5 - Lipids, Membranes & Cells Flashcards
chapter 6
Which form of energy would a bird use? and why
lipids because storage is tight and it doesn’t attract water therefore lighter
What has greater surface tension - water or oil?
Water
To create a fate what kinds of reaction must happen?
a dehydration reaction
are triglicerides polar or non polar?
no polar
The head of a fatty acid has which type of group at the head?
coarboxyl
What kind of head is on a steroid?
4 ring structure at top of the isoprene chain
hydrophillic
What does amphipathic mean?
has both hydrophobic & hydrophilic elements
“dual sympathy”
How do lipids behave in water?
the form micelles
have short acid tails
or
crate phospholipid bi layers
What is the distinguishing factor between a saturated and unsaturated fat?
double bonds in unsaturated
single bond in saturated
Describe diffusion
the movement at random
from a place of high concentration to a low concentration
describe osmosis
the movement of water
Describe the fluid mosaic model
proteins embedded into the cell membrane help the movement of stuff through the cell wall
What are channel proteins?
selective in allowing admittance of ions and small molecules
What properties are required for simple diffusion
move down concentration gradient lipid soluble CH4 Vitamin D CO2
What kind of factors need to be in place to help the movement across a membrane via facilitated diffusion
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
What conditions does a substrate need to be using active transport to move across a membrane?
up concentration gradient, or an electochemical gradient
requires energy from hydrolysis of ATP & assistance of transport protein
Na
Iodine into thyroid gland - up gradient
What conditions apply for a substrate to use secondary active transport to cross a membrane?
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
When a solution is said to be hypertonic relative to the inside of a vesicle, what does that mean? What are the implications?
Solutes cannot move though the lipid bilayer, water will flow out of the cell and it will shrink
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?
the water will flow in
the solution is hypotonic