2.3 Transport across cell membranes Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the fluid-mosaic model of membrane structure

A

● Molecules free to move laterally in phospholipid bilayer

● Many components - phospholipids, proteins,
glycoproteins and glycolipids

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2
Q

Describe the arrangement of the components of a cell membrane

A

● Phospholipids form a bilayer - fatty acid tails face inwards, phosphate heads face outwards

● Proteins
○ Intrinsic / integral proteins span bilayer eg. channel and carrier proteins
○ Extrinsic / peripheral proteins on surface of membrane

● Glycolipids (lipids with polysaccharide chains attached) found on exterior surface

● Glycoproteins (proteins with polysaccharide chains attached) found on exterior surface

● Cholesterol (sometimes present) bonds to phospholipid hydrophobic fatty acid tails

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3
Q

Explain the arrangement of phospholipids in a cell membrane

A

● Bilayer, with water present on either side

● Hydrophobic fatty acid tails repelled from water so point away from water / to interior

● Hydrophilic phosphate heads attracted to water so point to water

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4
Q

Explain the role of cholesterol (sometimes present) in cell membranes

A

● Restricts movement of other molecules making up membrane

● So decreases fluidity (and permeability) / increases rigidity

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5
Q

Suggest how cell membranes are adapted for other functions

A

● Phospholipid bilayer is fluid → membrane can bend for vesicle formation / phagocytosis

● Glycoproteins / glycolipids act as receptors / antigens → involved in cell signalling / recognition

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6
Q

Describe how movement across membranes occurs by simple diffusion

A

● Lipid-soluble (non-polar) or very small substances eg. O2, steroid hormones

● Move from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower conc., down a conc. gradient

● Across phospholipid bilayer

● Passive - doesn’t require energy from ATP / respiration (only kinetic energy of substances)

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7
Q

Explain the limitations imposed by the nature of the phospholipid bilayer

A

● Restricts movement of water soluble (polar) & larger substances eg. Na+/ glucose

● Due to hydrophobic fatty acid tails in interior of bilayer

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8
Q

Describe how movement across membranes occurs by facilitated diffusion

A

● Water-soluble / polar / charged (or slightly larger) substances eg. glucose, amino acids

● Move down a concentration gradient

● Through specific channel / carrier proteins

● Passive - doesn’t require energy from ATP / respiration (only kinetic energy of substances)

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9
Q

Explain the role of carrier and channel proteins in facilitated diffusion

A

● Shape / charge of protein determines which substances move

● Channel proteins facilitate diffusion of water-soluble substances
○ Hydrophilic pore filled with water
○ May be gated - can open / close

● Carrier proteins facilitate diffusion of (slightly larger) substances
○ Complementary substance attaches to binding site
○ Protein changes shape to transport substance

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10
Q

Describe how movement across membranes occurs by osmosis

A

● Water diffuses / moves

● From an area of high to low water potential (ψ) / down a water potential gradient

● Through a partially permeable membrane

● Passive - doesn’t require energy from ATP / respiration (only kinetic energy of substances)

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11
Q

What is water potential a measure of?

A

Water potential is a measure of how likely water molecules are to move out of a solution - pure (distilled) water has the maximum possible ψ (0 kPA), increasing solute concentration decreases ψ

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12
Q

Describe how movement across membranes occurs by active transport

A

● Substances move from area of lower to higher concentration / against a concentration gradient

● Requiring hydrolysis of ATP and specific carrier proteins

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13
Q

Describe the role of carrier proteins and the importance of the hydrolysis of
ATP in active transport

A
  1. Complementary substance binds to specific carrier protein
  2. ATP binds, hydrolysed into ADP + Pi, releasing energy
  3. Carrier protein changes shape, releasing substance on side
    of higher concentration
  4. Pi released → protein returns to original shape
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14
Q

Describe how movement across membranes occurs by co-transport

A

● Two different substances bind to and move simultaneously via a
co-transporter protein (type of carrier protein)

● Movement of one substance against its concentration gradient is often
coupled with the movement of another down its concentration gradient

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15
Q

Describe an example that illustrates co-transport

A

Absorption of sodium ions and glucose (or amino acids) by cells lining the mammalian ileum:
1 ● Na + actively transported from epithelial cells to blood (by Na+/K+ pump)
● Establishing a conc. gradient of Na+(higher in lumen than epithelial cell)

2 ● Na+ enters epithelial cell down its concentration gradient with glucose against its
concentration gradient
● Via a co-transporter protein

3 ● Glucose moves down a conc. gradient into blood via facilitated diffusion

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16
Q

Why is the movement of sodium considered to be indirect / secondary active transport?

A

It is reliant on a concentration gradient established by active transport

17
Q

Describe how surface area, number of channel or carrier proteins and
differences in gradients of concentration or water potential affect the rate of
movement across cell membranes

A

● Increasing surface area of membrane increases rate of movement

● Increasing number of channel / carrier proteins increases rate of facilitated diffusion / active transport

● Increasing concentration gradient increases rate of simple diffusion

● Increasing concentration gradient increases rate of facilitated diffusion
○ Until number of channel / carrier proteins becomes a limiting factor as all in use / saturated

● Increasing water potential gradient increases rate of osmosis

18
Q

Explain the adaptations of some specialised cells in relation to the rate of
transport across their internal and external membranes

A

● Cell membrane folded eg. microvilli in ileum → increase in surface area

● More protein channels / carriers → for facilitated diffusion (or active transport - carrier proteins only)

● Large number of mitochondria → make more ATP by aerobic respiration for active transport