Chapter 5 - Cell Membrane and Signaling Flashcards

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1
Q

Why do phospholipids spontaneously form bilayer structures, while oils form small droplets?

A

Oils do not have the polar head group that phospholipids have

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2
Q

What kind of membrane proteins may be associated with the phospholipid head groups of membrane proteins?

A

Peripheral membrane proteins

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3
Q

In addition to the lipid bilayer and proteins, membranes may contain ____ in the form of _____ and _____

A

carbohydrates; glycoproteins; glycolipids

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4
Q

In animals, cell recognition

A

involves proteins in plasma membranes

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5
Q

Osmosis

A

is the movement of water across selectively permeable membranes

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6
Q

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

A

swell and lyse (burst)

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7
Q

In facilitated diffusion

A

specific integral membrane proteins mediate transport

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8
Q

The sodium potassium pump (Na+ - K+ pump)

A

results in the formation of an Na+concentration gradient across the cell membrane

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9
Q

Hormones are chemical signals that

A

Travel through circulatory systems

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10
Q

A universal feature of receptors is that they

A

undergo structural (shape) changes when the signal molecule is bound

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11
Q

T/F

Both receptors and enzymes may be integral membrane proteins

A

True

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12
Q

Chemical signal transduction pathways

A

involve binding of the signal molecule to receptors

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13
Q

Caffeine

A

binds to receptors in the brain

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14
Q

Adenylyl cyclase

A

makes cAMP from ATP with the liberation of pyrophosphate

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15
Q

Which statement about a signal cascade is true?

A

cAMP is referred to as a “second messenger”

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16
Q

The phosphorylation of proteins by ATP

A

is catalyzed by enzymes know as “protein kinases.”

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17
Q

Cholesterol molecule in a membrane

A

interspersed between the phospholipid tails in the bilayer. Their presence influences the fluidity of the membrane.

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18
Q

Carbohydrate associated with membranes

A

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.

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19
Q

Non-Transmembrane integral protein

A

Integral protein that penetrates the phospholipid bilayer but does not extend all the way through it.

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20
Q

Transmembrane integral protein

A

Integral protein is an integral protein that extends all the way through the phospholipid bilayer

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21
Q

Cholesterol associated with membranes

A

They are interspersed between the phospholipid tails in the bilayer. Their presence influences the fluidity of the membrane.

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22
Q

3 functions of membrane proteins

A

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.

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23
Q

Peripheral membrane proteins

A

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

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24
Q

glycolipid

A

consists of a carbohydrate covalently bonded to a lipid

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25
Q

glycoprotein

A

consists of one or more short carbohydrate chains covalently bonded to a protein. The bound carbohydrates are oligosaccharides.

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26
Q

proteoglycan

A

a protein with even more carbohydrate molecules attaches to it, and the carbohydrate chains are often longer than glycoproteins

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27
Q

selective permeability

A

allowing certain substances to pass through while other substances are excluded; a characteristic of membranes.

28
Q

passive transport

A

do not require direct inputs of metabolic energy
substances move from area of high concentration to area of low concentration. Substances moves down the concentration gradient

29
Q

active transport

A

require the input of metabolic energy because they involve the movement of substances against their concentration gradients. “Acting Against normal flow” (from area of low concentration to area of high concentration)

30
Q

diffusion

A

the process of random movement toward a state of equilibrium
net movement from regions of greater concentration to regions of lesser concentration

31
Q

how fast something diffuses depends on what

A

the diameter of the molecules or ions (smaller molecules diffuse faster), the temperature of the solution (higher temperatures lead to faster diffusion because the hear provides more energy for movement), and concentration gradient in the system (the greater the concentration gradient the more rapidly a substance diffuses.

32
Q

simple diffusion

A

diffusion that doesn’t involve a direct input of energy or assistance by carrier proteins
*the more lipid-soluble the molecule is, the more rapidly it diffuses through the lipid bilayer

33
Q

Hypertonic

A

solution has a higher solute concentration that the other solution (more outside of the cell than the inside of the cell)

34
Q

Isotonic

A

solutions have equal solute concentrations

35
Q

Hypotonic

A

solute has a lower solute concentration than the there solution. (more on inside than outside) Hippo Hypo Swell

36
Q

channel proteins

A

integral membrane proteins that form channels across the membrane through which certain substances can pass

37
Q

carrier proteins

A

membrane proteins that bind specific molecules and transport them through the membrane

38
Q

Facilitated diffusion

A

passive movement through a membrane involving a specific carrier protein; does not proceed against a concentration gradient

39
Q

ion channels

A

an integral membrane protein that allows ions to diffuse across the membrane in which it is embedded
all show the same basic structure of a hydrophilic pore that allows a particular ion to move through it

40
Q

Gated channels

A

a membrane protein that changes its 3D shape and therefore its ion conductance in response to a stimulus. When open, it allows specific ions to move across the membrane.

