Plasma Membrane Flashcards

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1
Q

What is the function of membranes?

A
  • deliminatory barrier, separates cytosol from ECM
  • selective permeability
  • ATP synthesis
  • molecule, ion, transport
  • signal transduction
  • electrical signal generation and conduction
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2
Q

What general types of proteins can be embedded in membranes?

A

Based on location:

  • integral
  • peripheral

Based on function:

  • receptors
  • enzymes and pumps
  • channels and carrier proteins
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3
Q

Define the structural unit of PM (shape. composition, polarity, movement) What are their most common goups? Why do membranes organize in a specific manner?

A

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

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4
Q

Describe the structure of cholesterol. What is the role of cholesterol in PM?

A

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
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5
Q

Name some types of transmembrane proteins and how can they be attached to the PM other than being integrated into the membrane itself.

A
  • 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)
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