Lecture 14: Membranes I Flashcards
Major driving forces of assembly of lipid bilayer?
Hydrophobic interactions (major) van der Waals-attractive forces b/w hydrocarbon tails Electrostatic & Hydrogen-bonding-attraction b/w polar head groups and water molecules
What are the 3 significant consequences of hydrophobic interactions?
Bilayers have inherent tendency to be extensive
Bilayers close on themselves so no exposed hydrocarbon chains
Bilayers are self-sealing b/c hole is energetically unfavorable
T/F: Lipid bilayer is highly permeable to polar molecules
False, bilayer has low permeability for ions and polar molecules
Where does oxidative phosphorylation occur?
Inner-mitochondrial membrane
Where does the TCA cycle & fatty acid oxidation take place?
Mitochondrial matrix
T/F: Alpha-helix is most membrane spanning structure.
True
What are the 3 types of lipid-linked protein modifications?
Palmitoylation- cysteine residues
Farnesylation- cysteine residues
Glycosylphosphatidylinositol-link (GPI)
Why do mitochondria have specialized membranes?
They have a permeable outer membrane and impermeable inner membrane (matrix)
What is mitochondrial fission?
Separation of one mitochondria into two new mitochondria
What is mitochondrial fusion?
A healthy mitochondria gobbling up unhealthy mitochondria=mitophagy
T/F: ATP is required to transport a protein across the inner membrane into the matrix
True