41
Q

ligand

A

Any molecule that binds to a receptor site of another (usually larger) molecule
may also be referred to as a chemical signal

42
Q

aquaporins

A

a transport protein in plant and animal cell membranes through which water passes by osmosis. Also called a water channel protein. Allows large amounts of water to move down its concentration gradient

43
Q

In eukaryotes where is ATP produced?

A

in the mitochondria and plastids

44
Q

When is ATP energy released

A

when ATP is converted to adenosine diphosphate (ADP) in a hydrolysis reaction that breaks the bond between the terminal phosphate and the rest of the molecule.

45
Q

primary active transport

A

direct hydrolysis of ATP, which provides the energy required for transport
The sodium potassium pump

46
Q

Secondary active transport

A

does not use ATP directly. Instead, its energy is supplied by an ion concentration gradient or an electrical gradient, established by primary active transport. uses the energy of ATP indirectly to set up the gradient

47
Q

Exocytosis

A

process by which materials packaged in the vesicles are secreted from the cell. Important in the secretion of many types of substances, including digestive enzymes from the pacers, neurotransmitters from neurons, and materials for the construction of the plant cell wall.

48
Q

Endocytosis

A

processes that bring small molecules, macromolecules, large particles, and even small cells into eukaryotic cells. Often depends on receptors

49
Q

Three types of endocytosis

A

Phagocytosis

pinocytosis and receptor endocytosis

50
Q

Phagocytosis

A

receptors in cell membrane recognize a specific ligand on the surface of a large particle or even an entire cell. Binding of the ligand to the receptor causes the phagocytic cell to engulf the particle or other cell.

51
Q

Pinocytosis

A

vesicles bring fluids and dissolved substances, including proteins, into the cell

52
Q

Receptor endocytosis

A

mechanism for bringing specific large molecules, recognized by specific receptors, into the cell.

53
Q

signal transduction pathway

A

the series of biochemical steps whereby a stimulus to a cell (such as a hormone or neurotransmitter binding to a receptor) is translated into a response of the cell.

54
Q

Autocrine signals

A

affect the same cell that releases them. Ex: many tumor cells reproduce uncontrollably because they self-stimulate cell division by making their own division signals

55
Q

Paracrine signals

A

diffuse to and affect near by cells. Ex: a neurotransmitter made by a nerve cell that diffuses to an adjacent cell and stimulates it

56
Q

Juxtacrine signaling

A

requires direct contact between the signaling and the responding cell, usually involves interaction between the signaling molecules bound to the surface of the two cells.

57
Q

hormones

A

chemical substance produced in minute amounts by endocrine cells and transported in the blood to distant target cells, where it exerts regulatory influences on their function

58
Q

allosteric regulation

A

regulation of the activity of a protein (usually an enzyme) by the binding of an effector molecule to a site other than the active site.

59
Q

intracellular receptors

A

located inside the cell. small or non polar ligands can diffuse across the phospholipid biceps. Acetylcholine layer of the cell membrane and enter the cell. Ex: estrogen is a lipid soluble steroid hormone that can easily diffuse across the cell membrane; it binds to receptor inside the cell.

60
Q

membrane receptors

A

located on the cell surface. Large or polar ligands cannot cross the lipid bilayer. Ex: insulin, is a protein hormone

61
Q

protein kinase receptors

A

change shape upon ligand binding. modifies specific target proteins in the cell by adding phosphate groups to them.
not all protein kinases are receptors

62
Q

example of a protein kinase receptor

A

receptor for the hormone insulin

63
Q

G-protein linked receptors

A

ligand binding on the extracellular domain of the receptor exposes a site on the cytoplasmic side that can bind to a mobile membrane protein called a G protein.
partially inserted in the lipid bilayer and partially exposed on the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane.

64
Q

Glycogen phosphorylase

A

Activated when an animal faces life-threatening conditions and needs energy fast for the fight-or-flight response. Catalyzes the breakdown of glycogen stored in the liver so that the resulting glucose molecules can be released to the blood.

65
Q

second messengers

A

do not have enzymatic activity themselves instead they act to regulate target enzymes by binding to them noncovalently. allow a cell to respond to a single event at the cell membrane with many events inside the cell (aka it distributes the initial signal)
Also serve to amplify the signal.

66
Q

inhibition

A

glcogen synthase, catalyzes the joining of glucose molecules to form the energy-storing molecule glycogen, is inactivated when a phosphate group is added to it by protein kinase A. Thus the epinephrine signal prevents glucose from being stored in glycogen.

67
Q

Activation

A

Phosphorylase kinase is activated when a phosphate group is added to it. It is part of the cascade of reactions that ultimately leads to the activation of glycogen phosphorylase, another key enzyme in glucose metabolism. This enzyme results in the liberation of glucose molecules from glycogen.