Membranes - pas exams Flashcards
1
Q
- Which of the following features are characteristic for biomembranes? (4P)
- The average thickness varies from ~3.5 um
- Charged molecules can cross the membrane unhindered
- They can contain 25% of sterol lipids
- The have a hydrophilic and positively charged surface
- They are kept together by non-covalent interactions
- Water molecules can cross the membrane only via channels
- The can contain more than 70% proteins
- Triglycerols are one of the most common components of biomembranes
A
- The average thickness varies from ~3.5 um - False
- Charged molecules can cross the membrane unhindered - False
- They can contain 25% of sterol lipids - True
- The have a hydrophilic and positively charged surface - False
- They are kept together by non-covalent interactions - True
- Water molecules can cross the membrane only via channels - False
- The can contain more than 70% proteins - True
- Triglycerols are one of the most common components of biomembranes - False
2
Q
- What is the difference between bilayer and non-bilayer lipids?
- Why are there non-bilayer lipids in membranes?
A
-
What is the difference between bilayer and non-bilayer lipids?
- Bilayer lipids typically cylinder, non-bilayer typically cones
-
Why are there non-bilayer lipids in membranes?
- Non-bilayer lipids typically involved in adjustment of lipid bilayer, such as in hydrophobic mismatch, and membrane curvature.
3
Q
Which type of a) integral, b) anchored and c) peripheral membrane proteins exist? (6P)
A
- Integral
- Alpha-helix
- Beta-barrel
- Anchored
- GPI anchor
- Isoprenoid anchored
- Lipid anchored (e.g. palmitic)
- Peripheral
- function as: cytoskeleton linkers, signal transducers, components of extracellular matrix (not 100% sure on this answer)
4
Q
- Explain the term “hydrophobic mismatch and how it can be corrected in the context of a biomembrane? (3P)
A
- If TM-region and lipid bilayer size do not match
- Lipid bilayer can be adjusted to the protein size because lipid hydrocarbon chains are flexible and can be stretched squashed, or tilted
- Non-bilayer lipids are often involved in this adjustment
- The protein can adjust to hydrophobic mismatch
- Changes in tilting angle of TM-helices can be employed to adjust proteins
5
Q
- Explain in key words the functional mechanism of the Na+/K+ ATPase? (6P)
A
- Is primary active antiporter
- Description:
- Na+/K= ATPase is open to the inside and has high affinity for Na+
- One ATP transfers a phosphate group and induces conformational change
- The phosphorylated Na+/K+-ATPase is now open to the extracellular space and the 3Na+ are released there due to decreased affinity
- After binding of two K+, phosphate is cleaved off by a phosphate from Na+/K+ antiporter à Conformational change à release 2K+ in the cytosol à circle can start again
- Net 3Na+ out, 2K+ in, - potential
- Process:
- Na+ binds
- Pump phosphorylates itself
- Phosphorylation triggers conformational change, Na+ ejected
- K+ binds
- Pump dephosphorylated
- Pump returns to original conformation, K+ ejected
6
Q
- Identify the type of displayed lipid and label the marked structures (6P)
A
- Phospholipid (or type of cetrimide) (from top to bottom): Hydrophilic part: (Head-group; Phosphate group); Hydrophobic part: (Glycerol; Fatty acid; fatty acid)
- Glycosphingolipid (from top to bottom): Sugars; Sphingosine; Serine; Fatty acid; fatty acid
- Sterol (cholesterol in this case) (from top to bottom): OH-/Hydroxy group; Isoprenoid
7
Q
