Cell membrane Flashcards

1
Q

What is diffusion?

A

Molecules move down their concentration gradient passively

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2
Q

What affects diffusion rate? What quantifies this?

A

Surface area
Concentration gradient
Distance
Temperature

Fick’s Law

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3
Q

What is osmosis?

A

Water moves down its water potential gradient across a partially permeable membrane

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4
Q

What is solubility?

A

The ability of a substance to dissolve in a solvent

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5
Q

What is the difference between a channel and a carrier?

A

Channel:
Passive diffusion.

No binding site, open to both environments at the same time.

Can be gated and only open under certain conditions.

Can also be selective with selectivity filters.

Carriers:
Passive or active.

Have binding site, undergo a conformational shape change to present the solute on the other side of the membrane.

Carriers are saturable.

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6
Q

What makes a carrier work actively?

A

Require ATP hydrolysis to undergo the conformational shape change

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7
Q

What is the main constituent of a cell membrane?

A

Phospholipids

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8
Q

What arrangement do phospholipids form in the membrane?

A

Bilayer

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9
Q

What property of phospholipids allows them to form a bilayer?

A

Amphipathic

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10
Q

What does amphipathic mean?

A

Hydrophilic and hydrophobic properties

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11
Q

What are the 3 parts of a phospholipid?

A

Phosphate head
Glycerol
Two fatty acid tails

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12
Q

Which part of the phospholipid is hydrophilic and what part is hydrophobic?

A

Hydrophobic head

Hydrophilic tail

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13
Q

What are the three most prevalent lipids in the cell membrane?

A

Phosphatidylserine: Head contains serine residue (PS)

Phosphatidylcholine: Head contains choline residue (PC)

Sphingomyelin (SM), is a type of sphingolipid

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14
Q

Where is sphingomyelin especially present?

A

Membranous myelin sheath that surrounds some nerve cell axons

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15
Q

What does sphingomyelin consist of?

A

Phosphocholine head group, a sphingosine, and a fatty acid

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16
Q

Is sphingomyelin synthesised from glycerol?

A

No

17
Q

How are the 3 lipid constituents arranged on the inside and outside?

A

Inside layer containing more PS and the outside layer containing more PC and SM

18
Q

What is cholesterol?

A

Unsaturated alcohol (sterol)

19
Q

What does cholesterol’s interaction with phospholipids result in?

A

Cholesterol increases membrane packing, which both alters membrane fluidity and maintains membrane integrity so that animal cells do not need to build cell walls

20
Q

What is the glycocalyx?

A

A glycoprotein and glycolipid covering that surrounds the cell membranes

21
Q

What conjugation results in the formation of the glycocalyx?

A

Glycosylation of the proteins and lipids

22
Q

What does the fluid mosaic model refer to?

A

The fluidity and dynamic nature of the membrane

23
Q

What are three ways a protein can be positioned in a membrane?

A

Surface proteins

Transmembrane proteins: integral membrane protein that spans the entirety of the cell membrane.

Anchored proteins: proteins located on the surface of the cell membrane that are covalently attached to lipids embedded within the cell membrane.

24
Q

What do surface proteins often contribute to?

A

Often are glycosylated and make up glycoproteins in the glycocalyx.

25
Q

What is a uniporter, symporter and antiporter?

A

Carrier proteins

Uniporters (move one substance in one direction)

Symporters (move two substances in the same direction)

Antiporters (move two substances in opposite directions) .