Chapter 4 Transport Across Membranes Flashcards

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1
Q

What is a plasma membrane?

A

The name given to all membranes in and around all cells and membrane bound organelles. They all have the same basic structure.

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2
Q

Describe the structure and give 5 functions of the plasma membrane.

A

Plasma membranes are made up of a phospholipid bilayer, cholesterol, proteins, glycoproteins and glycolipids. Membranes are flexible and self healing.

Functions
1. Separates cell contents from the external environment.

  1. Controls what enters and leaves the cell.
  2. Identifies the cell as self.
  3. Acts as a receptor for various chemicals.
  4. Site of chemical reactions.
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3
Q

What is the cell-surface membrane?

A

The cell surface membrane refers specifically to the plasma membrane that surrounds cells and forms the boundary between the cytoplasm and the environment.

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4
Q

How do phospholipids arrange themselves to form the plasma membrane?

A

The hydrophilic heads point out and are attracted to water on both sides of the membrane. The hydrophobic tails point into the membrane, repelled by water on both sides. This forms a bilayer.

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5
Q

Describe the movement of lipid soluble and water soluble materials into and out of the cell.

A

Lipid soluble material is able to move into and out of the cell. Water soluble material is unable to move in or out of the cell.

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6
Q

How are proteins embedded in the plasma membrane?

A

Proteins either occur on the surface only, and don’t cross the membrane, or completely span the bilayer from one side to the other.

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7
Q

What are 2 roles of the proteins which are embedded on the surface of a plasma membrane?

A

Proteins embedded on the surface of a plasma membrane either give mechanical support, or work as cell receptors for molecules such as hormones.

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8
Q

What is the role of proteins which span the width of the plasma membrane? What names are used to describe these proteins?

A

Transmembrane or integral proteins can act as protein channels, water filled tubes allowing water soluble ions to diffuse across the membrane. Others are carrier proteins that bind to molecules and change shape to move them across the membrane.

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9
Q

Give 6 roles of proteins in the membrane.

A

1- Structural support
2- Channels for water soluble substances
3- allow active transport
4- cell-surface receptors for identifying cells
5- cell adhesion
6- act as receptors e.g. for hormones.

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10
Q

How does cholesterol interact with water?

A

Cholesterol is very hydrophobic.

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11
Q

How does cholesterol affect fluidity?

A

At low temperatures cholesterol gets in between phospholipids and increases fluidity and at high temperatures it reduces the space between molecules and lowers fluidity.

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12
Q

How does solvent concentration affect permeability? How does temperature affect permeability?

A

As solvent concentration increases the permeability of the cell membrane increases.
At subzero temperatures permeability is very high due to water crystals damaging the membrane. As temperature increases above zero permeability increases as phospholipid fluidity increases until the proteins in the membrane denature resulting in full permeability.

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13
Q

What is the difference between passive and active transport?

A

Passive uses only the energy of the motion of particles. Active transport uses an external energy source, such as ATP.

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14
Q

Describe the movement of particles.

A

1 - Particles are constantly in motion due to kinetic energy.
2 - Particle motion is random.
3 - Particles are constantly bouncing off each other and their surroundings.

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15
Q

What is the definition of diffusion?

A

The net movement of molecules or ions from a region where they are highly concentrated to one where their concentration is lower until evenly distributed.

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16
Q

What kind of molecules can diffuse through the cell-surface membrane? Give examples.

A

Small, non-polar molecules can diffuse through cell surface membranes.. E.g. oxygen and carbon dioxide.

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17
Q

What does polar mean?

A

A polar molecule has a positive charge on one side and a negative charge on the other.

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18
Q

Which molecules do not diffuse easily across the plasma membranes. Why?

A

Charged ions and polar molecules do not diffuse easily across the plasma membrane. This is due to the hydrophobic nature of the fatty-acid tails of the phospholipids in the membrane.

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19
Q

Define the term facilitated diffusion

A

Movement of molecules from a high concentration to a low concentration, across a partially permeable membrane, via specific channel or carrier proteins. It is passive, does NOT require ATP

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20
Q

Where does the energy for facilitated diffusion come from?

A

The inbuilt kinetic energy of the molecules.

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21
Q

What is a channel protein?

A

A protein which creates a water filled hydrophilic channel through the cell membrane through which ions can pass. It is selective to a specific ion.

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22
Q

What is a carrier protein?

A

A protein which changes shape to allow larger molecules to pass through the membrane. In facilitated diffusion this requires no energy, in active transport it requires ATP.

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23
Q

State 4 factors that affect the rate of diffusion

A
  1. Surface area
  2. Number of channel or carrier proteins
  3. Temperature
  4. Concentration gradient.
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24
Q

What is the definition of osmosis?

A

The passage of water from a region where it has a higher water potential to a region where it has a lower water potential through a selectively permeable membrane.

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25
Q

What is meant by water potential?

A

Water potential is the pressure applied by water molecules.

26
Q

What substance has the highest possible water potential of 0 kPa?

A

Pure water has a water potential of 0kPa.

27
Q

As more solute is added to a solution, what happens to the water potential?

A

As more solute is added the water potential decreases. It becomes more negative.

28
Q

Describe how water moves in terms of water potential.

A

Water moves from an area of higher water potential to a lower water potential. From less negative to more negative.

29
Q

What symbol is used to represent water potential?

A

Water potential is represented by the greek symbol Psi - Ψ

30
Q

How can the water potential of a cell or tissue be determined?

A

Water potential can be determined by placing the substance in various solutions of different water potentials. Where there is no net change of mass, (no gain or loss of water), the water potential must be the same inside the cell/tissue as in the external solution.

