are embedded
- like the tiles in a mosaic picture
NOT static - proteins can move
p.107 diagram of fluid mosaic
model
Membrane Proteins
Functions:
◦
◦
◦
◦
Transport of small molecules
Enzymes
Information transfer
Identification tags - allow for cell-cell
recognition
Membrane Proteins
◦ Integral Proteins - firmly bound to the
membrane, usually do not extend all
the way through
amphipathic
◦ hydrophilic regions extend out of the cell or
into
cytoplasm
- hydrophobic regions interact with fatty acid
tails of the phospholipids
Membrane Proteins
Transmembrane Proteins - extend
through the membrane, also amphipathic
Membrane Proteins
Peripheral Proteins - not embedded in
the lipid bilayer
◦ located on the inner or outer surfaces of the
plasma membrane
◦ can be removed from the membrane without
disrupting the structure
Cell Membrane is Selectively
Permeable
Most membranes are permeable to small
molecules and lipid-soluble or polar
molecules
Water molecules may pass through the
lipid bilayer
◦ gases: such as O2 and CO2
Transport Across Membranes
Passive Transport - does not require
energy, moves with the concentration
gradient
Active Transport - requires ATP, moves
against the concentration gradient
Simple Diffusion
Process based on random motion
Particles move down concentration
gradient -from an area of high
concentration to low concentration
◦ can occur rapidly
◦ occurs until equilibrium is reached
Types of Diffusion:
Osmosis - diffusion of water across a
selectively permeable membrane
◦ p.114 Figure 5-11
Dialysis - diffusion of a solute across a
selectively permeable membrane
◦ p.113 Figure 5-10
High H2O potential
Low solute
concentration
Low H2O potential
High solute
concentration
Osmotic Pressure
the tendency of water to move into a
solution by osmosis
solution with high solute concentration,
low water, has a high osmotic pressure
solution with a low solute concentration,
high water, low osmotic pressure
Isotonic - equal solute concentration
◦ ex. blood plasma isotonic to blood cells
Hypertonic - higher solute concentration
- if a cell is placed in a hypertonic environment,
water will leave the cell, the cell shrinks
- plasmolysis occurs: plasma membrane separates
from cell wall
Hypotonic - lower solute concentration
- a cell placed in a hypotonic environment will
gain water, swell, and possibly burst
Turgor Pressure
Turgor Pressure - internal pressure of cells
with cell walls
◦ Plants, Algae, and Bacteria
Enables them to withstand a low solute
concentration outside the cell
Cell is hypertonic to environment
Water moves into cell, cell swells, building
pressure -> turgor pressure against cell wall
Cell does not burst b/c of cell wall, resist
stretching and water molecules must stop
moving into the cell
Carrier-Mediated Transport
Membrane proteins move ions or
molecules across a membrane
2 types:
1. facilitated diffusion (passive)
2. carrier-mediated active transport
Carrier-Mediated Transport
Facilitated diffusion - with
concentration gradient, requires
transport protein
energy comes from concentration
gradient
ex. glucose permease - transports glucose
into red blood cells
Carrier-Mediated Active Transport
Carrier-mediated Active Transport movement of solutes across
membrane against concentration
gradient
particles must be "pumped" from region or
low conc. to region of high conc.
requires energy source - ATP, and transport
protein
ex. sodium-potassium pump: in all animal
cells, pump sodium ions out of cell and
potassium ions into cell
Other Types of Active Transport
large particles such as food, cell parts
requires ATP
Endocytosis and Exocytosis
Active Transport video clip
Exocytosis
Cell ejects waste products or hormones
by the fusion of a vesicle with the plasma
membrane
Vesicle releases contents from the cell
Endocytosis
Materials are taken into the cell
Types: phagocytosis, pinocytosis
Endocytosis Video clip
Phagocytosis
"cell eating"
cell ingests large solid particles such as
bacteria and food
ex. protists, white blood cells
plasma membrane folds enclose particle,
forms a vacuole, fuses, then enters the cell
and fuses with lysosomes
Pinocytosis
"cell drinking"
cell takes in dissolved materials
droplets of fluid are trapped by folds in
the membrane
pinch off into the cytosol as tiny vesicles
liquid is slowly transferred into the
cytosol
vesicles become smaller, then disappear