Membrane Dynamics And Membrane Transport Flashcards

1
Q

What are peripheral membrane protiens

A

They’re attached to the membrane by weak non covalent bonds (ionic, h bonding)

Normally outside lipid membrane and sometime part of some protein complexes have integral membrane proteins that are attached internally

They’re dynamic (can be released/recruited to by the membrane due to weak interactions)

Mostly hydrophillic

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2
Q

What is the role of peripheral membrane protiens

A

Signal transduction
Mechanical support for the membranes
Anchor for integral membrane protiens
Enzymes

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3
Q

How to red blood cell peripheral membrane protiens work

A

The cell has a network of protiens that give it its concave shape by interactive with the integral membrane protiens

Spectrin is the protien complex that does this, it’s on the internal side of the membrane

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4
Q

What are lipid anchored protiens

A

Proteins outside the bilayer on either extracellular or cytoplasmic side

Covalently linked to lipid molecules in the bilayer

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5
Q

What are GPI - anchored protiens

A

A type of lipid anchored protien that’s attached to the membrane by a small complex oligosaccharide thats linked to PI in the membrane

Is faces the extracellular space and played roles in cell adhesion and receptors

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6
Q

What are hydrocarbon chains embedded in the lipid bilayer

A

A type of lipid anchored chain that’s attached to the cytoplasmic leaflet of the membrane

Plays roles in signal transduction

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7
Q

What type of movement is easily done by phospholipids

What type is more restricted

A

Moving laterally across one membrane leaflet is easy

Flip flopping to other leaflet (transverse diffusion) is harder

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8
Q

What enzymes helps in lipids movement and establishes membrane assymetry

A

Flippase

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9
Q

What special about cholesterol when talking about lipid movement

A

If has a small polar (OH) head group so it can easily flip flop across leaflets

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10
Q

What is passive transport and what ways can it happen

A

Doesn’t require atp, occurs by diffusion (high to low solute concentration

Can occur through just membrane, a channel, or a facilitative transporter

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11
Q

What is active transport and what ways can it happen

A

Requires energy (ATP)
Can move diff again concentration gradient (low to high)

Happens through use of pumps

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12
Q

What types of thing can do simple diffusion just through lipid bilayer

What things can’t

A

Small inorganic solutes : O2, CO2, H2O

Solutes with high lipid solubility (ex. Caffine)

Can’t : ions and polar organic solutes (sugar/amino acids)

Anything too big

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13
Q

What is osmosis and what give hyper hypo and iso tonic solution

A

Water move through the membrane from region of low solute to high solute

Hyper if more solute on outside of cell

Hypos if less solute on outside of cell

ISO if equal on inside and outside

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14
Q

What are aquaporin

A

Channel protiens for simple diffusion the help better water diffusion

Lets the cells be more permeable to water

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15
Q

What are ion channels

A

For simple diffusion, Transmembrane structure that is HIGHLY selectively permeable to specific ions (NA K CA CL)

Most are gated: meaning they change confirmation to be open or closed

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16
Q

What are the types of ion channels in simple diffusion

A

Voltage gated
Ligand gated
Mechano gated

17
Q

What is a voltage gated channel

A

It’s open/ closed depending of the ionic charge difference on either side of the membrane

18
Q

What is a ligand gated channel

A

Opens and closes depending on the binding of a specific molecule (ligand)

That ligand is not the solute that’s passing through the channel, it binds to the channel to open it and let ions pass

Ex. Acetylcholine is a ligand

19
Q

What are mechano gated channels

A

Open and close depending on mechanical forces

Ex. Stretching

20
Q

Why are voltage gated K+ ion channels important

A

They transmit electrical impulses along axons

More than 10mill k ions can pass through the channel per second (lots of flux/movement)

In response to diff voltages, the channels open or close