membrane transport active Flashcards
dual role of a lipid bilayer:
a 2-D liquid that allows lateral movement of proteins and lipids
a permeability brrier
hydrophobic molecules that pass easily through a membrane
O2
CO2
N2
steroid hormones
small uncharged polar molecules (little permeability)
H2O
urea
glycerol
NH3
large uncharged polar molecules (little permeability)
glucose
sucrose
ions (no permeability)
H+ Na+
HCO3-
K+ Ca2+
Cl- Mg2+
methods to cross a membrane:
Passive transport:
Active transport:
- *
passive transport:
- no energy needed
- solute travels down concentration gradient
active transport:
- coupled to ATP hydrolysis
- solute travels against concentration gradient
3 general modes of transport
antiporter: A and B in opposite direction
symporter: A and B in same direction
uniporter: moves only 1 particle but in both direction
3 genera categories of transporters:
- pumps: perform primary active transport
- a water pump fights gravity and actively pulls water to the house*
- carriers: traverse the membrane without needing (extra) energy
- carrying a stowawy along for the ride* (2º active)
- channels: are used in passive transport
- the channel opened and allowed your ship to float gently out of the gridlock from behind the dam
characterstics of P-type pumps: P-Type ATPases
phosphorylates self
- transmembrane domain spans the lipid bilayer
- A/Actuator domain links the cytosolic domains to the transmembrane domain
- N/Nucleotide binding domain binds ATP
- P/Phosphorylation domain accepts the phosphate from ATP
general mechanism for P-Type ATPases
- E1 (open to cytosol) + bind moleculeA
- bind and hydrolyze ATP = phosphorylate self
- E2 (open to outside) + release moleculeA + bind moleculeB
- reset to E1 + release moleculeB
P-Type ATPase example: Ca2+
- ____porter (Ca2+ movement ____ of cytosol)
- name describes membrane crossed:
- ____ = sarcoplasmic/endoplasmic reticulum (in muscle cells)
- ____ = plasma membrane
- ____ = golgi (secretion pathway)
- mechanism:
- E1 , 2 Ca2+ bound on ____ side
- ATP binds, Ca2+ ions ____
- ATP hydrolysis, self ____
- eversion to E2 , Ca2+ ions ____
- release of ____
- eversion to ____
- uni
- SERCA
- PMCA
- SPCA
- cytosolic
- trapped
- phosphorylation
- released
- Pi
- E1
P-Type ATPase example: Na/K pump
- ____porter across cell membrane
- role in cell
- ____ excitation in neurons and muscle cells
- ____ driving other active transports
- mechanism
- E1, ____ ions bound, ATP bound
- Na+ ions are ____
- ATP hydrolysis, self ____
- eversion to E2, Na+ ions ____
- binding of ____
- K+ ions ____ , release of Pi, ATP rebinding
- eversion to ____
- release of ____
- anti
- electrical
- gradient
- Na+
- trapped
- phosphorylation
- released
- K+
- trapped
- E1
- K+
P-Type ATPases: flippases
- ____ (flipping) motion within plasma membrane
- on cell membrane - internalize ____
- on golgi - recycle ____
- phosphatidylserine (PS) is ____
- phospholipid ____
- activates ____ ____ ____
- essential for proper ____ function
- externzlized PS signals ____
- transverse
- lipids
- endosome
- internalized
- nutrient
- protein kinase C
- neuron function
- apoptosis
other notabile families of P-type ATPases:
- in plants and fungi, the Na/K pump is replaced by a plasma membrane ____
- ____ in gastric cells maintain the pH of the stomach lumen
- ____ ____ ____ maintain proper levels of trace metals while preventing toxicity
- H+ ATPase
- H+/K+ ATPase
- heavy metal ATPases
ABC transporters important features
2 transmembrane domains span the lipid bilayer
2 nucleotide binding domains bind ATP = ATP Binding Cassette
importers requires a substrate binding protein
can be a single protein or a dimer