Topic 4 - Transport across cell membranes Flashcards
Fluid mosaic model of membrane structure
- Molecules within membrane can move laterally (fluid) e.g. phospholipids
- Mixture of phospholipids, proteins, glycoproteins and glycolipids
The structure of the cell membrane
- Phospholipid bilayer
Phosphate heads are hydrophilic so attracted to water - orientate to the aqueous environment either side of the membrane
Fatty acids tails Arte hydrophobic so repelled by water - orientate to the inside/interior of the membrane - Embedded proteins (intrinsic or extrinsic)
Channel and carrier proteins (intrinsic) - Glycolipids (lipids and attached polysaccharide chain) and glycoproteins (proteins with polysaccharide chain attached)
- Cholesterol (binds to phospholipid hydrophobic fatty acid tails)
The fluid mosaic model of membrane structure can explain how molecules enter/leave a cell
Phospholipid bilayer
- Allows movement of non-polar small/lipid-soluble molecules e.g. oxygen or water, down a concentration gradient (simple diffusion)
Channel proteins (some are gated) and carrier proteins
- Allows moment of water-soluble/polar molecules / ions, down a concentration gradient (facilitated diffusion)
Carrier proteins
- Allow the movement of molecules against a concentration gradient using ATP (active transport)
Features of the plasma membrane adapt it for its other functions
Phospholipid bilayer
- Maintains a different environment on each side of the cell or compartmentalisation of cell
Phospholipid bilayer is fluid
- Can bend to take up different shapes for phagocytosis / to form vesicles
Surface proteins / extrinsic / glycoproteins / glycolipids
- Cell recognition / act as antigens / receptors
Cholesterol
- Regulates fluidity / increases stability
The role of cholesterol
- Makes the membrane more rigid / stable / less flexible, bye restricting lateral movement of molecules making up the membrane e.g. phospholipids (binds to fatty acid tails causing them to pack more closely together)
- NOTE: Not present in bacterial cell membranes
Movement across membrane by simple diffusion and factors affecting rate
- Net movement of small, non polar molecules e.g. oxygen or carbon dioxide, across a selectively permeable membrane, down a concentration gradient
- Passive / no ATP / energy required
- Factors affecting rate - surface area, concentration gradient, thickness of surface / diffusion distance
Movement across membranes by facilitated diffusion
- Net movement of large/polar molecules e.g. glucose, across a selectively permeable membrane, down a concentration gradient
- Through a channel/carrier protein
- Passive / no ATP / energy required
Factors affecting rate of movement across membranes by facilitated diffusion
- Surface area
- Concentration gradients (until the number of proteins is the limiting factor as all are in use / saturated)
- number of channel/carrier proteins
role of carrier/channel proteins is movement across membranes by facilitated diffusion
- Carrier proteins transport large molecules, the protein changes shape when molecule attaches
- Channel proteins transport charged/polar molecules through its pore (some are gayer so can open/close e.g. voltage acted sodium ion channels)
- Different carrier and channel proteins facilitate the diffusion of different specific molecules
Movement across membranes by active transport
- Net movement of molecules/ions against a concentration gradient
- Using carrier proteins
- Using energy from the hydrolysis of ATP to change the shape of the tertiary structure and push substances through
Factors affecting rate of movement across membranes by active transport
- pH / temp (tertiary structure of carrier protein)
- Speed of carrier protein
- Number of carrier proteins
- Rate of respiration (ATP production)
Movement across membranes by co-transport
(illustrated as absorption of sodium ions and glucose by cells lining the mammalian ileum
- Sodium ions actively transported out of epithelial cells lining the ileum, into the blood, by the sodium potassium pump. Creating a concentration gradient of sodium (higher conc. of sodium in lumen than epithelial cell)
- Sodium ions and glucose move by facilitated diffusion into the epithelial cell from the lumen, via a co-transporter protein
- Creating a concentration gradient of glucose - higher conc. of glucose in epithelial cell than blood
- Glucose moves out of cell into blood by facilitated diffusion through a protein channel
Movement across membranes by osmosis
- Net movement of water molecules across a selectively permeable membrane down a water potential gradient
- Water potential is the likelihood (potential) of water molecules to diffuse out of or into a solution; pure water has the highest water potential and adding solutes to a solution lowers the water potential (more negative)
- Passive
Factors affecting rate of movement across membranes by osmosis
- Surface area
- Water potential gradient
- Thickness of exchange surfaces / diffusion distance
How might cells be adapted for transport across their internal or external membranes
- By an increase in surface area
- Increase in number of protein channels / carriers