Plasma membrane & structure Flashcards
What is the Plasma Membrane?
- The overcovering= a bilayer that ALL CELLS HAVE
- Acts as a barrier & a very selective door for things that need to be let in (food) & let out (waste)= semipermeable
- HOMEOSTASIS BEIBI
What does the Plasma Membrane separate?
-Separates external from internal compartments (extracellular fluid from cytoplasm)
What is the structure of the Plasma Membrane?
- Thin, flexible covering over ENTIRE SURFACE of cell
- Thickness is less than 10nm (1 millionth of a cm)
What makes the Plasma Membrane so flexible?
-phospholipids in the membrane are held together by noncovalent interactions (hydrophobic effect)= AREN’T HELD TOGETHER BY RIGID COVALENT CONNECTIONS
What is the Plasma Membrane based on?
- Phospholipid bilayer w/ nonpolar heads on the inside
- Also contains Cholesterol, Glycoproteins, Glycolipids
How do we know that membranes have a bilayer?
- Area of the phospholipid is twice the surface area of starting cells (P.L in cell formed a layer that’s 2 molecules thick= bilayer)
- Monolayer area is twice the RBC surface area= membranes in cells is a bilayer
What makes the Plasma Membrane complex?
-Multiple lipid & protein components
What are the lipid components?
- Cholesterol, steroid (4 carbon rings)
- Sphingolipids (have 2 nonpolar tails but connected differently w/ a non-glycerol core
- Glycolipids (have carbs attached)
What are the Protein components?
- Integral membrane proteins (span across the membrane & tightly attached to it)
- Peripheral membrane proteins (sit only on the surface & loosely bound it membrane)
What is the complete membrane described by?
-Fluid Mosaic Model
What does the Fluid Membrane Model describe?
- Membrane lipids & proteins that aren’t fixed can move laterally (in the plane of membrane)
- Integral membrane proteins float freely even though they are partially submerged in sea of lipid
- Peripheral membrane proteins can float freely on the surface (either extracellular or intracellular)