S2) Membrane Proteins & Cell Signalling Flashcards

1
Q

The movement of ions and hydrophilic molecules across a membrane is mediated.

Provide reasons for this

A
  • Maintenance of intracellular pH
  • Maintenance of intracellular ionic composition
  • Regulation of cell volume
  • Extrusion of waste products of metabolism
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2
Q

What is passive transport?

A

Passive transport is a movement of molecules across a cell membrane, down a concentration gradient, without energy input

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3
Q

When does passive transport occur?

A

Occurs when non-polar molecules can enter and, therefore, diffuse across the hydrophobic domain of lipid bilayers

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4
Q

How does the rate of passive transport change with the concentration gradient?

A

The rate of passive transport increases linearly with increasing concentration gradient

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5
Q

What is osmosis?

A

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

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6
Q

What are permeability coefficients?

A

- Permeability coefficient is the speed at which any substance transverses a lipid bilayer

  • Low for ions and hydrophilic molecules, higher for water molecules
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7
Q

What is facilitated transport?

A

Facilitated transport is a saturable process of spontaneous passive transport of molecules or ions across a cell’s membrane via specific transmembrane integral proteins

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8
Q

What is active transport?

A

Active transport is the movement of ions or molecules, against a concentration gradient (low-high) across a cell membrane, requiring energy

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9
Q

What is secondary active transport?

A

- 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
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10
Q

Identify and describe two examples of secondary active transport

A
  • 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)
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11
Q

Active transport is employed to overcome unfavourable chemical or electrical gradients.

How does it work?

A
  • 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
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12
Q

What is uniport?

A

Uniport: one solute molecule alone is transported from one side of the membrane to the other

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13
Q

Symport and antiport are two forms of co-transport.

Distinguish between them

A
  • 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
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