In-Class Lecture 2: Membrane structure and function, Jihan notes Flashcards

1
Q

What does a barrier to diffuse mean in terms of the energy demand requirement on a cell?

A

It decreases the energy demand, but not having to let everything in and processing everything

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2
Q

In the cell, where are the processes for handling glucose located?

A

In the cytosol

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3
Q

In the cell, where are the enzymes for the TCA cycle located?

A

Mitochondrial matrix

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4
Q

Where does translation occur in the cell?

A

In the cytosol

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5
Q

What are two key features of a membrane enhancing its chances of survival?

A
  1. They are flexible

2. They are self-healing

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6
Q

What 5 processes are dependent on a cell’s ability to add or remove membrane?

A
  1. Cell growth
  2. Synaptic vesicle recycling
  3. Neurotransmitter and hormone release
  4. Nerve regeneration
  5. Insulin regulation of glucose transporters
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7
Q

How does exocytosis impact the total cell membrane surface area?

A

It allows for its expansion

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8
Q

Exocytosis, in conjunction with endocytosis, leads to the ability to regulate ___ and ___ sensitivity in target cells (membrane remodeling)

A

Transport and signal

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9
Q

Exocytosis is the process by which what type of signals can be stored in a cell and released when needed?

A

Hydrophilic signals (like polypeptide hormones and most neurotransmitters)

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10
Q

What are two appropriate signals that initiate exocytosis?

A
  1. Binding of ligand to cell surface receptors

2. Transient depolarization (such as with an action potential in a neuron)

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11
Q

What three steps are involved in the cascade of exocytosis with the appropriate signaling?

A
  1. Increase in intracellular calcium
  2. Interactions of SNARE and SNAP proteins
  3. ATP hydrolysis
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12
Q

What are three functions of endocytosis?

A
  1. To remove proteins from the cell membrane (glucose transporters)
  2. Form intracellular vesicles (synaptic vesicle recycling)
  3. Incorporate particulate matter from the ECF (example of phagocytosis)
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13
Q

What diseases are implicated in the process of endocytosis?

A

Hepatitis, polio, AIDS, iron toxicity

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14
Q

In the process of endocytosis, the inner leaflet of an endocytotic vesicle is made of the ___ ____ of the cell membrane.

A

outer leaflet

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15
Q

For receptor-mediated endocytosis, what type of protein molecules occur where the membrane invagination will take place?

A

Clathrin

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16
Q

Coated vesicles, from the process of endocytosis, generally fuse with primary lysosomes, making secondary lysosomes. What are the enzymes within responsible for? What molecules are produced by the lysosomes, that are used by the cell?

A

The lysosomal enzymes digest the contents within the coated vesicle. This frees up amino acids, simple sugars, and nucleotides to be used by the cell.

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17
Q

What three factors are necessary to provoke endocytosis?

A
  1. Energy (often from ATP hydrolysis)
  2. Calcium (keeps the ligand bound)
  3. Contractile elements of the microfibrils in the cell (to pinch off the vesicle)
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18
Q

What is a hydration sphere, as it relates to the lipid bilayer of a cell?

A

The hydration sphere is a coating of water molecules around an ion or molecules; they stabilize hydrophilic compounds in solution. When this layer is shed, the compound goes to a higher energy state, but it is done to cross the lipid bilayer to the area of hydrophobicity.

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19
Q

What is a glucose that is newly acquired by a cell phosphorylated by? What is formed?

A

Hexokinase, forming glucose-6-phosphate.

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20
Q

How does phosphorylating a glucose molecule keep it inside the cell? 2 parts

A
  1. The phosphate makes glucose-6-phosphate even more hydrophilic than glucose
  2. G6P is not a substrate for the GLUT transporters (while regular glucose is), leading to a reduced likelihood that the glucose will be transported out of the cell.
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21
Q

What three things comprise the membrane?

A
  1. Lipids
  2. Proteins
  3. Sugars
22
Q

What two functions do lipids provide in the membrane? One is a passive function, as well as one active function

A
  1. Barrier to diffusion (active)

2. Forms the hydrophobic core to anchor proteins to the membrane (passive)

23
Q

Proteins provide what type of functions for the membrane, and list two.

A

They provide all active functions

  1. Acting as receptors
  2. Acting as effectors (i.e. producing second messengers)
24
Q

What is the primary role of sugars, and in what form are they present in membranes?

