Lipids and membrane structure Flashcards

1
Q

How are phospholipid molecules orient themselves in a bilayer

A

Fatty acid tails face inwards, away from aqueous exterior of membrane

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2
Q

What type of membrane is the only one on which carbohydrates are found?

A

Plasma membrane

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3
Q

How are lipids used?

A

Energy storage (triacylglycerides)
Precursors fro vitamins and steroid hormones (such as testosterone and oestrogen)
Production of bile acids such as cholic acid.

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4
Q

What is the structure of a phospholipid?

A

Polar head group = phosphate = serine/choline/ethanolamine/inositol attached to glycerol by the phosphate group.
Then two fatty acid chains are linked to the glycerol back bone by ester bonds.

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5
Q

Amphipathic

A

Has a polar side and a non-polar side

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6
Q

What is the structure of phophatidylcholine?

A

choline - phosphate - glycerol = (fatty acid chain)2

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7
Q

What phospholipid lacks a glycerol backbone?

A

Sphingomyelin

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8
Q

What is the structure of sphingomyelin?

A

Ceramide (sphingosine + fatty acid) - phosphate - choline

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9
Q

What are the pairs of lipids that make up each side of a phospholipid bilayer?

A

Phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin face the extracellular environment; phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine face the cytosolic side

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10
Q

Where are glycosylated proteins found in a membrane

A

Only on the extracellular face of the membrane

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11
Q

What is fluidity in terms of a membrane and why is it important?

A

The ease with which lipid molecules can move about in the plane of the bilayer. Important for:
Movement of proteins; signalling and exocytosis.

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12
Q

How can fatty acids affect the fluidity of a membrane?

A

The length of the chain: longer the chain the carbon atoms there are and so the greater the VDW forces and therefore a greater degree of stability - less fluidity.
The saturation of the fatty acid chain: saturation causes kinks in the acyl chain meaning there is a reduced molecule-to-molecule SA - less VDW forces, less stability and therefore more fluidity.

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13
Q

How does the presence of cholesterol affect the fluidity of a membrane

A

Cholesterol restricts the movement of polar head groups, making things more ordered and so increasing stability; decreasing fluidity..

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14
Q

What functions can proteins serve within a membrane.

A
I = ion channels
R = receptors
E = enzymes
S = structural 
T = transport
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15
Q

Give the function of, and an example of an ion channel in the membrane:

A

Maintenance of ionic gradient; acetylcholine

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16
Q

Give the function of, and an example of a receptor in the membrane:

A

Signal recognition; insulin receptor

17
Q

Give the function of, and an example of an enzyme in the membrane:

A

Catalysis; adenylyl cyclase

18
Q

Give the function of, and an example of a structural protein in the membrane:

A

Cell-to-cell contact + cytoskeletal organisation;

actin

19
Q

Give the function of, and an example of a transport protein in the membrane:

A

Import/export of substances;

glucose transporter

20
Q

What are the types of membrane protein?

A
Intrinsic = embedded in lipid bilayer
Anchored = covalently bonded to lipi molecule or to a sugar-arm of a glycolipid
Extrinsic = attached by ionic interactions with integral proteins for example spectrin (structural)