2. Membranes and Transport I Flashcards

1
Q

Membrane function

____ barrier
Keep external components out of cell interior
Retain cell constituents

____ control
Selectively control entry and exit

A

permeability

border

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2
Q

Membrane structure

Fluid mosaic bilipid membrane - mix of ____ and ____
Not just proteins bobbing in sea of lipid
Both lipid and protein arrangement highly ____

• Half of surface area - ____, that are highly structured

A

lipids
protein
structured

proteins

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3
Q

Lipid bilayer is amphipathic Amphipathic: both ____ and ____ portions

With phospholipids, only heads stable next to ____ - bilayer

  • Energetics - most ____ arrangement for these phospholipids
  • Occurs ____
A
polar
nonpolar
water
favorable
spontaneously
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4
Q

Membrane fluidity varies

  • Membrane fluidity influenced by distribution of ____
  • ____, length and ____ of fatty acid chains decrease fluidity
  • ____: Clusters of cholesterol, proteins sphingolipids
A

lipids
cholesterol
saturation
rafts

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5
Q

Rafts cluster signaling proteins

  • Many signaling processes require multiple players
  • Rafts provide island to cluster key ____ together receptors/enzymes, internalization with ____
  • Multiple cellular processes require ____

____ is important when it comes to activation via NT Necessary to optimize chances of achieving the signal we need

A

signalling components
caveolae
proximity

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6
Q

Lipid rafts relevant to dentistry

• Membrane vesicles (MVs) from ____ enter human gingival epithelial cells more when ____ intact

A

P. gingivalis

lipid rafts

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7
Q

P. gingivalis enters cells via lipid rafts

• Suggest entry via raft allows bacteria to evade ____ more readily

A

digestion

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8
Q

Membrane lipids summary

  1. Lipid molecules are ____: they have a hydrophilic polar component and a hydrophobic non- polar tail
  2. Lipids are ____ distributed on the outer and inner leaflets of the membrane
  3. Membrane fluidity varies with ____ content and degree of ____ of fatty acid chains; key proteins for many signaling processes are clustered in ____
A
amphipathic
asymmetrically
cholesterol
saturation
rafts
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9
Q

Membrane proteins

  • Critical to how we control processes across the membrane
  • ____ = gap junction protein
A

connexin 26

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10
Q

Classes of membrane proteins

Integral proteins - span ____
Peripheral proteins
- restricted to one ____
- ____ within membrane or ____ to membrane lipids

• Optimize ____ that occurs across membrane

A

bilayer
side
move
anchored

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11
Q

Functions of membrane proteins

  • ____ (pumps/carriers/channels)
  • Structural - anchors etc maintain membrane integrity
  • Receptors/signaling
  • Enzymes
  • ____ – antibody recognition
A

Transport

glycoproteins

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12
Q

Transport membrane proteins

• Transporters
◦ Make sure that ____ compounds get
across the membrane
◦ Allows ____

A

charged/uncharged

selectivity

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13
Q

Types of membrane transport How to get across the membrane?

  1. ____ across bilayer
  2. Facilitated diffusion
    - ____
    - ____
  3. Active transport
    - ____
    - ____

• Active
◦ Direct/indirect requirement for ____ against gradient
• ____
◦ Simple
◦ Facilitated
‣ ____ used to aid diffusion (channel mediated
and carriers)

A
diffusion
channel
carrier
ATP
passive
proteins
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14
Q
Transport across membranes
• Cell membranes are selective, semi- permeable barriers
• Molecules move across cell membranes by
– Simple diffusion
• Follows \_\_\_\_ gradient
– Facilitated diffusion 
• Follows \_\_\_\_ gradient
– Active transport
• Uses energy to go \_\_\_\_ EC* gradient
A

EC
EC
against

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15
Q

Diffusion

• Process whereby molecules move and intermingle because of ____ motion

A

random thermal Brownian

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16
Q

Fick’s First Law of Diffusion

Diffusion across a membrane is proportional to:

  • ____ of membrane (involved in diffusion)
  • difference in ____ on the two sides