31
Q

Where does the energy for osmosis come from?

A

The energy for osmosis comes from the molecules’ kinetic energy.

32
Q

Why must there be a selectively permeable membrane involved in osmosis?

A

This only allows water molecules to move across, not the solute molecules.

33
Q

Describe what would happen to a red blood cell placed in a solution with a more negative water potential than that of its cytoplasm

A

Water would move OUT of the red blood cell, down a water potential gradient, shrinking and shrivelling (also known as crenation)

34
Q

Describe what would happen to a liver cell placed in a solution with a more positive water potential than its own cytoplasm

A

Water would move IN to the liver cell, down a water potential gradient, swelling the cell and causing it to burst due to the presence of no cell wall.

35
Q

Describe what would happen to a root hair cell placed in a solution with lower water potential than its own cytoplasm/vacuole

A

Water would move OUT of the root hair cell, down a water potential gradient, causing the cell to become plasmolysed. Tissue plasmolysed tissues are described as flaccid.

36
Q

Describe what would happen to a guard cell placed in a solution of less negative water potential than its own cytoplasm

A

Water would move IN to the guard cell, down a water potential gradient, causing the cell to swell and become turgid.

37
Q

If the water potential is equal in and out of the cell, what would happen?

A

There would be no net movement of water.

38
Q

What is the protoplasm?

A

The protoplasm refers to the cell surface membrane, nucleus, cytoplasm and vacuole membrane.

39
Q

What does turgid mean?

A

When the protoplasm pushes against the cell wall we describe the cell as turgid.

40
Q

What does plasmolysed mean?

A

When water has left the cell its volume therefore decreases, the protoplasm no longer pushing against the cellulose cell wall. The cell surface membrane pulls away from the cell wall.

41
Q

What does incipient plasmolysis mean?

A

Any further loss of water would lead to plasmolysis.

42
Q

What is the definition of active transport?

A

Active transport is the movement of a substance from a region where it is in a lower concentration to a region where it is in a higher concentration across a membrane.
The process requires the expenditure of metabolic energy in the form of ATP and also requires carrier proteins.

43
Q

How is active transport different from passive transport?

A

Metabolic energy(ATP) is required for active transport. Substances move against the concentration gradient. Carrier proteins are always involved. The process is very selective.

44
Q

What are the two methods of active transport?

A
  1. Directly move molecules. (uniport)
  2. Co-transport. (antiport and symport)
45
Q

What are the 5 stages in direct active transport?

A

1 - Carrier proteins span the membrane, the molecule/ion to be transported binds.
2 - substance moves from low to high concentration.
3 - ATP binds to protein inside the cell, causing it to change shape and open on opposite side (ATP -> ADP)
4 - substance is released on the other side of the membrane.
5 - The phosphate molecule is released from protein and the carrier returns to its original shape.

46
Q

What is the similarity between facilitated diffusion and active transport?

A

They both use carrier proteins.

47
Q

What are the differences between facilitated diffusion and active transport.

A

Facilitated diffusion occurs down a concentration gradient, active transport occurs against a concentration gradient. Facilitated diffusion is passive, active transport uses metabolic energy in the form of ATP.

48
Q

Sometimes 2 types of molecules or ions are moved at once by active transport, one type in and one out type out of the cell, give an example of this.

A

The sodium-potassium pump. Sodium ions are actively removed from the cell, whilst potassium ions are actively taken in from the surroundings.

49
Q

What is the ileum?

A

The ileum is the small intestine.

50
Q

The epithelial cells of the ileum possess microvilli, how are these collectively known?

A

As a “brush border”.

51
Q

What is the purpose of the microvilli in the ileum?

A

Microvilli increase surface area to aid absorption.

52
Q

Describe in detail why there is typically a higher concentration of glucose and amino acids in the ileum compared to the blood?

A

1 - carbohydrates and proteins are constantly being broken down.
2 - the glucose and amino acids being absorbed are constantly being removed as the blood flows away from the ileum.
3 - glucose in the blood is constantly being used in respiration.

53
Q

Why is active transport also required alongside diffusion, to absorb nutrients from the ileum?

A

Diffusion only results in concentrations on both sides becoming equal, this will lead to some loss of glucose and amino acids from the body.

54
Q

What is the process by which amino acids and glucose are absorbed from the ileum?

A

Co-transport.

55
Q

What is the basic principle of co-transport of glucose or amino acids from the ileum?

A

The molecules are taken into the cells along with sodium ions which have been actively transported out by the sodium potassium pump.

56
Q

What are the stages involved in the cotransport of glucose from the ileum?

A

1 - Sodium ions are actively pumped out of the epithelial cells via a sodium-potassium pump, into the blood.
2 - This creates a low concentration of sodium inside the cell compared to the lumen of the ileum.
3 - Sodium ions diffuse into the epithelial cells through a carrier protein. as they do they carry glucose (or amino acid) molecules with them.
4 - This increases the concentration of glucose in the epithelial cell, so it moves via facilitated diffusion into the blood plasma.

57
Q

Sodium ions and glucose/amino acid molecules move from the ileum to the epithelial cells together, in which direction compared to their concentrations?

A

Sodium moves down the concentration gradient. Glucose/amino acids move up the concentration gradient.

58
Q

What is powering the movement of glucose/amino acid molecules into the epithelial cells from the ileum?

A

The sodium ion concentration gradient. (Sodium ions diffuse across the membrane, taking with them the other molecule). This is indirect active transport called cotransport.

59
Q

Describe endocytosis.

A

A substance is engulfed by the cell creating a vesicle.

60
Q

Describe exocytosis.

A

A vesicle in the cell fuses with the membrane and releases its contents out of the cell.