Lipids and membrane structure Flashcards
How are phospholipid molecules orient themselves in a bilayer
Fatty acid tails face inwards, away from aqueous exterior of membrane
What type of membrane is the only one on which carbohydrates are found?
Plasma membrane
How are lipids used?
Energy storage (triacylglycerides)
Precursors fro vitamins and steroid hormones (such as testosterone and oestrogen)
Production of bile acids such as cholic acid.
What is the structure of a phospholipid?
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.
Amphipathic
Has a polar side and a non-polar side
What is the structure of phophatidylcholine?
choline - phosphate - glycerol = (fatty acid chain)2
What phospholipid lacks a glycerol backbone?
Sphingomyelin
What is the structure of sphingomyelin?
Ceramide (sphingosine + fatty acid) - phosphate - choline
What are the pairs of lipids that make up each side of a phospholipid bilayer?
Phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin face the extracellular environment; phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine face the cytosolic side
Where are glycosylated proteins found in a membrane
Only on the extracellular face of the membrane
What is fluidity in terms of a membrane and why is it important?
The ease with which lipid molecules can move about in the plane of the bilayer. Important for:
Movement of proteins; signalling and exocytosis.
How can fatty acids affect the fluidity of a membrane?
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.
How does the presence of cholesterol affect the fluidity of a membrane
Cholesterol restricts the movement of polar head groups, making things more ordered and so increasing stability; decreasing fluidity..
What functions can proteins serve within a membrane.
I = ion channels R = receptors E = enzymes S = structural T = transport
Give the function of, and an example of an ion channel in the membrane:
Maintenance of ionic gradient; acetylcholine