A

They primarily serve the role in recognition.

They are present in membranes as glycoproteins and glycolipids

25
Q

When it comes to membrane composition, what process makes the membrane more extensive, and what process reduces the amount of cell membrane?

A

Endocytosis makes the cell membrane reduce in size, and exocytosis makes the cell membrane more extensive

26
Q

What are three specific functions that happen INSIDE membranes?

A
  1. Transport (like facilitated diffusion, etc).
  2. Receptors (i.e. paracrines, autocrines, etc)
  3. Pumps (i.e. active transport)
27
Q

What type of transport does not require membrane proteins, and what 3 do require them?

A

Simple diffusion does not;

Facilitated diffusion, active transport and endocytosis/exocytosis all require proteins

28
Q

What two types of transport exhibit saturable kinetics, and why?

A
  1. Active transport
  2. Facilitated diffusion
    This is due to there being a finite number of transport molecules
29
Q

Cell surface receptors are present in the target cells of what type of signals?

A

Hydrophilic

30
Q

What are three examples of hydrophilic signals?

A
  1. Autocrines
  2. Paracrines
  3. Polypeptide hormones
31
Q

What are the two general classes of active transport? Which is most common?

A
  1. Primary active transport: ATP is directly hydrolyzed to provide the energy for transporting the molecule (i.e. sodium potassium pump)
  2. Secondary active transport (most common): The direct energy source for the active transport is the electrochemical gradient of an anion (mostly Na) (ex: neurotransmitter reuptake)
32
Q

Where is GLUT 1 found?

A

Everywhere (ubiquitous)

33
Q

Where is GLUT 2 found?

A

Liver, pancreatic islets, intestine

34
Q

Where is GLUT 3 found?

A

Brain, neurons

35
Q

Where is GLUT 4 found? What is GLUT-4 dependent on?

A

Muscle, fat, heart. It is dependent on insulin

36
Q

What does “antiporter” mean?

A

Sodium and potassium are transported in opposite directions

37
Q

Each sodium-depent pump is an example of what type of transport, and ATPases are examples of what type of active transport?

A

Secondary; primary

38
Q

A voltage-gated sodium and potassium channel produces actions potentials in what type of cell, with what specific examples?

A

In excitable cells, like neurons and muscle

39
Q

What role does a ligand-gated Sodium-Potassium channel serve in skeletal muscle celles?

A

It produces the end-plate potential in skeletal muscle cells

40
Q

Neurotransmitters use what type of channel?

A

Ligand-gated

41
Q

Where do you find the aquaporin types AQP1 and AQP2?

A

Collecting duct cells of the kidney

42
Q

What type of bonding occurs in the interior core of the membrane between the fatty acid chains of the phospholipids and glycolipids?

A

Van der Waals

43
Q

What three factors increase membrane fluidity?

A
  1. Shorter length of fatty acid chains
  2. Increased number of unsaturated fatty acids (the double bonds prevent the fatty acids from packing as tightly as they could)
  3. Decreased cholesterol content of the membrane
44
Q

How does Cholesterol increase membrane fluidity?

A

The cholesterol inserts between the fatty acid chains, and the proteins don’t have has much space to move

45
Q

What are the three primary types of lipids found in the membrane?

A
  1. Phospholipids
  2. Glycolipids
  3. Cholesterol
46
Q

Why are linoleic and linolenic acids essential fatty acids, especially in relation to arachidonic acid?

A

Linoleci acids and linolenic acids are used to make arachidonic acids

47
Q

What is arachidonic acid used for in the body?

A

To make Paracrines like…

  1. Prostaglandins
  2. Thromboxanes
  3. Leukotrienes
48
Q

What substance makes up most of the barrier to diffusion in membranes?

A

Phospholipids

49
Q

What is the main function of proteins, which explains why they are on the outside of the cell?

A

To recognize molecules that may be serving as signals

50
Q

What’s the 3 functions of glycoproteins, which are found on the outer leaflet of the cellular membrane?

A

They participate in the cell’s ability to recognize other cells, forming links between the cell and the ECM, absorbing molecules at the cell’s surface

51
Q

What does fibronectin do?

A

It is bound from the extracellular aspect by integrins, and fibronectin can attach to elements of the ECM

52
Q

What can integrin attach to on the inside of the cell?

A

The cytoskeleton