24. Membrane structure Flashcards
Describe membrane permeability?
- Lipid soluble molecules can move either way through the membrane
- Movement of the molecules is dependant upon their concentration
- Large uncharged or polar molecules such as glucose and ions cannot easily cross the membrane.
- Membranes act as semi-permeable barriers.
- Transport across them can be passive or active.
Describe simple diffusion?
Movement of molecules from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration.
Describe the carrier-mediated mechanism?
Proteins within the membrane act to pass these molecules from one side to the other. This gain is driven by concentration gradient.
Describe Uniporter
Uniporter is movement in one direction.
Describe symporter transport?
Molecules transported in the same direction. Requires the presence of A and B for transport to occur.
Describe antiporter transport?
Molecules transported in opposite directions
Describe simple difussion? (5pts)
- Driven by a concentration gradient
- Does not require ATP
- Not specific
- Slow speed
- No limit to capacity
Describe carrier-mediated diffusion?
- Driven by a concentration gradient
- Does not require energy
- specific
- Fast
- Can be saturated
What is v max?
The maximum rate transport can take place
Describe how glucose is transported via carrier mediated transporters? (3pts)
- Glucose will bind to the transporter and will undergo a series of conformational changes allowing the glucose to pass across the membrane and into the cell.
- After the glucose has been released the transporter then returns to original confirmation allowing transport to continue.
- This continues until the gradient of glucose is diminished. To prevent this from happening cells remove the glucose from the inside of the cell by converting it to another molecule called Glucose-6-phosphate.
Describe features of glucose transport? (3pts)
- Transport of glucose is selective
- Transport of glucose can be increased by increasing the number of transporters on the cell surface.
- GLUT4 transporters are increased on muscle and adipocytes by insulin.
Summarise Carrier mediated facilitated diffusion? (6pts)
- Driven by concentration gradient
- Gradient is maintained by phosphorylation
- Bidirectional transport
- Transporters are selective
- Transporters can be saturated
- Some transporters are under hormonal regulation.
Describe Active transport (4pts)
- Movement of molecules from an area of low concentration to an area of high concentration against a concentration gradient.
- Requires ATP
- Selective
- Requires integral membrane proteins.
Describe sodium dependant glucose transporters SGLUT-1? (4pts)
- SGLUT-1 increase the uptake of glucose from the gut into the bloodstream by transporting sodium and glucose together.
- SGLUT-1 will transport glucose when there is sodium present. The driving force for the movement of glucose is the sodium ions.
- The concentration of sodium ions within the cells is less than that on the outside of the cells creating a concentration gradient.
- In order for this to continue ATP hydrolysis must take place.
Describe sodium dependant glucose transporters SGLUT-1? (4pts)
- SGLUT-1 increase the uptake of glucose from the gut into the bloodstream by transporting sodium and glucose together.
- SGLUT-1 will transport glucose when there is sodium present. The driving force for the movement of glucose is the sodium ions.
- The concentration of sodium ions within the cells is less than that on the outside of the cells creating a concentration gradient.
- In order for this to continue ATP hydrolysis must take place.