Membrane Structure Flashcards
what is the plasma membrane? what does it control? what is responsible for this control?
-it is the boundary that separates a living cell from its
surroundings
-Controls movement of molecules into and out of cell
-its structure
what is “selectively permeable”?
allows some substances to cross more easily than others
what are the marcomolecule components of a cell membrane? which kind specifically are the most abundant?
- lipids and proteins
- phospholipids
what are the components of a phospholipid? how do their parts interact with water?
- 1 glycerol
- 2 fatty acids
- 1 phosphate group
Hydrocarbon tails of fatty acids –> hydrophobic
Phosphate head –> hydrophilic
How are phospholipids arranged in cell membranes?
- they from a bilayer (2 layers)
- Hydrophilic heads interact with water –> form outside layers of membrane
- hydrophobic tails hide away from water –> in the middle of membrane
what must membranes have in order to function? why?
- fluidity
- fluidity allows for movement of atoms/molecules in and out of cell
which direction can lipids/other protections move in the membrane? can they move the other direction?
laterally
- can switch with lipids from other side of bilayer, but it is very rare
what happens to a membrane when temperature decreases? what can a membrane do to adjust to temperature changes?
- membranes go from fluid state to solid state
- can change it’s lipid composition
Membranes rich in … fatty acids are more fluid than those rich in … fatty acids
- in unsaturated fatty acids
- in saturated fatty acids
what is cholesterol; where is it found?
- it is a rigid steroid lipid
- found wedged between phospholipids in cell membrane
what is the effect that cholesterol has on membrane fluidity at a high temp, how? low temp, how?
what is the overall effect cholesterol has on membrane fluidity?
high temp –> cholesterol reduces membrane fluidity, by decreasing phospholipid movement
low temp –> cholesterol increases membrane fluidity, by blocking phospholipids from packing tightly together
-reduces changes in membrane fluidity
how can proteins be arranged in cell membranes? what are these called?
- transmembrane proteins –> integral proteins –> inserted and span the membrane (hydrophilic regions on the outside, hydrophobic regions in the inside)
- peripheral proteins –> bound to surface of membrane on one side
what kind of proteins are transport proteins?
transmembrane
what do proteins in the membrane determine?
most of the membrane specific functions
what are the 6 major functions of membrane proteins?
- Transport
- Enzymatic activity
- Signal transduction
- Cell-cell recognition
- Intercellular joining
- Attachment to cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix