1.3 membrane structure Flashcards
what does the ability of a compound to dissolve in water depend on?
whether the molecule is hydrophilic or hydrophobic
when are molecules hydrophilic / hydrophobic?
- organic compounds which are hydrophilic tend to be polar molecules, and are soluble in water
- organic compounds which are hydrophobic tend to be non-polar molecules and are not soluble in water
what is polarity?
- ability of a molecule to form a positive and/or a negative charge at parts of the molecule (dipole moment)
difference between polar and non-polar?
- non-polar molecules do not form charges and hence cannot interact with water molecules (usually via hydrogen bonds) and hence are not soluble
what is a phospholipid?
- a phospholipid molecule is considered to be a bipolar molecule, with one end being polar (charged) while the other end being non-polar (not able to form charges)
- phosphate (PO4-) end of a phospholipid molecule is polar and hence is hydrophilic and is able to attract and form weak bonds with other polar molecules like water
- other end is made up of two fatty acid tails (chains) and this region retains the non-polar nature and is hydrophobic
- can form monolayers, bilayers and micelles
how do phospholipids form bilayers?
- most cells have water based environment on both sides of membrane
- water attracts the polar phosphate ends of the phospholipid molecules
- phospholipids align themselves to form a bilayer, with the polar ends in contact with water and the hydrophobic non- polar fatty acid tails inside the bilayer away from the water molecules
how was it first discovered that the plasma membrane was a bilayer?
- with the advent of electron microscopy, scientists discovered that the plasma membrane is a bilayer, made up of two layers of material
- presence of 2 layers of dark material that sandwiches a lighter layer in between
- Davson-Danielli models explains this observation as arising from proteins on both surfaces surrounding a core made up of phospholipids
what is the davson-danielli model?
- protein-lipid “sandwich”
- lipid bilayer made up of phospholipids with hydrophilic heads pointing outwards and hydrophobic tails pointing inwards
- proteins coat the surface and stabilises the bilayer and does not penetrate into the bilayer
how was davson-danielli model falsified?
- use of freeze-fracturing to study cell membrane
- cells rapidly frozen and fractured and viewed under
an electron microscope - fracture occurs along lines of weakness, including the center of membranes
- fracture shows an irregular surface within the phospholipid bilayer, showing the presence of globular structures within the bilayer
- globular structures most likely proteins that were integral (and hence within) to the phospholipid bilayer, which falsified the Davson-Danielli model of having proteins only outside the phospholipid bilayer
what replaced davson-danielli model?
singer-nicolson model (fluid mosaic theory)
- proposed by singer and nicolson in 1972
- states that many proteins found within plasma membrane, within phospholipid bilayer
- supported by evidence from freeze fracturing analysis of the plasma membrane
- “fluid” in the sense that the phospholipid molecules are not bound in a fixed crystal lattice structure, but can move independently like a fluid
- “mosaic” in the sense that the entire membrane is made up of smaller phospholipid components
what are membrane proteins?
- membrane is a collage of different proteins embedded within the fluid matrix of the phospholipid layer
- proteins determine most of the specific functions of the plasma membrane
- weak hydrogen bonds between the polar regions of the proteins and the phospholipids keep the entire membrane stable
difference between integral and peripheral membrane proteins
INTEGRAL
- permanently embedded within the membrane and may go all the way through and emerge from one surface (monotopic) or both surfaces (polytopic) of the plasma membrane
PERIPHERAL
- do not interact with the hydrophobic core of the phospholipid bilayer, and are loosely bound to the plasma membrane via interactions with the hydrophilic heads of the bilayer
what are the major functions of membrane proteins?
J – joining / junctions (intercellular joining where it serves as a junction btwn 2 cells)
E – enzyme (fixing to membrane localises metabolic pathways)
T – transport (facilitated diffusion and active transport)
R – recognition (cell-cell recognition)
A – anchorage (attachment to cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix (ECM))
T – transduction (signal transduction; functions as receptors for peptide hormones)
how do transport membrane proteins work?
- some act as a hydrophilic channel that spans across the membrane that allows for specific molecules to pass through the membrane past the hydrophobic region of the plasma membrane
- others shuttle substances from one side to the other side of the plasma membrane by binding to the molecule and changing shape, with some being able to spontaneously do so or with the expenditure of energy from ATP
how do membrane proteins carry out enzymatic activity?
- protein embedded in a membrane may be an enzyme with their active site exposed to substances either in contact with the inner or outer surface of the membrane
- the enzymes may be organised as a group to carry out sequential steps in a metabolic pathway
- ATP synthase is an example of an embedded enzyme found on the inner membrane of mitochondria