biological membranes 2.5 Flashcards

1
Q

2 ways proteins can be in the membrane

A

-Can be intrinsic/integral (span the entire membrane) • —Can be extrinsic (embedded in one half of the membrane

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2
Q

What is the glycocalyx

A

Formed from glycolipids and glycoproteins outside of the membrane

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3
Q

2 ways of diffusion

A
  • simple diffusion

- facilitated diffusion

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4
Q

factors affect rate of diffusion

A
  • temperature
  • diffusion distance
  • surface area
  • size of diffusing molecule
  • concentration gradient
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5
Q

Plant cells when water enters/leave

A
  • plasmolysed —-flaccid

- turgid

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6
Q

Animal cells when water enters/leaves

A
  • cytolysis

- crenated

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7
Q

Why cant plasmolysed cells metabolise?

A

Enzyme catalysed reactions need to be in solution

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8
Q

What happens when temperature drops in terms of membrane fluidity and structure? (fatty acids and cholesterol)

A

Temperature drops

  • saturated fatty acids become compressed
  • unsaturated fatty acids kinks in their tails push adjacent phospholipid molecules away, maintaining fluidity
  • cholesterol prevents phospholipids packing too closely therefore preventing reduction in fluidity and acting as a buffer
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9
Q

What happens when temperature increases in terms of membrane fluidity? (fatty acids and cholesterol)

A

Temperature increases

  • phospholipids have more kinetic energy o move around more making it more fluid and more permeable
  • cholesterol buffers
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10
Q

Effects of increased fluidity and movement of membrane due to temperature increase?

A
  • membrane embedded proteins drift affecting the rates at which they catalyse reactions
  • higher fluidity affects infolding of membrane in phagocytosis
  • increase in fluidity changes ability for cells to signal each other
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11
Q

Discuss proteins and temperature

A

Protein and temperature

  • high temperatures cause atoms to vibrate breaking hydrogen bonds and ionic bonds in their structure so they unfold
  • Tertiary structure changes shape, they denature
  • cytoskeleton threads denature and membrane embedded proteins denature the plasma membrane falls apart, becoming more permeable due to hols forming
  • rate of reaction slows if proteins/enzymes move or denture
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12
Q

Effects of solvents on cell membrane

A

Organic solvents like acetone and ethanol damage cell membranes as they dissolve lipids

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13
Q

2 types of bulk transport

A
  • endocytosis

- exocytosis

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14
Q

What is active transport

A

The movement of substances against their concentration gradient from an area of low concentration to an areas of high concentration across a cell membrane causing ATP and protein carriers

  • ATP is hydrolysed
  • releases energy
  • energy released enables protein conformational change so they can move things against gradient
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15
Q

2 types of endocytosis and what it is

A

Endocytosis is bringing large molecules into the cell by the plasma membrane surrounding and enclosing the particle, bringing it into the cell as a vesicle

  • phagocytosis, the intake of solid matter
  • pinoendocytosis, the intake of liquid matter
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16
Q

What is exocytosis?

A

exocytosis I how large molecules are transported out of cells , a vesicle moves towards and fuses with the plasma membrane. This requires ATP to fuse the vesicles and to move the vesicles.
Every step the motor protein takes dragging the cargo along cytoskeleton threads, a molecule of ATP is hydrolysed