J = -DA(∆c/∆x)
where:
J - net rate of ____ in moles or grams/unit time;
D - diffusion ____ of the solute;
A - ____ of the membrane;
∆c - ____ difference across the membrane;
∆x - membrane ____
D – inversely proportional to ____ of particle and ____ of solvent (big globs move slowly through thick muck)

A
area
solute concentration
diffusion
coefficient
area
concentration
thickness
size
viscosity
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17
Q

A note on equations: Equations can only describe ____ processes

A bit of understanding goes further than straight memorization
Qualitative understanding of diffusion and osmosis equations Quantitative understanding of Nernst and GHK equations

A

simple

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18
Q

What about crossing the membrane? The same laws apply J = -DA(∆c/∆x)

Diffusion of a solute through a cell membrane depends on:
– membrane ____ - ∆x
– ____ difference - ∆c
– ____ of membrane - A
– ____ and ____ of solute (lipid solubility) - 1/D – ____of solvent -1/D

• Big difference is that small uncharged molecules much more ____ in lipid bilayer
• The more charged and larger you are, the more difficult to cross the membrane
◦ Preference for uncharged
• More ____ - more difficult to diffuse

A
thickness
concentration
area
size
charge
viscosity

soluble
viscous

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19
Q

Effective range of diffusion
– Diffusion time ____ with the ____ of distance

  • Diffusion fine for very ____ distances (cell ~ 10 um dial)
  • Need other forces to move further in reasonable time: nervous and circulatory system
A

increases
square
short

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20
Q

Permeability across membrane

Dependent on 
• \_\_\_\_
• charge
• \_\_\_\_ solubility
• membrane thickness
  • O2, CO2, N2 - ____ and small, travel across the membrane quickly
  • H2O - ____
  • Glucose - ____
  • Ions - ____ charge, do not cross the hydrophobic barrier too well
A
size
lipid
uncharged
polarized
size
positive
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21
Q

How do compounds cross mucosal membrane in oral cavity?

  • Diffusion via ____ pathways
  • Barriers you will have to use ____
A

paracellular

transport

22
Q

Facilitated diffusion:
Transport across membranes with a little help from the ____
• Many large and/or charged molecules cannot diffuse across the bilipid membrane
• Specialized proteins aid in the crossing
• Transport called facilitated diffusion if proteins provide a ____ through membrane to avoid lipid barrier
•____ transport
- ____
- ____

A
proteins
route
passive
carriers
channels
23
Q

Facilitated diffusion
• Diffusion of a solute mediated by carrier proteins
– via ____ conformational change
• Solutes move down their ____ gradients
– no exogenous ____ required
• Enzyme that transports across membrane
• Unlike simple diffusion, facilitated diffusion can reach a ____, ____ – carrier as enzyme
• Facilitated diffusion exhibits
– ____ specificity
– ____
– ____ inhibition

• Presence of enzyme kinetics:
◦ ____ - how fast
◦ ____

A
ping-pong
electrochemical
energy
maximum (Vmax)
Km
chemical
sterospecificity
competitive

Vmax
Km

24
Q

Saturation of facilitated diffusion

The carrier protein can only ____ so quickly > formation of a Vmax

A

flip-flop

25
Q

Facilitated diffusion by ion channels

Ion channels:
– Ions flow through the pore
– “downhill” so no exogenous ____ required
– ____: many roles in rapid signaling
– Conformational change to gate open triggered by ____, ____, ____,
– ____ varies
– More details tomorrow

A
energy
fast
voltage
ligands
stretch
selective
26
Q

What ion channels are targets in dentistry?

• ____ channels
◦ Lidocaine blocks these
• ____ channels
◦ If patient’s are on blockers, may interfere with ____

A

sodium
potassium
heart

27
Q

Active transport
• Active transport expends ____ to move solutes “uphill” against gradients and keep ions from ____
• Requires energy input
– Primary active transport uses ATP (____)
– Secondary active transport couples energy from ____
• Transporter has properties of carrier protein – ____, ____

A
energy
equilibrium
ATPases
gradients
Vmax
stereospecificity
28
Q

Primary active transport Na-K-ATPase

  • Transport of ions against ____
  • Uses ____ of cell ATP - critical to function
  • Found in all ____ cells
  • Electrogenic – 3 ____+/2 ____+ drives a net charge across membrane (only ____ mV)
  • Main role is to set up ____
A
gradient
33-70%
animal
Na
K
2-4
gradients
29
Q

