CP 2 Flashcards
What is the difference between channel and carrier mediated transport?
- Channel: no binding/direct interaction, fast
- Carrier: binds, slower
What is the difference between primary and secondary active transport?
- PAT: Uses ATP for transport to establish gradient
- SAT: Uses gradient from PAT for transport
What is non-mediated transport?
What molecules can do this?
- Can diffuse through membrane without transport protein
- Nonpolar hydrophobic molecules (O2, CO2, N, fatty acids, small molecules, fat-soluble vitamins, etc.)
What is active transport?
- Uses energy to drive substances AGAINST conc/electrochemical gradient
- Primary/secondary
What is passive transport?
Moves substances DOWN conc/electrochemical gradient (using only their kinetic energy)
What are the properties of ion channels? (5)
- Channel forms water filled pore that shields ions from hydrophobic core
- Ions do not bind to pore (so transport is RAPID)
- Amino acids lining pore determine selectivity
- Channel can harness energy STORED IN ION GRADIENTS
- Can be gated/non-gated
In a gated ion channel, gates control open/close of pore, what stimuli control this?
Voltage, ligand binding, cell volume, pH, phosphorylation
How is electrical current generated in ion channels?
How is this measured?
- Diffusion through channel generates current
- Current can be recorded by patch clamp (fluctuations represent opening/closing of channels)
How does carrier mediated transport occur?
Why is it slow?
(3)
- Binds to protein, carrier changes shape for molecule to enter and pass
- Slow due to specificity, competition, saturation
- Can be passive or active
What is primary active transport? (3)
- Energy directly derived from ATP hydrolysis to create gradient
- A typical cell uses 30% of its ATP energy on primary active transport
- Eg. Na/K ATPase
What is secondary active transport?
- Energy stored in ionic conc gradient (from PAT) is used to drive the active transport of a molecule AGAINST its gradient
- Usually use Na gradient from Na/K ATPase in PAT
What does the Sodium pump do?
Why is it important?
- Maintains low conc of Na and high conc of K in cytosol
- Difference in conc important for cell volume, RMP, contraction, SAT