Biochemistry - Membranes Flashcards
1
Q
Fluid mosaic model of membranes + movement of components
A
- A biological membrane is made of a fluid phospholipid bilayer that has proteins embedded within it that have the ability to move freely
- Lipids vibrate, flex back + forth, spin around axis, move sideways, and exchange places within same half of bilayer (millions of times/second)
- Proteins move slower (due to larger size), those anchoring cytoskeleton to membrane do not move
2
Q
Why do phospholipids have the tendency to form bilayers in water?
A
Nonpolar hydrophobic fatty acids aggregate together and polar heads associate with water (this arrangement represents lowest energy state, more likely to occur)
3
Q
Glycolipids
A
Any membrane lipid bound to a carbohydrate
4
Q
Glycoprotein
A
Protein bound to a carbohydrate
5
Q
Major factors affecting membrane fluidity
A
- Composition of lipid molecules making up the membrane: the more unsaturated, the more space between phospholipids, the more fluid the membrane is
- Temperature: the higher the temperature, the more fluid the membrane (if temp low enough, lipids pack closely together, membrane forms viscous semisolid gel)
6
Q
Role of sterols in stabilizing membrane
A
- At high temps: help restrain movement of lipid molecules in membrane, reducing fluidity
- At lower temps: sterols occupy spaces between lipid molecules, preventing fatty acids from associating + forming a non-fluid gel
7
Q
Transport proteins
A
- Provide a means for molecules to enter cell
- Some proteins provide hydrophilic channel
- Shape shifting may allow some proteins to shuttle molecules from one side of membrane to the other
8
Q
Enzymatic activity proteins
A
- Some membrane proteins are enzymes (e.g. those associated with respiration + photosynthesis)
- Help speed up biological reactions
9
Q
Triggering Signal Proteins
A
- Membrane proteins may bind to specific chemicals (e.g. hormones)
- Binding to such chemicals triggers changes on inner membrane surface causing a cascade of events within the cell
10
Q
Attachment + Recognition Proteins
A
- Proteins exposed to internal + external membrane surfaces that act as attachment points for cytoskeleton elements and cell to cell recognition components
- Bond to extracellular matrix
- e.g. surface proteins recognize disease-causing microbes attempting invasion and trigger immune response
11
Q
Peripheral proteins
A
- Protein on surface of membrane
- Do not interact with hydrophobic membrane core
- Held to membrane surfaces by non-covalent bonds (hydrogen + ionic), usually by interacting with exposed integral proteins/directly with membrane lipids
- Hold some integral proteins in place
- e.g. proteins that link cytoskeleton together
12
Q
Integral proteins
A
- Protein that is embedded in lipid bilayer
- Have at least one region that interacts with hydrophobic membrane core
- Most are transmembrane proteins that span entire membrane bilayer + have regions exposed to aqueous environment on both sides of membrane