cell membranes Flashcards

1
Q

function of a plasma membrane

A

to act as a barrier - separate cellular components

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2
Q

what are plasma membranes properties ?

A

flexibility and deformability
permeability barrier
fluidity yet structure
receptors
transporters
enzymes
association with cytoskeleton
adhesion proteins linking cells together

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3
Q

what are the components of a plasma membrane

A

complex lipids
proteins
glycoproteins
glycolipids

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4
Q

definition of amphipathic

A

dual affinity eg.
plasma membrane phospholipids are amphipathic as they are both hydrophilic and hydrophobic

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5
Q

how do phospholipids arrange in fluids?

A

in a bilayer as they have a cylindrical shape so a bilayer is the most favourable arrangement

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6
Q

what affects the structure of fatty acids ?

A

they have different structures due to chain lengths and double bonds
the double bonds kink the chain, changing the structure and therefore the packaging of the lipid ( increase SA ) so lower melting point and so more fluid

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7
Q

what do seven span receptors do ?

A

( in plasma membrane ) transduce signals from molecules like glucagon, adrenaline, noradrenaline
effects vary between tissues depending on receptor type
hence why drugs aim to interfere with these receptors

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8
Q

what are the 3 classes of membrane transport proteins?

A

transporters, ATP powered pumps, channel proteins

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9
Q

what are ATP powered pumps?

A

ATPases that use energy from ATP hydrolysis to move ions across their conc. gradient
Na+/K+ pump in glucose and amino acid co transport

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10
Q

what is a transporter?

A

protein that only binds to one substrate at a time and transports it passively down its conc. gradient

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11
Q

what is a channel protein?

A

water filled pores in the bilayer which open allowing charged molecules (ions) to move down their conc. gradient

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12
Q

what is the membrane potential of an animal cell? how is it created?

A

between -20mV and -200mV
Na+ molecules are pumped out and K+ are pumped in, more Na+ ions are pumped out than K+ pumped in so it creates a negative charge within the membrane

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13
Q

what is a uniporter ?

A

moves one molecule down its conc. gradient at once
involved in facilitated diffusion

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14
Q

what is an antiporter ?

A

moves two molecules at once , one down its conc. gradient while the other is transported against its conc. gradient - co transport

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15
Q

define facilitated diffusion

A

passive movement of a molecule down its concentration gradient with use of a protein channel

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16
Q

define active transport

A

active movement of a molecule against its concentration gradient using energy in the form of ATP and with the aid of protein carriers

17
Q

explain the relationship of permeability the membrane has with different molecules

A

hydrophobic molecules eg. oxygen, CO2, nitrogen and benzene can diffuse straight through the membrane
small uncharged polar molecules eg. H20, urea and glycerol are transported via facilitated diffusion
large uncharged polar molecules eg. glucose and sucrose are actively transported
ions are usually involved in pump systems and have specific protein channels for each ion

18
Q

define simple diffusion

A

when a molecule can pass straight through - must be lipid soluble ( hydrophobic molecules )

19
Q
A
20
Q
A