Chapter 5 - Cell Membrane and Signaling Flashcards
Why do phospholipids spontaneously form bilayer structures, while oils form small droplets?
Oils do not have the polar head group that phospholipids have
What kind of membrane proteins may be associated with the phospholipid head groups of membrane proteins?
Peripheral membrane proteins
In addition to the lipid bilayer and proteins, membranes may contain ____ in the form of _____ and _____
carbohydrates; glycoproteins; glycolipids
In animals, cell recognition
involves proteins in plasma membranes
Osmosis
is the movement of water across selectively permeable membranes
If a suspension of red blood cells in an isotonic NaCl solution was suddenly diluted with pure water, by a factor of 10, the cells would
swell and lyse (burst)
In facilitated diffusion
specific integral membrane proteins mediate transport
The sodium potassium pump (Na+ - K+ pump)
results in the formation of an Na+concentration gradient across the cell membrane
Hormones are chemical signals that
Travel through circulatory systems
A universal feature of receptors is that they
undergo structural (shape) changes when the signal molecule is bound
T/F
Both receptors and enzymes may be integral membrane proteins
True
Chemical signal transduction pathways
involve binding of the signal molecule to receptors
Caffeine
binds to receptors in the brain
Adenylyl cyclase
makes cAMP from ATP with the liberation of pyrophosphate
Which statement about a signal cascade is true?
cAMP is referred to as a “second messenger”
The phosphorylation of proteins by ATP
is catalyzed by enzymes know as “protein kinases.”
Cholesterol molecule in a membrane
interspersed between the phospholipid tails in the bilayer. Their presence influences the fluidity of the membrane.
Carbohydrate associated with membranes
Are attached either to the lipids or to the protein molecules. Located on the outside of the plasma membrane, where they protrude into the extracellular milieu. Crucial in recognizing specific molecules.
Non-Transmembrane integral protein
Integral protein that penetrates the phospholipid bilayer but does not extend all the way through it.
Transmembrane integral protein
Integral protein is an integral protein that extends all the way through the phospholipid bilayer
Cholesterol associated with membranes
They are interspersed between the phospholipid tails in the bilayer. Their presence influences the fluidity of the membrane.
3 functions of membrane proteins
some move materials through the membrane, others are involved in intercellular recognition and adhesion, while others receive chemical signals from the cell’s external environment.
Peripheral membrane proteins
lack exposed hydrophobic groups and are not embedded in the bilayer. Instead, they have polar or charged regions that interact with exposed parts of the integral membrane proteins, or with the polar heads of phospholipid molecules.
Does not extend into the phospholipid bilayer. Usually attached to integral proteins
glycolipid
consists of a carbohydrate covalently bonded to a lipid
glycoprotein
consists of one or more short carbohydrate chains covalently bonded to a protein. The bound carbohydrates are oligosaccharides.
proteoglycan
a protein with even more carbohydrate molecules attaches to it, and the carbohydrate chains are often longer than glycoproteins