Proteins in the membrane Flashcards
Cell membrane consists of
Phospholipids and proteins
The cell membrane is (permeability)
Selectively permeable, allows smaller soluble molecule through but not large insoluble molecules
How are molecules transported across the membrane
Molecules can be passed across by passive transport, moving down the concentration gradient - this does not require energy.
They can also move across by active transport moving up the concentration gradient requiring energy.
What do enzymes do
Speed up cellular reactions and are unchanged in the process
Fluid mosaic structure of the membrane
Made up of layer of phospholipids, which are constantly moving - why it is said to be fluid. It has larger proteins embedded in the phospholipids, which is why it is said to be mosaic
Roles of membrane proteins
They act as enzymes and involved in cell communication, they are also essential for intracellular and extracellular transport
Transport proteins - pores
Allow molecules to move across them by facilitated diffusion, they form pores to allow molecules to move passively across them
Transport proteins - pumps
Active transport requires ions or molecules to be pumped against the concentration gradient, energy released from the breakdown of ATP need to change the shape of the protein and allow the molecules or ions to transport across the membranes
e.g. sodium - potassium pump.
What factors affect how quickly a pump can operate
Temperature and availability of oxygen and glucose affect the rate of respiration and therefore the rate of active transport (since
this requires energy/ATP)
Enzymes in the membrane
Some proteins in the membrane are enzymes which catalyse steps within cellular metabolic processes
e.g. ATP synthase