Unit 1: Section 2 - Cell Membranes Flashcards

1
Q

What do plasma membranes do?

A

Control which substances enter and leave the cell. They are partially permeable. Allow recognition by other cells. They allow cell communication.

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2
Q

What do membranes within cells do?

A
  • Membranes around organelles divide the cell into different compartments. Making different functions more efficient.
  • Membranes of some organelles are folded to increase surface area and so make chemical reactions more efficient.
  • Can form vesicles
  • Control what enters and leaves the organelle.
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3
Q

What structure do cell membranes have?

A

‘Fluid mosaic’

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4
Q

What are the 4 components of a cell membrane?

A

Phospholipids
Cholesterol
Proteins
Glycolipids/Gylcoproteins

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5
Q

Describe the structure of a phospholipid bilayer

A

Head is hydrophilic - attracts water
Tail is hydrophobic - repels water

2 layers, heads face outward and tails face inwards with water on either side

The centre of the bilayer is hydrophobic therefore water-soluble molecules cannot pass through the bilayer.

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6
Q

What does cholesterol do?

A

Fit between the phospholipids, they bind to the tails causing them to pack more closely together, this makes the membrane less fluid and more rigid.

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7
Q

What do proteins do?

A

1) Form channels in the membrane for small or charged particles to pass through
2) Carrier proteins allow molecules and ions across the membrane by active transport or facilitated diffusion.
3) Act as receptors for molecules in cell signalling.

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8
Q

What do glycolipids and glycoproteins do?

A

Stabilise the membrane by forming hydrogen bonds with surrounding water molecules

Act as sites where drugs, hormones and antibodies bind

Act as receptors for cell signalling

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9
Q

What is cell signalling?

A

How cells communicate with each other to control processes inside the body and to respond to changes in the environment.

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10
Q

How do cells communicate with each other?

A

Messenger molecules:

1) One cell releases a messenger molecule
2) This molecule travels to another cell
3) The messenger molecule is detected by the cell because it binds to a receptor on its cell membrane

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11
Q

Why do receptor proteins have specific shapes?

A

So that only messenger molecules with a complementary shape can bind to them.

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12
Q

What is the name given to a cell that responds to a particular messenger molecule?

A

A target cell

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13
Q

Why are drugs designed to bind to cell membrane receptors?

A

When they bind to the cell membrane they either trigger a response in the cell or black the receptor and prevent it from working

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14
Q

What happens to a cell membrane at temperatures below 0?

A

The phospholipids don’t have as much energy, so they cant move very much. They’re packed closely together and the membrane is rigid.

Channel proteins and carrier proteins denature increasing the permeability of the membrane. Ice crystals may pierce the membrane making it highly permeable when it thaws

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15
Q

What happens to a cell membrane at temperatures between 0 and 45 degrees?

A

The phospholipids can move around and aren’t packed as tightly together - membrane is partially permeable. As temperature increases the phospholipids move more because they have more energy - this increases the permeability of the membrane.

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16
Q

What happens to a cell membrane at temperatures above 45 degrees?

A

Phospholipid bi-layer melts and the membrane becomes more permeable. Water inside the cell expands putting pressure on the membrane.

Channel proteins and carrier proteins in the membrane denature - increases permeability

17
Q

What is diffusion?

A

Diffusion is the net movement of particles from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration.

18
Q

What is a concentration gradient?

A

The path from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration - particles diffuse down a concentration gradient.

19
Q

3 factors that affect the rate of diffusion

A

1) Concentration gradient
2) Thickness of the exchange surface
3) Surface area

20
Q

What is osmosis?

A

Diffusion of water molecules across a partially permeable membrane, from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration.

21
Q

Does pure water have the highest or lowest water potential?

A

Highest - all solutions have a lower water potential than water

22
Q

What is a hypotonic solution?

A

A solution with a higher water potential than the cell

23
Q

What is an isotonic solution?

A

A solution with the same water potential as the cell

24
Q

What is a hypertonic solution?

A

A solution with a lower water potential than the cell

25
Q

What do carrier proteins do?

A

Move large molecules into or out of the cell, down their concentration gradient

26
Q

How does a carrier protein work?

A

1) A large molecule attaches to a carrier protein
2) Then, the protein changes shape
3) This releases the molecule on the opposite side of the membrane

27
Q

What do channel proteins do?

A

Form pores in the membrane for charged particles to diffuse through.

28
Q

What does active transport do?

A

Move substances against a concentration gradient.

29
Q

How does it do this?

A

It uses the same method as carrier proteins but uses ATP in order to move the substance against the concentration gradient.

30
Q

How does endocytosis work?

A

Some molecules are way too big to be taken into a cell by carrier proteins, a cell can surround a substance with a section of it’s plasma membrane. The membrane then pinches off to form a vesicle inside the cell containing the substance.

31
Q

How does exocytosis work?

A

Some substances produced by the cell need to be released, vesicles containing the substance pinch off from the sacs of the golgi apparatus and move towards the plasma membrane. The vesicles fuse with the plasma membrane and release their contents outside the cell. Some substances may not leave the cell, they may be inserted straight into the plasma membrane.