Membranes Flashcards

1
Q

How is a red blood cell’s membrane adapted to do its function?

A

Permeable to oxygen, carbon dioxide.
It is a biconcave disc to have a larger surface area for better permeability.
It is very flexible to go into small places.

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2
Q

How is a phagocytes membrane adapted to do its function?

A

Needs to be able to engulf pathogens.
Flexible to be able to wrap around foreign bodies.
They have receptors to engulf foreign bodies,

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3
Q

How is a muscle cell’s membrane adapted to do its function?

A

Permeable to oxygen, carbon dioxide, and glucose.
Can transmit electrical impulses to each other using special molecules. have receptors to know when to contract and relax. Have a lot of proteins.

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4
Q

How is a shoot cell’s membrane adapted to do its function?

A

Has auxin receptors to know when to grow
Flexible so it can grow

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5
Q

How is a neurone cell’s membrane adapted to do its function?

A

Can transmit electrical impulses to each other using special molecules.

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6
Q

How is chloroplast membrane adapted to do its function?

A

Permeable to oxygen, carbon dioxide and glucose.
Chlorophyll and many thylakoids to increase surface area

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7
Q

What are the general functions of membranes?

A

Separates the cells internal parts to its surroundings
Site of chemical reactions
Releases chemicals to signal to other cells
Partially permeable to regulate transport in and out of the cell
-Has antigens to recognise own body and foreign cells
Contains receptors that receive chemical signals, such as hormones and drugs
-Contain enzymes involved in specific metabolic pathways

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8
Q

What makes up different parts of the membrane

A

Phospholipid bilayer (lipids with a phosphate group)
- Glycolipids (lipid with a carb molecule)
Proteins, glycoproteins (protein with a carb molecule)
Fluid because compartments can move across each other
Channel proteins - to allow substances through
Antigens to allow the cell to be recognised

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9
Q

What is a phospholipid?

A

A molecule with a phosphate head and 2 fatty acids as tails

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10
Q

What part of the phospholipid is hydrophilic and why?

A

The phosphate head is polar so it is hydrophilic

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11
Q

What part of the phospholipid is hydrophobic and why?

A

The fatty acid tail is not polar so it is hydrophobic

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12
Q

What are the 2 structures can phospholipids make in water and why does it become these shapes ?

A

It can make a complete circle with the hydrophobic tails in the centre and the hydrophilic heads on the outside called a micelle to protect the hydrophobic tails
It can make a double layered membrane with hydrophilic heads on the outside on both sides and the hydrophobic tails in between them.

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13
Q

What is cholesterol’s function?

A

-It is important in regulating the membranes fluidity, the more cholesterols the less fluid or permeable the membrane because nothing can enter where the cholesterol it.
-It also keeps the cell stable at normal body temperature, without it cell membranes would burst open

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14
Q

What is a carrier protein function?

A

It transports substances that can’t go through the membrane, such as sugars, ions and amino acids but are still needed in the cell

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15
Q

What is a channel protein function?

A

It transports ions that can’t go through the membrane but are still needed in the cell

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16
Q

What is an intrinsic protein?

A

These are proteins that span the entire width of the membrane

17
Q

What is an extrinsic protein?

A

Proteins that may be free on the membranes surface of attached to an intrinsic protein

18
Q

Why is the cell membrane inside of a mitochondria folded?

A

To increase SA for more chemical reactions

19
Q

What is a glycoprotein?

A

A carbohydrate chain attached to a protein in the cell membrane

20
Q

What is a glycoproteins function?

A

It is a receptor involved in cell recognition and and cells binding to make tissues
it also can be a receptor for hormones or an enzyme. It also can give off hormones

21
Q

What is a glycolipid?

A

A carbohydrate chain attached to a phospholipid in the cell membrane

22
Q

What is a glycolipids function?

A

It is a receptor involved in cell recognition and and cells binding to make tissues

23
Q

What is the function of extrinsic proteins on the inside the cell membrane?

A

They are used in cell signalling or chemical signalling

24
Q

What types of molecules can pass through the phospholipids through the bilayer?

A

Small non-polar molecules can pass though the bilayer easily
Small polar molecules can pass though the bilayer slowly

25
Q

What types of molecules can’t pass through the phospholipids through the bilayer?

A

Charged particles like ions are unlikely to pass through the bilayer, even if they are small

26
Q

What happens to the saturated fatty acids in the cell membrane if the temperature decreases?

A

Fatty acids become more condensed

27
Q

What happens to the unsaturated fatty acids in the cell membrane if the temperature decreases?

A

They compress and the kinks in the tails push the phospholipids away to maintain the cell membranes permeability.

28
Q

What does cholesterol do when the temperature decreases?

A

It buffers the effect of the lowered temperature to prevent a reduction in the membrane fluidity by preventing the phospholipids from packing together too closely.

29
Q

What does cholesterol do when the temperature increases?

A

They buffer the effect of the increasing heat as it reduces the cell membrane permeability.

30
Q

What happens to the phospholipids in the cell membrane if the temperature increases?

A

They have more kinetic energy do they start to move more and in random ways, increasing fluidity and permeability

31
Q

What happens to the intrinsic proteins in the cell membrane if the temperature increases?

A

The intrinsic proteins may shift their position, altering the rate of the reaction they catalyse and the active site may change and denature the protein

32
Q

What affects phagocytosis and how?

A

An increase in temperature may affect the infolding of the plasma membrane during phagocytosis

33
Q

What happens to proteins in the cell membrane if the temperature increases?

A

The high temperatures cause the ionic and hydrogen bonds in the protein to break the bonds holding its structure together, so it unfolds.

34
Q

What happens to proteins tertiary structure in the cell membrane if the temperature increases?

A

They can’t change back to their original structure so they are denatured.

35
Q

What happens to cytoskeleton if the temperature increases?

A

If both the intrinsic proteins and cytoskeleton threads become denatured then the plasma membrane will start to fall apart and make the cell membrane more permeable.

36
Q

What happens to the phospholipids in the cell membrane if the there is a solvent?

A

Organic solvents such as acetone and ethanol will damage the cell membranes because they dissolve lipids.