Chapter 2 - Cell Membranes Flashcards
(40 cards)
What are the functions of the cell membrane?
It separates the contents of the cell from the external environment.
Communicates with other cell.
Regulated the exchange of substance between cytoplasm & environment
Chemical reactions occur in the membrane & acts as a receptor for recognising external stimuli.
What is the plasma membrane?
It surrounds all living cells. Controls how substance move in & out of the cell.
Phospholipids, proteins, carbohydrates and cholesterol.
What is found in the cell membrane?
Phospholipids that form a thin, flexible sheet while protein which float like icebergs & carbohydrates that extend out from proteins.
How are the phospholipids arranged?
They are in a bilayer, with the polar hydrophilic phosphate heads facing outwards and their non-polar fatty tails facing inwards.
Why is it considered a barrier?
To all but the smallest molecules, it efficiently isolates the 2 sides of the membrane.
Why is cholesterol important?
Links fatty acids together, stabilises and strengthens the membrane.
There are 2 types of proteins found in cell membranes. State them.
Intrinsic proteins which span from one side of the phospholipid to the other.
Extrinsic proteins which sit on one of the surfaces.
What are the intrinsic proteins used for?
Are usually involved in transporting substances across the membrane.
What are the extrinsic proteins used for?
The ones found on the inside are attracted to the cytoskeleton, and are involved in the maintaining of shape and motility.
Whereas the ones found in the outside can act as receptors, by having a specific boding site with hormones/chemicals can bind.
Carbohydrates are found on all outer surfaces of cell membranes and are attached to a number of things. Mention a few combinations.
Proteins and carbohydrates form glycoproteins.
Phospholipids and carbohydrates form glycolipids.
The carbohydrates are short polysaccharide that form a cell coat which is involved in protection and recognition of antigens.
What is the fluid mosaic model?
The plasma membrane is described to be fluid because of its hydrophobic integral components move throughout the membrane. That means the membrane is not solid, but more like a ‘fluid’.
The membrane is depicted as mosaic because like a mosaic that is made up of many different parts such as proteins, phospholipids and cholesterol.
What are channel proteins and carrier proteins?
They are involved in the selective transport of polar molecules & ions through the membrane. (Facilitated diffusion & active transport)
What are receptor molecules?
Proteins have very specific shapes, making them ideal as receptor molecules for chemical between cells. (eg: hormones)
What are antigens?
These are proteins that act as a cell identity markers.
What are glycolipids?
Have branching carbohydrate side chains and are involved in cell recognition. May act as a receptor.
Some of the fatty acids are saturated and others are not. What difference does this make?
Unsaturated tails are bent and fit together loosely.
The more unsaturated the tails, the more fluid the membrane is.
What is another use for cholesterol?
It acts like a plug reducing even further the escape or entry of polar molecules through membrane.
How are proteins used in energy transfer?
In photosynthesis and respiration proteins take part in energy transfer systems that exist in the membranes of mitochondria and chloroplasts.
What are the benefits of compartmentalisation?
Allows materials to be concentrate inside, excluded from cell or separate.
Enables reactions to take place that would otherwise be impossible.
What is simple diffusion?
For very small molecules such as water, the barrier doesn’t affect them, as such they can’t control it. Can only happen down the concentration gradient.
Is a passive process requiring no energy.
What factors affect the rate of diffusion?
The steeper the gradient, the faster the rate, which may be needed if rapid transport is required.
The greater the surface area of membrane, the greater the rate. (The larger the cell, the smaller the surface area, which places a limit of cell size)
Rate of diffusion decreases dramatically with distance. Only effective short distances.
What is osmosis?
It is the diffusion of water across a membrane, just like simple diffusion. However due to its important, it has it’s own name.
The more concentrated the solution (contents of cell), the more solute molecules & therefor the less water molecules available in a volume.
Always down the concentration gradient. Concentrated to dilute.
There are 3 types if concentration in osmosis which affect the state of the cell. Mention them.
Isotonic solution: a solution of equal OP to cell.
Hypertonic solution: a solution of higher OP to cell. (Flaccid)
Hypotonic solution: a solution of lower OP to cell. (Turgid)
What is facilitated diffusion?
Transport of substances by a transmembrane protein molecule.
Protein molecules tend to be specific for one molecule, so will only be able to pass if it’s the specific molecule.
Passive process requiring no energy
Travel down a concentrated gradient.