Physiology: What is a Membrane Flashcards

1
Q

what are the functions of a cell membrane (5)

A
  • forms outer boundary of cell
  • controls entry of nutrients, exit of waste and secretory products
  • maintains ion conc. in and out cell
  • enables cell to respond to signals
  • part of joining cells to form tissues/organs
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2
Q

what is a membrane made of

A
  • phospholipids
    • -ve polar hydrophilic head
    • +ve non-polar hydrophobic tail
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3
Q

what is the lipid bilayer impermeable to

A

water-soluble molecules

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4
Q

what is allowed to cross the membrane (without transport)

A

small uncharged molecules

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5
Q

what are the 3 important functions of the lipid bilayer

A
  • basic structure of the membrane
  • hydrophobic interior acts as a barrier
  • membrane fluidity and selective permeability
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6
Q

describe a peripheral protein

A

not embedded in the membrane but adhered to the cytoplasmic or extracellular membrane surfaces

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7
Q

describe the 3 ways an integral protein is associated with the bilayer

A
  • span membrane (1+ times) - transmembrane
  • embeddedbut doesnt cross bilayer
  • linked to a lipid component to fatty-acid derivative
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8
Q

what are the 7 functions of integral proteins

A
  • ligand-binding receptors
  • adhesion molecules
  • pores and channels
  • carriers
  • pumps
  • enzymes
  • participate in intracellular signalling
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9
Q

how do intgeral proteins act as adhesion molecules and why is this important

A
  • forms contact with extracellular matrix or cellular neighbours
  • important in regulating cell shape, growth and differentiation
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10
Q

what is the function of pores and channels

A

passive movement of watwr/specific ions

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11
Q

what is the function of carrier proteins

A

facilitate transport of a specific molecule or couple transport of a molecule to other solutes

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12
Q

what is the function of protein pumps

A

use energy from ATP to drive transport in/out against a gradient

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13
Q

where are dicking-marker receptors and what is their function

A
  • on inner membrane surface

- interact with secrtory besicles leading to exocytosis of the vesicles contents

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14
Q

where do membrane carbohydrates reside

A

on outer surface of cells often bound to membrane proteins and sometimes lipids

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15
Q

when a membrane carbohydrate is bound to a protein/lipid what is it called

A

glycoprotein/glycolipid

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16
Q

glycoproteins and glycolipids together form a layer called what

A

glycocalyx

17
Q

what is the function of glycolipids

A

act as self identity markers

- important in cell to cell interactions and play a role in tissue growth

18
Q

what is the role of glycolipids in tissue growth and what is the exception to this

A
  • ensures cells dont overgrow their territory

- cancer cells are the exception as they have abnormal markers

19
Q

what are the 3 types of specialised cell junctions

A
  • tight junctions
  • desmosomes
  • gap junctions
20
Q

function of tight junctions and what are the 2 types

A

join lateral edges of epithelial cells near apical membranes
- tight or leaky

21
Q

function of desmosomes

A

adhering junctions that anchor cells together especially in tissues subject to stretch

22
Q

function of gap junctions

A

communicating junctions - allow movement of charge carrying ions and small molecules between adjacent cells