Membrane permeability and transport Flashcards
Molecule permeability
Depends on size and polarity
- Small, non-polar molecules (ex. O2, CO2, steroids)
- Small uncharged polar molecules (ex. H2O, ethanol, glycerol)
- larger, uncharged polar molecules (amino acids, glucose, nucleotides)
- ions (H+, Na+, HCO3-, Ca2+ etc.) - need transporters to pass through
-Gases diffuse rapidly across membrane
- smaller, more hydrophobic will move faster
Types of membrane transport proteins
- channels
- passive transporters
- active pumps
Channels
- Passive transport; acts like a pore and selects what goes through based on size and charge, and its electrochemical gradient
- Can be leaky (commonly K channels) or gated (Ligand, 2nd messenger, mechanosensitive, voltage).
Ligand-gated channel
Ligand (ex. acetylcholine or GABA) needs to bind for channel to open
2nd messenger channel
2nd messenger (ex. Ca 2+, IP3) needs to bind for channel to open
Mechanosensitive channel
(Ex. on stereocilia in hair cells, gut, or skin)- physical stress opens channels
Voltage-gated channel
Voltage (ex. Na+, K+, Ca2+)- channels open based on voltage differences
Passive transporters
Transporter mediated! More selective. Based on how well a molecule fits into the binding site (similar to enzymes). If it fits, then it will be transported.
Active pumps
Require energy (ATP) to pump molecules against electrochemical gradient
Ex. Na/K ATPase pump – most important type, account for 30% or more of total ATP consumption in animal cells
Sodium/Potassium Pump
3 Na ions enter pump from cell, ATP used and Phosphate group binds which changes confirmation so that entrance is to outside of cell, 2 K ions enter pump from outside of cell, Phosphate group leaves which changes confirmation back to original allowing K to exit into the cell
Creates a voltage difference across the plasma membrane
Active ion pumps role in avoiding osmotic disaster
- Anionic sites must be balanced out by intracellular cations
- Osmotic pressure inside the cell is always higher than outside so water always moving inside.
- Pump is always actively pumping Ca and Na out of cell which allows for a steady state/balance
Secondary Active Transport
Symporter
Antiporter
Uniporter
Symporter
*Eg. Glucose-Na symporter
Coupled transport by gradient driven pumps
Both glucose and Na are coupled and brought through the pump together
Antiporter
Eg. Sodium-Hydrogen Antiporter
Coupled transport by gradient driven pumps.
Na moves through pump from high to low concentration, creating enough energy to then bring the hydrogen ion across from low to high concentration
Uniporter
Uniporter
Eg. Glucose into erythrocytes
Allows glucose into the cell at a much faster rate than diffusion