Chapter5 Flashcards
Phospholipid
Phospholipids belong to the lipid family of biological polymers. A phospholipid is composed of two fatty acids, a glycerol unit, a phosphate group and a polar molecule.
Amphipathic
An amphipathic molecule is polar at one end and nonpolar at the other. They interact in specific ways when placed in an aqueous environment
Hydrophobic
nonpolar substances that are excluded by water and other polar molecules
Hydrophilic
Polar molecules that associate readily with water
Bilayer
A double layer of phospholipids in which the tails face inwards and are hydrophobic and the phosphate groups face outwards and are hydrophilic. This allows for the membrane to be selectively permeable.
Micelle
A sphere composed of a single layer of lipid molecules
Fatty acid
One of two components of a neutral lipid, containing a single hydrocarbon chain with a carboxyl group linked at one end.
Unsaturated hydrocarbon
hydrocarbons with one or more doubles bonds linking the carbons. This makes the melting point go down.
Saturated hydrocarbon
Hydrocarbons with only single bonds linking the carbon atoms. This makes the melting temperature higher.
Desaturase
Bacteria, Plants and Animals use desaturase enzymes to alter their membrane fatty acids in response to their environment. A fatty acid desaturase is an enzyme that removes two hydrogen atoms from a fatty acid, creating a carbon/carbon double bond.
Sterol
Steroid with a single polar –OH group linked t one end of the ring framework and a complex, nonpolar hydrocarbon chain at the other end.
Cholesterol
Cholesterol is also found in the membranes of most animal cells. The presence of cholesterol in plasma membranes has the same affect as double bonds. It disrupts the hydrophobic interactions in the fatty acid tails
Integral membrane protein
Integral or Trans-membrane proteins travel all the way across the membrane. They may cross once, twice or many times – depending on the protein being examined
Diffusion
The net movement of ions or molecules from a region of higher concentration to a region of lower concentration
Transmembrane protein
Transmembrane proteins have a number of important functions in the plasma membraneThey can aid transport of ions and polar molecules or they can help communicate signals from one side to the other
Peripheral membrane protein
Extrinsic or Peripheral membrane proteins are more loosely attached1 & 2 Partly embedded in the membrane 3 protein is anchored by a lipid
Cytoskeleton
The interconnected system of protein fibres and tubes that extends throughout the cytoplasm of a eukaryotic cell
Selectively permeable
Membranes that selectively allow, impede, or block the passage of atoms and molecules
Passive transport
The transport of substances across the cell membranes without expenditure of energy, as in diffusion.
Concentration gradient
The concentration difference that dives diffusion