M&R 1.1 The Membrane Bilayer Flashcards

1
Q

Name 5 general functions of biological membranes

A
  1. Selective permeability barrier
  2. Control enclosed chemical environment
  3. Communication (of info between cells and environment)
  4. Recognition (signalling molecules, adhesion proteins etc..)
  5. Signal generation in response to stimuli (APs, 2nd messengers)
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2
Q

How much of total membrane weight is water?

A

20%

membranes are hydrated structures - water needed to make hydrophilic interactions

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3
Q

What is the composition of membrane DRY weight?

A

Protein ~60%
Lipid ~40%
Carbohydrate ~1-10%

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4
Q

All membrane lipids are ___________

A

amphipathic (have both a a hydrophilic and a hydrophobic moiety)

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5
Q

Name 3 main types of membrane lipid

A

Phospholipids
Sphingolipids
Glycolipids

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6
Q

Describe the structure of a phospholipid

A

Glycerol backbone with 2 fatty acid chains (hydrophobic) and a phosphate head group (hydrophilic)

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7
Q

How are phospholipids named?

A

After their head groups (e.g. if the phosphate group has choline attached, the phospholipid is called phosphatidycholine)

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8
Q

Describe the fatty acid chains in a phospholipid

A

Most often C16 or C18 in length (can range C14-24)

One chain has a cis double bond which introduces a kink

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9
Q

What is the advantage of FA chains generally being of similar lengths?

A

It means that the thickness of the bilayer is always about the same

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10
Q

What effect does the cis double bond (on one of the fatty acids of phospholipids) have?

A

It reduces phospholipid packing, and therefore increases membrane fluidity

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11
Q

Name a sphingolipid

A

Sphingomyelin

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12
Q

Describe the structure of sphingomyelin

A

Sphingosine backbone
1 Fatty acid chain (hydrophobic)
Phosphocholine head group (hydrophilic)

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13
Q

Why is sphingomyelin important?

A

Its composition allows a role in signalling pathways - degradation and synthesis of sphingomyelin produces important 2nd messengers
It is one of the few membrane lipids not synthesised from glycerol

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14
Q

Where is sphingomyelin prominently found?

A
In myelin 
(therefore disorders of sphingolipid metabolism predominantly affect neural tissue)
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15
Q

Describe the structure of a glycolipid

A

Backbone - usually sphingosine or glycerol
2 FA tails
Head group is a sugar

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16
Q

What is the difference between cerebrosides and gangliosides?

A

Cerebrosides have a sugar monomer head group (usually galactose in neural tissue and glucose elsewhere)

Gangliosides have a sugar oligosaccharide head group (and are predominantly found in neural tissue)

[Both have a sphingosine backbone and FA tails]

17
Q

Is the composition of a lipid membrane the same in every cell?

A

No, the distribution of different membrane lipids varies depending on cell type

18
Q

Amphipathic molecules in water can form either _________ or _________ in water

A

Micelles

Bilayers

19
Q

Describe the forces involved in bilayer formation in water

A

Spontaneous formation driven by attractive VDW forces between hydrophobic tails
Structure stabilised by non-covalent forces (electrostatic and H-bonding) between hydrophilic moieties, and between hydrophilic moieties & water

20
Q

Describe the 4 permitted modes of mobility for lipids in a bilayer

A
  1. Flexion (moving their aliphatic tails around)
  2. Rotation (fast axial rotation of a single lipid molecule)
  3. Lateral diffusion (lipid molecules exchanging place with each other within the same lamella)
  4. Flip-flop (exchange of a lipid from one lamella of the bilayer to another. Rare because not thermodynamically favourable)
21
Q

Describe the structure of cholesterol

A

Polar head group
Rigid planar steroid ring structure (can’t twist it)
Mostly single bonds
Non-polar hydrocarbon tail

22
Q

Can the body produce all the cholesterol it needs?

A

No - the body can only make ~50% of the cholesterol it needs, and the rest must be obtained from the diet

23
Q

In general, how does cholesterol interact with phospholipids?

A

It is inserted in the bilayer, and H-bonds to every other phospholipid

24
Q

Describe the paradoxical effects of cholesterol on membrane fluidity. How is this helpful?

A
  1. Its rigid sterol ring reduces phospholipid chain motion and therefore reduces fluidity
  2. Its presence in the membrane reduces packing between phospholipids and therefore increases fluidity

This allows cholesterol to buffer any changes and stop the membrane becoming either too fluid or too solid