B2 Chapter 2: Membranes and Transport Flashcards

1
Q

What does membrane composition differ between?

A
  • Cell types
  • Different membranes of the same cell
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2
Q

What are the biochemical components of membranes?

A
  • proteins
  • lipids
  • carbohydrates
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3
Q

What biochemical component of membranes are normally most abundant in terms of:
1. Number
2. Mass

A
  1. Lipids
  2. Proteins
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4
Q

In terms of bicohemical components of a membrane, would the proportion of proteins by mass be higher in the inner or outer mitochondrial membrane? Why?

A

The inner membrane.
The location of ATP synthesis.

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5
Q

What are the three major types of membrane lipid?

A
  • phospholipids
  • glycolipids
  • cholesterol (or other sterol)
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6
Q

What is the difference between the hydrophilic head group of a phospholipid and that of a glycolipid?

A

A phospholipid has a negatively charged phosphate group (-PO4) attached to a polar group.

Glycolipids have heads composed of a sugar residue (glucose or galactose), or multiple in a branching chain

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7
Q

Of the three major types of membrane lipid, which can contain glycerol and what is the name of these glycerol-containing lipids?

A

Phospholipids and glycolipids may contain glycerol

Glycerolipids (glycerophospholipids and glyceroglycolipids)

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8
Q

What are sphingolipids?

A

Lipids containg sphingosine

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9
Q

What is the most common type of glycolipid found in animal cell membranes?

A

Sphingoglycolipid

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10
Q

What are glycolipids and phospholipids that contain sphingosine called?

A

Sphingophospholipids and sphingoglycolipids

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11
Q

How many hydrocarbon chains do phospholipids and glycolipids contain?

A

2

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12
Q

In glycolipids and phospholipids, what are the origins of the 2 hydrocarbon chains?

A

Sphingolipids - One from sphingosine, one fatty acid
Glycolipids - Two fatty acids

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13
Q

What are fatty acids?

A

Long hydrocarbon chains containing an acidic carboxyl (-COOH) group at one end.

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14
Q

What does the acidic carboxyl group (-COOH) located at the end of a fatty acid react with and bond to in the formation of glycolipids and phospholipids?

A

The acidic carboxyl group (-COOH) of the fatty acid reacts with the hydroxyl group (-OH) belonging to a glycerol or sphingosine, forming an ester linkage in the lipid molecule.

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15
Q

What are fatty acids that are incorporated into fatty lipid moecules called?

A

Fatty acyl chains.

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16
Q

How long are fatty acyl chains usually, and what is the number of carbons almost always?

A
  • 14 to 24 carbons
  • Almost always even
17
Q

What is the difference between a saturated and unsaturated fatty acyl chain?

A
  • Saturated (With hydrogen) : contains one or more double bonds between carbons.
  • Unsaturated: Contains no double bonds between carbons.
18
Q

In animal and plant cells, are saturated or unsaturated fatty acids more abundant in membranes?

A

Over half of membrane fatty acids are unsaturated

19
Q

What properties of fatty acys affect physical properties of the membrane?

A
  • the level of saturation
  • Length of fatty acyl component of membrane lipids
20
Q

What are steroids characterised by?

A

Four ring structure
- Short hydrocarbon at one end of the four-ring structure
- Weakly polar hydroxyl group (-OH) at the other end

21
Q

What are sterols a type of?

A

Steroid

22
Q

What type of membrane lipid is very important and significant in animal cell membranes but not so much in intracellular membranes?

A

Cholesterol

23
Q

Animals have cholesterols in membranes. What do plants have?

A

Phytosterols (related molecules)

24
Q

Animals have cholesterol in membranes. What do prokaryotes have?

A

Hopanoids (sterol-like molecules)

25
Q

What does the relative solubility of membrane lipids in different solvents depend on?

A

The relative sizes of their hydrophobic and hydrophilic portions, and the polarity of the latter (Charged groups are more polar than the weakly polar hydroxyl groups found in cholesterol.)

26
Q

What properties of a solvent would cause non-polar hydrophobic molecules to readily dissolve?

A
  • Non polar, hydrophobic
27
Q

What properties of a solvent would cause polar hydrophillic molecules to readily dissolve?

A

Polar, hydrophilic

28
Q

Why do membrane lipids most readily dossilve in non polar, or weakly polar organic solvents?

A

Because membrane lipids have relatively large hydrophobic components.