Biological Membranes & Transport Flashcards

1
Q

Name 3 amphipathic lipid aggregates that form in water

A

micelle, vesicle, lipid bilayer

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2
Q

What is simple diffusion?

A

Nonpolar compounds move down concentration gradient

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3
Q

What is facilitated diffusion?

A

Molecule moves down its electrochemical gradient Requires transport channel Passive

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4
Q

What is primary active transport?

A

Molecule moves against its electrochemical gradient Requires transport channel ATP is used

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5
Q

What is secondary active transport?

A

Molecules moves against its electrochemical gradient Driven by an ion moving down its electrochemical gradient Requires transport channel Ion and molecule move in the same direction

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6
Q

What is an ion channel?

A

Molecule moves down its electrochemical gradient May be gated by a ligand or ion Requires transport channel

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7
Q

What is ionophore-mediated ion transport?

A

Molecule moves down its electrochemical gradient Ionophore picks up ion outside the cell, moves through membrane, drops ion off inside the cell, and can then repeat the cycle

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8
Q

Name the components of the phospholipid bilayer

A

Hydrophilic head (polar) and hydrophobic tail (nonpolar)

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9
Q

Why is cholesterol an important in the cell membrane?

A

Gives rigidity and intregrity to the membrate Has OH which allows it to be amphipathic It is a precursor of hormones

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10
Q

What causes archaea to have an unusual cell membrane?

A

Ether bond Causes lipid properties to withstand extreme temperatures

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11
Q

Permeability of phospholipid bilayer

A

From low permeability to high permeability: Ion (impermeable to phospholipid bilayer) Glucose, sucrose/ large uncharged polar molecules (impermeable) H2O, indole, glycerole/ small uncharged polar molecules (semipermeable) O2, CO2, N2/ hydrophobic molecules (freely permeable)

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12
Q

What is a peripheral protein?

A

A protein that is attached to the outside of the lipid bilayer.

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13
Q

What is an integral protein?

A

A protein that is free floating in the lipid bilayer Exposed ends are hydrophilic Strongest connection; must have detergent to remove from membrane Carboxy-terminis inside, amino-terminis outside

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14
Q

Explain the asymetric distribution of phospholipids in plasma membrane

A

Phospholipids that are high inside will be low outside, and vice versa

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15
Q

Explain the translipid deposition of glycophorin in an electrocyte

A

Carboxyl-terminis end inside Amino-terminis end outside

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16
Q

How do integral proteins embed into the phospholipid bilayer?

A

It has hydrophobic amino acids in its structure

17
Q

How do lipid-linked membrane proteins attach to the phospholipid bilayer?

A

There is a protein component and a lipid component. Lipid component anchors the complex into the phospholipid bilayer by attaching to the hydrophobic tails

18
Q

What is uniport?

A

Single molecule moves one direction across membrane Ex. glucose

19
Q

What is symport?

A

Type of cotransport Two different molecules move in the same direction at the same time across the membrane Ex. glucose and Na

20
Q

What is antiport?

A

Type of cotransport Two different molecules move in opposite directions at the same time across the membrane Ex. Na/K ATPase

21
Q

Describe uncatalyzed transbilayer (“flip-flop”) diffusion

A

Lipid moves from one side of the lipid bilayer to the other (ex. inside border to the outside border) Occurs very slow

22
Q

Describe uncatalyzed lateral diffusion

A

Lipid moves up or down the lipid bilayer on the same side Occurs very fast

23
Q

Name the 3 enzymes involved in catalyzed transbilayer translocations

A

Flippase Floppase Scramblase

24
Q

Name this membrane lipid and its class

A

Glycerophospholipid from the phospholipid class

25
Q

Name this membrane lipid and its class

A

Sphingolipid from the phospholipid and glycolipid classes

26
Q

Name this membrane lipid and its class

A

Cholesterol from the sterol class

27
Q

What are lipid rafts?

A

specialized membrane microdomains that compartmentalize cellular processes

28
Q

What are characteristics of caveolar membranes?

A
  • they are membrane microdomains that have caveolin as the prinicpal component
  • Caveolins may act as scaffolding proteins within caveolar membranes by compartmentalizing and concentrating signaling molecules
  • receptor-independent endocytosis
29
Q

How does simple diffusion without a transporter compare with diffusion with a transporter, in relation to entropy?

A
  • simple diffusion without a tranporter will cause an increase in entropy
  • diffusion without a transporter will cause a decrease in entropy
30
Q

Describe the enzymatic action of carbonic anhydrase on carbon dioxide that occurs inside RBCs

A
  • in respiring tissues, CO2 enters the RBC, where it is converted to carbonic acid and bicarbonate via carbonic anhydrase; bicarbonate is released into plasma
  • in the lungs, bicarbonate and carbonic acid are converted to CO2 via carbonic anhydrase; CO2 is exhaled