Molecular Cell Biology Flashcards

1
Q

What do biomembranes do?

A

Form boundary around cells, form compartments within cells, allow concentration gradients to be established, place of communication and transport between cells, flexible and selectively permeable.

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2
Q

What happens in Alzheimer’s disease?

A

Dysregulation of membrane proteins.

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3
Q

What happens in Menkes disease?

A

X-linked lethal disorder, copper-transporting ATPase is defective.

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4
Q

What happens in Wilson’s disease?

A

Toxic accumulation of copper by failure to excrete copper from the liver into bile.

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5
Q

What are lipids?

A

A major class of biomolecules that includes fatty acids, triglycerides, phospholipids and cholesterol.

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6
Q

What are lipids used for?

A

Metabolism, energy storage and cell signalling.

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7
Q

Describe the phospholipid structure.

A

Composed of phosphoglycerides. Head is charged. Glycerol backbone. 2 hydroxyl chains have fatty acid chains attached another hydroxyl is phosphorylated. Phosphate group also linked to small polar alcohol head groups

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8
Q

Describe sphingolipids.

A

Contain sphingosine instead of glycerol. Make sphingomyelins. Most common choline polar group. Enriched in the myelin sheath.

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9
Q

What’s the liquid crystalline phase?

A

Lipids within biomembrane contain fatty acids that can move. Double bonds prevent very close packing of acyl chains - acyl chains are mobile.

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10
Q

Name some membrane proteins.

A

Integral membrane proteins.
Peripheral proteins.
Transmembrane proteins.

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11
Q

How does lipid signalling work?

A

By receptors, G coupled receptors, nuclear receptors. Roles as precursors of signalling molecules and cellular messengers.

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12
Q

What is passive diffusion?

A

No energy needed. From high conc to low conc.

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13
Q

What is simple diffusion?

A

Small non-polar molecules and uncharged molecules.

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14
Q

What is facilitated diffusion?

A

Larger polar molecules that need transporters.

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15
Q

What are ATPases?

A

An enzyme that catalyses the hydrolysis of ATP. Some are integral membrane proteins and move solutes across the membrane against conc gradient = transmembrane ATPases.

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16
Q

What is primary active transport?

A

Directly uses the chemical energy to move molecules through the membrane. Na/K pump is one, 3 Na out and 2 K in. The energy needed to pump against conc and electrochemical gradient.

17
Q

What is secondary active transport?

A

Molecules moved through the membrane as a direct result of diffusion of another substance. Sodium-calcium antiporter, transport of 2 different molecules in different directions simultaneously. ATP not used directly energy comes from a gradient that was created by primary active transport that uses ATP.

18
Q

What is ABC transporter?

A

ATP-binding cassette transporter - ATP dependent pumps - transmembrane protein. Hydrolyse ATP to drive transport across the membrane. Also participate in the movement of drugs and their metabolites across cell surface and organelle membranes.