Half of your food goes to power the ____

A

Na/K ATPase

30
Q

Model for operation of the Na+-K+ ATPase pump

  1. Binding of 3 ____ inside
  2. Hydrolysis of ____ for energy
  3. Release of ____ outside
  4. Binding of 2 ____ outside
  5. ____
  6. Release of ____ inside

Energy is used to pump Na+ and K+ against
their gradients

  • Binding of ATP occurs after binding of three Na+ ions
  • Binding of K+ triggers the ____
A
Na+
ATP
Na+
K+
dephosphorylation
K+

dephosphorylation

31
Q

Ouabain blocks the Na-K ATPase

  • Ouabain – digitalis ____, selective for ____ pump,
  • Ouabain binds ____ side
  • Used clinically to slow ____ when troubled e.g atrial ____
  • Now use related ____
  • Don’t use too much word ouabain from Somali “waabaayo “ translated as “____”
A
glycosides
Na/K
extracellular
heart
fibrillation
digoxin
arrow poison
32
Q

Active transport pump H-ATPase

  • Complex multisubunit structure
  • ____ portion that hydrolyzes ATP into ADP
  • ____ portion uses this energy to move H+ across gradient
  • Uses energy of ____ to transport protons against their gradient
  • Useful in building ____ and ____
  • Used in ____
  • Changes the proton gradient; pushes H+ against their gradient
A

V1
V0

ATP
bone
teeth
lysosomes

33
Q

H-ATPase

  • vH-ATPase present in intracellular ____
  • H-ATPase is also present on ____ in some cells
  • Important in bone ____
  • Blocking H-ATPase with ____ inhibits tooth eruption
  • Mandibular and maxillary ____ and molars are not present in Atp6i-/- mice.

• Makes areas more acidic - important in bone degradation
• Changes in AA structure can lead to differences in the enzymes function
— Some may have no ____
— Some may result in stark ____

A
organelles
plasma membrane
resorption
bafilomycin
incisors
effect
differences
34
Q

Inhibition of H-ATPase proton pump in stomach reduces ____

• ____ can contribute to tooth decay, so blocking HATPase in stomach can help oral health.

A

acidity

acid reflux

35
Q

Secondary active transport

Doesn’t require binding of ____
Utilizes gradient of another particle (e.g., ____) to provide energy
Gradient ultimately established by ____
Direction of exchange can be the same (____) or opposite (____)

Binding of Na+ triggers ____ changes in protein

• Na+ is the energy source in nearly all active transport
◦ Cxn within the cell is very ____
• Na+ is going along gradient, but it can bring other molecules along for the ride
• Mechanism:
◦ Upon Na+ binds, ____ change resulting in opening of site
for ____
• ____ eventually brings the Na+ back out (which is why we
use so much energy)

A
ATP
Na+
ATP
symport
antiport
allosteric

low
allosteric
glucose
NaKATPase

36
Q

Na/amino acid sympor

  • Coupling energy of Na+ movement to concentrate ____
  • If 2 Na+ translocated each cycle, greater ____, can concentrate AAs at higher concentration
A

amino acids

driving force

37
Q

Symport and Antiport

• Use gradient established by pumps
• Let ions like Na+ run down \_\_\_\_
• Couple this energy to that needed to move another \_\_\_\_ in
– \_\_\_\_: same direction, or
– \_\_\_\_: opposite direction
• Degree to which ion can 

be accumulated across membrane determined by ____ of driving ion and ____.

A
gradient
ion
symport
antiport
gradient
charges
38
Q

Na+/H+ Antiporter

  • In most cells to keep proton levels below gradient
  • Important in ____ cells in adaption to ____ taste (right), kidney, ____, lungs etc.
  • Coupled with the ____…
  • Na+ enters, while the H+ ____…
  • Located closely to the NaKATPase…
A

taste bud
sour
gut

NAKATPase
exits

39
Q

Active or passive transport? It’s all about the gradients

Intestinal epithelium: [glucose] ____ in than out

  1. Na+ gradient established using ____ active transport – ATP hydrolysis powers ____ pump
  2. Use energy of Na+ to get ____ into the cell using secondary active transport
  3. Let glucose flow out down the ____ through carrier using ____ diffusion
A
higher
active
NaK
glucose
gradient
facilitated
40
Q

Most cells and tissues use multiple transporters

  • Na/H, Cl/HCO3 - regulating ____
  • NaKATPase
  • ____
A

pH

aquaporin

41
Q

Transporters in ameloblasts

• Why channels
needed to
make enamel?