- You are asked to characterize a protein that was identified in the total membrane function of Arabidosis. Shortly describe 2 experimental set-ups to a) elucidate the precise subcellular localization and b) identify potential interaction partners. (6P)
A
- Subcellular localization methods
- Florescence label by tagging
- Add fluorescent label (e.g. GFP) to protein of interest to see its localization in the cell
- Immunogold labeling electron microscopy
- See the localization of your protein in electron microscopy after immune-gold labelling. Immunogold labelling occurs via antibodies
- Florescence label by tagging
- Interaction partner methods
- Ubiquitin-split-2-hybrid
- Protein of interest + potential interaction partner linked to Nub + Cub
- If the two proteins interact a transcription factor will be cleaved from the ubiquitin and trigger the transcription of a reporter gene
- Segregation of proteins by isoelectric point
- Protein complex should have
- Afterwards segregate complex via SDS-PAGE à identify components of complex
- Ubiquitin-split-2-hybrid
8
Q
- Which of the following features are characteristic for biomembranes? (4P)
- Always bilayer in eukaryotes
- They have a hydrophilic core and a hydrophobic surface
- Their average thickness varies from ~3-5 um
- Charged molecules can cross the membrane unhindered
- They are comprised of lipids, proteins, sugars
- They from automatically under physiologically conditions
- Both monolayers always have the same composition
- They can contain 25% of sterol lipids
A
- Always bilayer in eukaryotes - True
- They have a hydrophilic core and a hydrophobic surface – false
- Have hydrophilic head group, and hydrophobic tails
- Their average thickness varies from ~3-5 um – false
- Is 3-5 nm
- Charged molecules can cross the membrane unhindered - false
- They are comprised of lipids, proteins, sugars - true
- They form automatically under physiologically conditions – True
- Both monolayers always have the same composition - false
- They can contain 25% of sterol lipids - true
9
Q
- Label as detailed as possible (6P)
A
- Phospholipid: Hydrophilic part: (Head-group; phosphor-group); Hydrophobic part: (Glycerol; fatty-acid; fatty-acid)
- Glycolipid: Sugar; Sphingosine: (Serine + Fatty acid); Fatty acid
- Sterol (Cholesterol): OH-/Hydroxy group; Isoprenoid
10
Q
- Which type of amino acids are found preferentially where in a TM-α-helix and why? (4P)
A
- Tryptophan and tyrosine: often within the aromatic belt
- Lysine and arginine: snorkel just below the head region of the lipids
- Phenylalanine, alanine, leucine, isoleucine and valine: predominantly located within the hydrophobic core region
11
Q
- How do lipids move within Mono- and Bilayer and in-between membranes? (4P)
A
- Within monolayer: Rotation, flexion, Lateral diffusion
- Within bilayer: Transversal diffusion (flip-flop)
- In-between membranes: Protein assisted movements, Vesicles
12
Q
What is the main phase transition temperature (Tm) and why is it important for membrane function? (3P)
A
- The main phase transition temp (also known as the melting temp)
- Temperature are which a phase transition occurs from normal liquid crystalline form to ordered crystalline/gel form
- Will affect how lipids will behave in membranes:
- If temp is below Tm: Will be more solid (ordered crystalline structure)
- If temp is above Tm: Will be more fluid (liquid crstalline form)
- Important for increasing or decreasing fluidity and flexibility of membranes as needed.
