5 - Lipids, Membranes & Cells Flashcards

chapter 6

0
Q

Which form of energy would a bird use? and why

A

lipids because storage is tight and it doesn’t attract water therefore lighter

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1
Q

What has greater surface tension - water or oil?

A

Water

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2
Q

To create a fate what kinds of reaction must happen?

A

a dehydration reaction

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3
Q

are triglicerides polar or non polar?

A

no polar

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4
Q

The head of a fatty acid has which type of group at the head?

A

coarboxyl

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5
Q

What kind of head is on a steroid?

A

4 ring structure at top of the isoprene chain

hydrophillic

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6
Q

What does amphipathic mean?

A

has both hydrophobic & hydrophilic elements

“dual sympathy”

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7
Q

How do lipids behave in water?

A

the form micelles
have short acid tails
or
crate phospholipid bi layers

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8
Q

What is the distinguishing factor between a saturated and unsaturated fat?

A

double bonds in unsaturated

single bond in saturated

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9
Q

Describe diffusion

A

the movement at random

from a place of high concentration to a low concentration

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10
Q

describe osmosis

A

the movement of water

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11
Q

Describe the fluid mosaic model

A

proteins embedded into the cell membrane help the movement of stuff through the cell wall

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12
Q

What are channel proteins?

A

selective in allowing admittance of ions and small molecules

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13
Q

What properties are required for simple diffusion

A
move down concentration gradient
lipid soluble
CH4
Vitamin D
CO2
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14
Q

What kind of factors need to be in place to help the movement across a membrane via facilitated diffusion

A

moving down it’s concentration grade
with assistance from transmembrane carrier protein or channel proteins
Cl because it’s highly polar
glucose from liver to blood because it’s big and polar

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15
Q

What conditions does a substrate need to be using active transport to move across a membrane?

A

up concentration gradient, or an electochemical gradient
requires energy from hydrolysis of ATP & assistance of transport protein
Na
Iodine into thyroid gland - up gradient

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16
Q

What conditions apply for a substrate to use secondary active transport to cross a membrane?

A

up concentration gradient with help from something else that wants to go that way
eg glucose into the intestinal wall requires Na to bring it along for the dance party

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17
Q

When a solution is said to be hypertonic relative to the inside of a vesicle, what does that mean? What are the implications?

A

Solutes cannot move though the lipid bilayer, water will flow out of the cell and it will shrink

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18
Q

When the solution outside of the bilipid membrane has a lower concentration of solutes then the interior has
What will happen?
and what is this called?

A

the water will flow in

the solution is hypotonic

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19
Q

What is an electrochemical gradient?

A

Ions move in response to a combined concentration and electrical gradient

20
Q

What is facilitated diffusion?

A

the passive transport of substances that would otherwise not cross a membrane, flow of ions, isotonic
needs a carrier protein
ie Gramicidin - membrane peptides = ion channel
best studied specialized for moving glucose into the cell

21
Q

What are aquiporins?

A

water pores allowing H2O to cross plasma membrane 10x faster than in the absence of it

22
Q

What are gated channels?

A

channels in the membrane that open or close in response to the binding of a particular molecule or to the change in an electrical charge on the outside of the membrane

23
Q

Describe active transport

A

against their electrical gradient
requires energy - ATP
Changes shape

24
What is the distinguishing factor between saturated and unsaturated fats?
Saturated fats are all single bonds, therefore saturated | Unsaturated fats have a double bond, therefor they have a kink in their tail, don't pack as well
25
What are fats composed of?
3 FA ester linked to a # carbon molecule called glycerol
26
What are the 3 most important types of lipids?
fats Steroids phospholipids
27
Where do the ester linkages go? | What kind of link is it?
Ester happens between the COOH of the FA tail & OH of the glycerol head, it is a covalent bond
28
What are the distinguishing factors of a steroid?
family of lipids distinguished by the 4 ring structure | estrogen, progesterone & testosterone derived from
29
What are molecules containing only carbon and hydrogen?
Hydrocarbons Isoprene or Octane non polar - sharing of electrons = therefor don't dissolve in H2O
30
Describe phospholipids
glycerol linked to a phosphate group and to either 2 chains of Isoprene or 2 Fatty acids sometimes bonded to another small organic molecule
31
Describe the properties of saturated lipids
single bonding on the carbons = saturated | pack in tightly, less permeability
32
What happens to a as a hydrocarbon tail increase in length?
stiffer, and less permeable, interactions among tails are stiffer ie wax used by sea birds, otters, plant cells on exterior waxy layer
33
Describe unsaturated FA
kink in tail due to double bond liquid at room temp liquid triglycerides are called oils
34
what is the protein channel called that helps to facilitate the movement of water across a membrane?
aquaporin
35
Define simple diffusion
The movement of a substance toward a lesser concentration - the larger the concentration, the faster the movement - size matters - moves faster when smaller - lipid solubility diffuse readliy - Charge - charge particles don't move by simple diffusion
36
Define facilitate diffusion
The movement of a substance down it's concentration gradient
37
What types of substances are moved via facilitated diffusion
- small charged particles - ions (Na, K, Cl) - polar molecules (glucose, some aa) - larger molecules (glucose, some aa)
38
list properties of simple diffusion
faster than simple diffusion selective transporter subject to saturation, denaturation dependent on both charge and conc. gradient
39
Define active transport
the movement of a substance up it's concentration gradient or electrochemical gradient via a transport channel
40
What does an active transport protein in the membrane require to work/
the input of energy Na/K pump - moves 3 Na out, 2 K in requires ATP
41
What is exocytosis?
the exit of materials from a cell
42
What is endocytosis?
taking in materials into the cell
43
Describe three different forms of endocytosis
- phagocytosis - pintocytosis - receptor-mediated endocytosis
44
Define phagocytosis
cell eating moves large particles into the cell White blood cells phagocytose bacteria
45
Define pintocytosis
cell drinking | moves extracellular fluid into the cell
46
define receptor-mediated endocytosis
cells take up specific extracellular molecules via receptors on their surface
47
List the 3 major types of lipids in the M.B. and their function
Phospholipids - Membrane structure Glycolipid - signaling steroid - membrane stabilization, cholesterol