Slc26al, Slc26a6 or Slc26a7 = Sat1, Pat1, and Sut2 respectively, all exhibit chloride, bicarbonate exchanger activities. Mutations lead to multiple disorders induced by the disruption of ion homeostasis. Enamel maturation involves ____
regulation mediated by multiple ion transport/ exchange activities
across plasma and endosome membranes

Here, the ameloblasts are making enamel
Why are there channels that make enamel?
• as you move out some of these ____, ____, ____ transporters here, you can see changes in the enamel
rods are arranged
• It seems counter intuitive that transporting HCO3 can affect the enamel
• The ____ dependent changes that these biochemical structures go through are critical in
development

• Why channels in lysosomes?

The lysosomes are very ____, so they are important

A
pH
Na
HCO3
H
pH
acidic
42
Q

Osmosis

• ____ of diffusion
• Forces based on ____ motion that want to make
levels of water the same among compartments

If membrane permeable to water and impermeable to solute, ____ will move to equal concentration.

____ - Pressure needed to stop water movement

A

inversion
Brownian

water

osmotic pressure

43
Q

Cell in isotonic solution

Isotonic – no net ____

A

movement

44
Q

Cell in HYPERtonic solution

Hypertonic solution outside, water ____ cell to equalize concentrations

Cell ____

A

leaves

shrinks

45
Q

Cell in HYPOtonic solution

Hypotonic solution outside, water moves ____ cell to equalize concentrations

Cell ____

A

into

swells

46
Q

Effects of osmolarity

Red blood cell exposed to range of osmolarities
Water moves to ____ solute concentrations
HypOtonic solution makes the cell an “O”

A

equalize

47
Q

What is the osmotic pressure of
physiologic saline?
• In physiologic saline (____ mM NaCl), red blood cells retain the size/shape they normally have in plasma.
• This NaCl concentration is called ____.

π = RTφic

RT = R is the ideal gas constant, T is the absolute temperature; RT = 22.4 atm φ=phi = osmotic coefficient = 0.93 because Na+ & Cl- don’t completely separate
i= number of ions formed by dissociation of solute = 2 because Na + Cl C = molar concentration of solute = 154 mOsm
A

154

isotonic

48
Q

Aquaporins

Water crosses membranes through ____, or water channels

  • ____ diffusion for water
  • ____ is the driving force
A

aquaporins
facilitated
osmotic pressure

49
Q

Aquaporins

Different types of aquaporins - vary in their ____, distribution and ____

• Knocking out just the aquaporin transporter isn’t necessarily ____… usually have backups…

A

regulation
roles
fatal

50
Q

Water crosses membrane through aquaporins

  • Permeability of membrane to water much ____ than predicted by its ____ permeability
  • Water passes through membrane through ____
  • Amino acids of proteins ____ when facing lipids, ____ in canal – provides ____ stability
A
higher
lipid
aquaporins
non-polar
polar
energetic
51
Q

Water crosses membrane through aquaporins

• Defective distribution of ____ in salivary gland of Sjögren’s syndrome with reduced ____ secretion

Why doesn’t your mouth swell when you drink a glass of water?
• Why don’t your teeth fall out when you eat a salty pretzel?

A

AQP5

saliva

52
Q

Transport Summary
• ____ molecules diffuse across membrane – rate based on concentration ____, size etc
• ____ molecules use protein transporters to cross
• In facilitated diffusion, solutes flow ____
• In primary and secondary active transport an ____ input is required
• Osmotic pressure created by limited permeability of ____
• Coincident presence of multiple ____ necessary for cell function

A
uncharged/small
gradient
charged/larger
downhill
energy
solutes
transporters