5 - Lipids, Membranes & Cells Flashcards

chapter 6

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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
Q

What is the distinguishing factor between saturated and unsaturated fats?

A

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
Q

What are fats composed of?

A

3 FA ester linked to a # carbon molecule called glycerol

26
Q

What are the 3 most important types of lipids?

A

fats
Steroids
phospholipids

27
Q

Where do the ester linkages go?

What kind of link is it?

A

Ester happens between the COOH of the FA tail & OH of the glycerol head, it is a covalent bond

28
Q

What are the distinguishing factors of a steroid?

A

family of lipids distinguished by the 4 ring structure

estrogen, progesterone & testosterone derived from

29
Q

What are molecules containing only carbon and hydrogen?

A

Hydrocarbons
Isoprene or Octane
non polar - sharing of electrons =
therefor don’t dissolve in H2O

30
Q

Describe phospholipids

A

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
Q

Describe the properties of saturated lipids

A

single bonding on the carbons = saturated

pack in tightly, less permeability

32
Q

What happens to a as a hydrocarbon tail increase in length?

A

stiffer, and less permeable, interactions among tails are stiffer
ie wax
used by sea birds, otters, plant cells on exterior waxy layer

33
Q

Describe unsaturated FA

A

kink in tail due to double bond
liquid at room temp
liquid triglycerides are called oils

34
Q

what is the protein channel called that helps to facilitate the movement of water across a membrane?

A

aquaporin

35
Q

Define simple diffusion

A

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
Q

Define facilitate diffusion

A

The movement of a substance down it’s concentration gradient

37
Q

What types of substances are moved via facilitated diffusion

A
  • small charged particles - ions (Na, K, Cl)
  • polar molecules (glucose, some aa)
  • larger molecules (glucose, some aa)
38
Q

list properties of simple diffusion

A

faster than simple diffusion
selective
transporter subject to saturation, denaturation
dependent on both charge and conc. gradient

39
Q

Define active transport

A

the movement of a substance up it’s concentration gradient or electrochemical gradient via a transport channel

40
Q

What does an active transport protein in the membrane require to work/

A

the input of energy
Na/K pump - moves 3 Na out, 2 K in
requires ATP

41
Q

What is exocytosis?

A

the exit of materials from a cell

42
Q

What is endocytosis?

A

taking in materials into the cell

43
Q

Describe three different forms of endocytosis

A
  • phagocytosis
  • pintocytosis
  • receptor-mediated endocytosis
44
Q

Define phagocytosis

A

cell eating
moves large particles into the cell
White blood cells phagocytose bacteria

45
Q

Define pintocytosis

A

cell drinking

moves extracellular fluid into the cell

46
Q

define receptor-mediated endocytosis

A

cells take up specific extracellular molecules via receptors on their surface

47
Q

List the 3 major types of lipids in the M.B. and their function

A

Phospholipids - Membrane structure
Glycolipid - signaling
steroid - membrane stabilization, cholesterol