13
Q
- How are sodium channels in the nerve axon regulated and which property is essential for the directed traveling of the signal? (3P)
A
- Binding of neurotransmitter induces conformational change
- Ion channel permeability changes, allowing flow of Na+
- This changes the membrane potential, and it is depolarized
- The membrane is eventually repolarized, causing sodium channels to close
- Essential property: concentration gradient and membrane potential
14
Q
- Explain (in keywords) the mechanism that guaranties the exclusive symport of one proton and one lactose molecule by LacY (6P)
A
- Lactose permease is a secondary transporter
- Is an example of coupled transport
- A transported molecule (Lactose) is transported against the concentration gradient
- This is done with the assistance of an ion (H+) that moves with the electrochemical gradient
- Process:
- H+ binds from outside at Glu 269
- Protonated form binds lactose
- Conformational change happens
- Lactose is released
- H+ is released
- Conformational change reset
15
Q
- Give an example for the direct involvement of a membrane lipid in signal transduction (2 P)
A
- Phosphatidylinositol in membrane trafficking:
- Increases the affinity of membranes for peripheral membrane proteins
- Sorting protein cargo
- Docking and fusion of transport vesicles
- controls direction of membrane trafficking
- Increases the affinity of membranes for peripheral membrane proteins
16
Q
- Label the numbered structures (5P)
A
- 1 – Bi-molecular lipid layer
- 2 – polar heads of lipid molecules
- 3 – non-polar tails of phospholipid molecules
- 4 – Carbohydrate of glycocalyx
- 5 – Peripheral protein
- 6 – glycoprotein
- 7 – Integral protein
- 8 – glycolipid
- 9 – Cholesterol
- 10 – Outward facing layer of phospholipids
17
Q
- True/False statements about biomembranes:
- Bacteria have cholesterol
- They don’t have glycoproteins
- Thylakoids are rich in proteins
- Bacteria and archaea have terpenoids
- They only have unsaturated fatty acids
- Both monolayers always have the same composition
A
- Bacteria have cholesterol – false (bacteria have Hoponoid sterols)
- They don’t have glycoproteins – false (they do have them)
- Thylakoids are rich in proteins – true (about 77% proteins)
- Bacteria and archaea have terpenoids – true (archaea do not have sterols)
- They only have unsaturated fatty acids - false
- Both monolayers always have the same composition - false
18
Q
- Draw a sketch of a glycerophospholipid, label its parts and mention an example
A
19
Q
- Draw three sketches of examples of transmembrane proteins
A
- Multi-pass transmembrane protein (polytopic) (example: rhodopsin)
- Transmembrane β-barrel proteins (eg. Bacterial porins)
- Oligomeric TM-helix protein (eg. Typical ion channels)
- Several subunits donate one or more TM helices that together form a multi-membrane-spanning holo protein
20
Q
How BAR domains stabilize membrane curvature?
A
- Built from coiled coils
- Dimerize into molecules with positively charged inner surface,
- Allows them to preferentially interacts with lipid head groups to bend membranes.
21
Q
- Three functions of protein glycosylation
A
- Marks progression of protein folding in ER to golgi transport
- Resistance to proteolytic cleavage
- Protection against pathogens
- Cell-cell recognition
- signaling
22
Q
- What happens with wrongly folded proteins in the ER?
A
- Endoplasmic-reticulum-associated protein degradation (ERAD)
- Misfolded proteins translocated out of ER via retro-translocation
- Are degraded by the proteasome
23
Q
- Explain fatty acid termination
A
- A thioesterase (hydrolase) hydrolyzes acyl-ACP to a free fatty acid + ACP
- Acyl-ACP + H2O –> fatty acid + ACP
- Prevents continuation of fatty acid elongation/synthesis
24
Q
- Explain the main steps of vesicle transport
A
-
Cargo loading
- Cargo binds to cargo receptor
- Adaptor proteins and coat proteins are summoned to begin vesicle formation
-
Budding
- In case of clathrin coated vesicles, clathrin triskelion is bound to adaptor protein, forming a clathrin coated vesicle
- Membrane-bending and fission proteins bend inner membrane, and sever vesicle from mebrane (involves dynamin and other cytosolic factors)
- Clathrin and adaptor proteins come off (uncoating) once vesicle is formed (naked transport vesicle)
-
Movement
- Vesicles transported along cytoskeleton
- Motor protein, receptor and energy
- Transport along actin filaments is assisted by myosin
- Transport along microtubules is mediated by kinesin-Dynein
- Transport is regulated spatially, temporally and directionally
-
Tethering/docking
- Protein complexes ensure than proteins are fusing with the correct acceptor membrane
- Rab tethering
- Rab proteins: monomeric GTPases
- Rab effectors (binds to Rab on both membranes)
- SNARE mediated vesicle fusion
- Vesicle has v-SNARE, target membrane has t-SNARE together forming a trans-SNARE complex
-
Fusion and cargo release
- Two lipid bilayers have to fuse
- Membrane contact, fusion of bi-layer, pore opening
- Stalk formation à hemifusion stalk à hemifusion diaphragm à fusion pore
- Theory 1: automatic fusion (lipid lined pore), Theory 2: SNAREs facilitate pore formation (protein-lined pore)