S2) Membrane Proteins & Cell Signalling Flashcards
The movement of ions and hydrophilic molecules across a membrane is mediated.
Provide reasons for this
- Maintenance of intracellular pH
- Maintenance of intracellular ionic composition
- Regulation of cell volume
- Extrusion of waste products of metabolism
What is passive transport?
Passive transport is a movement of molecules across a cell membrane, down a concentration gradient, without energy input
When does passive transport occur?
Occurs when non-polar molecules can enter and, therefore, diffuse across the hydrophobic domain of lipid bilayers
How does the rate of passive transport change with the concentration gradient?
The rate of passive transport increases linearly with increasing concentration gradient
What is osmosis?
Osmosis is a process by which molecules of water tend pass across a semipermeable membrane from a less concentrated solution into a more concentrated one
What are permeability coefficients?
- Permeability coefficient is the speed at which any substance transverses a lipid bilayer
- Low for ions and hydrophilic molecules, higher for water molecules
What is facilitated transport?
Facilitated transport is a saturable process of spontaneous passive transport of molecules or ions across a cell’s membrane via specific transmembrane integral proteins
What is active transport?
Active transport is the movement of ions or molecules, against a concentration gradient (low-high) across a cell membrane, requiring energy
What is secondary active transport?
- Secondary active transport is when the transport of one substance is linked to the concentration gradient for another substance via a co-transporter
- The primary energy source, e.g. hydrolysis of ATP, is used indirectly
Identify and describe two examples of secondary active transport
- Na+- Ca2+-exchange – inward flow of sodium down its concentration gradient drives outward flow of Ca2+ up its concentration gradient (antiport)
- Na+- H+- exchange – inward flow of sodium down its concentration gradient leads to cell alkalization by removing H+ (antiport)
Active transport is employed to overcome unfavourable chemical or electrical gradients.
How does it work?
- Movement of the transported ion or molecule must be coupled to a thermodynamically favourable reaction
- Free energy to drive active transport can come either directly or indirectly from the hydrolysis of ATP, electron transport or light
What is uniport?
Uniport: one solute molecule alone is transported from one side of the membrane to the other
Symport and antiport are two forms of co-transport.
Distinguish between them
- Symport: the transfer of one solute molecule depends on the simultaneous transfer of a second solute in the same direction
- Antiport: the transfer of one solute molecule depends on the simultaneous transfer of a second solute in the opposite direction