The Cell Membrane Flashcards

1
Q

State the organelles that contain membranes

A
  • Endoplasmic reticulum
  • Chloroplast
  • Mitochondria
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2
Q

What is the purpose of the membrane in the endoplasmic reticulum

A

Forms a transport system

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3
Q

What is the function of membranes in mitochondria and chloroplast

A

Controls entry and exit of materials

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4
Q

What is the cell membrane made up of

A

Phospholipids

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5
Q

What does the phospholipid head contain, and describe its significance

A

The head contains phosphate and glycerol, making it polar/hydrophillic

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6
Q

What does the phospholipid tail contain, and describe its significance

A

The tail contains 2 fatty acids, which makes it non-polar/hydrophillic

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7
Q

Describe how bilayers form

A
  • The cell membrane forms a barrier between the outside of the cell and the inside
  • Both the outside of the cell (tissue fluid) and inside of the cell (cytoplasm) are mainly water, therefore the hydrophillic heads orient themselves outwards
  • The hydrophobic tails orient themselves away from water, and therefore point inwards
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8
Q

Explain how the phospholipid bilayer interacts with water

A
  • The hydrophobic polar fatty acid tails orient themselves away from water
  • The hydrophilic, non-polar glycerol and phosphate heads orient themselves towards water
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9
Q

Why must the cell membrane be able to move

A

To enable transport of substances in or out the membrane

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10
Q

Describe the process of exocytosis

A

Vesicles produced within the cell can transport molecules such as proteins to the cell surface, and secrete these proteins through

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11
Q

Describe the process of endocytosis

A

Molecules enter the cell and are transported by a vesicle via endocytosis

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12
Q

Why are phospholipids fluid

A

Cells need to change shape

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13
Q

Describe the role of cholesterol in the cell membrane

A
  • Cholesterol increases the rigidity and stiffness of the membrane.
  • This limits the lateral (side to side) movement of the phospholipids, allowing the cell membrane to retain its shape
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14
Q

Why is the phospholipid bilayer selectively permeable

A

Due to the properties of the phospholipids

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15
Q

What must a molecule be in order to pass through the phospholipid bilayer

A

Lipid soluble

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16
Q

To be lipid soluble, a molecule must be…

A
  • Non-polar
  • Uncharged
17
Q

State the 2 types of transport protein

A
  • Channel protein
  • Carrier proteins
18
Q

Describe the properties of the 2 transport proteins, and why this makes the cell membrane selectively permeable

A

They’re specific, due to their specific 3D tertiary structures, so they can only transport certain molecules

19
Q

What other proteins are found in the cell membrane

A
  • Receptors
  • Membrane bound enzymes
  • Transport proteins
20
Q

Describe the structure of receptors

A

Often glycoproteins, which are proteins with a carbohydrate attached.

21
Q

Describe what happens when a specific molecule binds to the receptor

A

A response is triggered within the cell

22
Q

Describe the function of membrane bound enzymes

A

They catalyse reactions on the cell surface

23
Q

Describe the function of call identify markers

A
  • Commonly known as antigens
  • Each cell has a distinctive antigen with a different structure, allowing for identification
  • These can be proteins or glycolipids (carbohydrates with a lipid attached)
24
Q

Why is the phospholipid bilayer described as a fluid mosaic

A

The cell membrane is made up of many smaller components, with varying size and shape

25
Q

What do we call proteins that span the whole phospholipid

A

Intrinsic proteins
- They have non polar regions to make them lipid soluble

26
Q

What do we call proteins that are embedded in the membrane

A

Extrinsic proteins (pointing outwards)
- They are polar, so they aren’t found with the fatty acid tails

27
Q

Explain how the structure of the cell membrane enables it to act as a selectively permeable barrier

A
  • Selectively permeable means that only specific substances can pass through the membrane
  • As the bilayer is made from phospholipids, only lipid soluble molecules (which are non-polar and charged) can pass directly through it
  • As these proteins have a highly specific 3D tertiary structure, only particular molecules with the correct shape can be transported through them