Plasma Membrane Flashcards
What is the function of membranes?
- deliminatory barrier, separates cytosol from ECM
- selective permeability
- ATP synthesis
- molecule, ion, transport
- signal transduction
- electrical signal generation and conduction
What general types of proteins can be embedded in membranes?
Based on location:
- integral
- peripheral
Based on function:
- receptors
- enzymes and pumps
- channels and carrier proteins
Define the structural unit of PM (shape. composition, polarity, movement) What are their most common goups? Why do membranes organize in a specific manner?
Phospholipids:
- polar head (X+phosphate+glycerol)
- unpolar tail (two fatty acid chains [usually from 14-24 C long], saturated + unsaturated [has at least one kink which make them less packed and more flexible])
- amphipathic
- can have P attached = signal
- can be cleaved (e.g. polar head and fatty acid tail residue) = signal
Bilayer at physiological pH:
- phosphatidylcholine (neutral) and sphingomyeline (neutral) + glycolipids = outside
- phosphatidylserine (-), phosphatidylethanolamine (neutral) = inside
- both layers have cholesterol
- common movement: lateral difussion, rotation, flexion
- rare movement: flip-flop (apoptosis)
In water: wedge-shaped with one tail form micelles and cylinders with two tails form bilayers, they orient polar heads to the water and unpolar tails together = energically most favourable
Describe the structure of cholesterol. What is the role of cholesterol in PM?
Polar head (hydroxyl group) oriented to the polar head of phospholipids is connected via ring structures with an unpolar tail. Evenly redistributed across both layers.
- PM less deformable and fluid, more rigid
- decreased permeability
- prevents hydrocarbons from coming togethher and crystalizing
Name some types of transmembrane proteins and how can they be attached to the PM other than being integrated into the membrane itself.
- single and multipass (the integrated protein part is mostly unpolar)
- exposed to only one side of the bilayer (the peripheral protein part is amphipathic)
- single a-helix
- multiple a-helix
- b-sheet barrel
- fatty acid or prenyl linker
- oligosacharide linker (phosphatidylinositol)