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AP Biology Ch. 7 Membrane Structure

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The sodium-potassium pump exchanges sodium ions (Na+) for potassium (K+) across the cell membrane. Each ion is in high concentration on one side of the membrane. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: AP Biology Ch. 7 Membrane Structure


1
AP Biology Ch. 7 Membrane Structure Function
2
The Edge of Life
  • The plasma membrane of a cell is the boundary
    that separates the living cell from its
    surroundings.
  • It is only about 8nm thickit would take over
    8,000 of them to equal the thickness of a piece
    of paper.
  • It is essential to maintain the internal
    environment of the cell.

3
Selective Permeability
  • The plasma membrane exhibits selective
    permeabilityit allows some substances to pass
    through more easily than others.
  • What needs to come into a cell? (oxygen, water,
    nutrients, ions)
  • What needs to leave a cell?(carbon dioxide,
    water, wastes, proteins)

4
Cell membranes are fluid mosaics made of lipids
and proteins
  • The most abundant molecules in cell membranes
    are phospholipids and proteins. Phospholipids are
    amphipathic. What does this mean?

Phospholipids make a bilayer around the cell with
water inside the cell kept separate from water
outside the cell.
5
The Fluidity of Membranes
  • The membrane is a fluid structure with a mosaic
    of various proteins embedded in or attached to
    the phospholipids.
  • See video http//www.youtube.com/watch?vLKN5sq5d
    tW4featurerelated

6
Fig. 7-7
Fibers of extracellular matrix (ECM)
Carbohydrate
Glyco- protein
Glycolipid
EXTRACELLULAR SIDE OF MEMBRANE
Cholesterol
Microfilaments of cytoskeleton
Peripheral proteins
Integral protein
CYTOPLASMIC SIDE OF MEMBRANE
7
Movement of Molecules within the Plasma Membrane
  • Membranes are not locked into place.
  • Most of the lipids and some of the proteins can
    shift laterally side-to-side.
  • It is rare for them to flip-flop transversely.
  • Adjacent phospholipids move within the membrane
    rapidly107 times/second

Unsaturated fatty acid chains in the
phospholipids makes membranes more fluid since
the kinks in the tails dont pack together
tightly. This keeps it fluid even in cold
temperatures.
8
Cholesterolimportant for cell membrane structure
  • The steroid cholesterol is wedged between
    phospholipids in the plasma membrane of animal
    cells.
  • At higher temperatures, cholesterol makes the
    membrane less fluid by restraining phospholipid
    movement.
  • Because cholesterol keeps the membrane from
    packing tightly, it lowers the temperature
    required for the membrane to solidify (keeping
    animals from freezing)

Membranes must be fluid to work properly they
are usually about as fluid as salad oil.
9
Membrane Proteins and Their Functions
  • A mosaic of different proteins is embedded in the
    plasma membrane. Proteins determine most of the
    membranes functions.

Enzymes
Signal transduction
Active transport of materials
10
Functions of Membrane Proteins
Inter-cellular Joining
Attachment to the cytoskeleton and the
extra-cellular matrix
Cell-Cell Recognition
11
Two Major Kinds of Membrane Proteins
  • Integral Proteins penetrate the hydrophobic core
    of the lipid bilayer
  • Peripheral Proteins
  • Not embedded in the lipid bilayer at all
  • They are appendages

12
The Structure of a trans-membrane protein
EXTRACELLULAR SIDE
N-terminus
C-terminus
CYTOPLASMIC SIDE
? Helix
13
The Role of Membrane Carbohydrates in
Cell-to-Cell Recognition
  • A cells ability to distinguish one type of
    neighboring cell from another is crucial.
  • It helps sort cells into different tissues and
    helps the organism recognize foreign cells.

Membrane carbohydrates may be bonded to proteins
(Glyco-proteins) or to lipids (Glyco-lipids) Cell
s recognize other cells by binding to surface
molecules, often to carbohydrates.
14
Synthesis and Sidedness of Membranes
  • Membranes have distinctive inside and outside
    faces.
  • When a vesicle fuses with the plasma membrane,
    the OUTSIDE of the vesicle membrane fuses with
    the INSIDE of the plasma membrane.
  • Therefore, molecules that start on the INSIDE of
    the ER end up on the OUTSIDE of the plasma
    membrane.

15
ER
1
Synthesis of membrane components and their
orientation in the resulting membrane. The plasma
membrane has distinct cytoplasmic (orange) and
extracellular (aqua) faces, with the
extracellular face arising from the inside face
of the ER, Golgi, and vesicle membranes.
Transmembrane glycoproteins
Secretory protein
Glycolipid
2
Golgi apparatus
Vesicle
3
Plasma membrane
Cytoplasmic face
4
Extracellular face
Transmembrane glycoprotein
Secreted protein
Membrane glycolipid
16
Membrane Structure Animations
  • http//www.wisc-online.com/objects/ViewObject.aspx
    ?IDap1101

17
Membrane structure results in selective
permeability
  • Most important function of the cell membrane to
    regulate what goes in/out of the cell
  • Form fits function the fluid mosaic model helps
    explain how membranes regulate the cells
    molecular traffic

18
The Lipid Bilayer
  • Nonpolar molecules such as hydrocarbons, CO2 and
    O2 are hydrophobic and can pass easily through
    the lipid bilayer. Why?

19
Permeability of the Lipid Bilayer
  • Ions and polar molecules cannot pass easily
    across the lipid bilayer. Why not?
  • Polar molecules such as glucose and other sugars
    pass only slowly across the membrane.
  • Even water passes more slowly than expected,
    since it is such a small molecule. Why?

20
Transport Proteins
  • Cell membranes are permeable to certain ions and
    other polar substances such as water.
  • These hydrophilic substances can avoid contact
    with the Hydrophobic Zone by passing through
    transport proteins that span the membrane.

21
Channel Proteins
  • Channel proteins function by having a hydrophilic
    channel that certain molecules can use as a
    tunnel through the membrane
  • Aquaporins help water molecules move through the
    membrane easily. Each one allows up to 3 billion
    water molecules/second!

22
Carrier Proteins
  • Carrier proteins hold onto their passengers and
    change shape in such a way that shuttles them
    across the membrane.
  • A transport protein is specific for the substance
    it moves across.

23
Passive Transport
  • Passive transport is diffusion of a substance
    across a membrane with no energy investment
    required by the cell. Materials move by
    themselves! How?
  • Diffusion the movement of a substance from
    where it is more concentrated to where it is less
    concentrated.

Molecules move DOWN a concentration gradient.
They move from HIGH concentration to LOW.
24
Diffusion
  • Molecules move by themselves due to kinetic
    energy, the energy of motion. This is also called
    thermal energy.
  • Each molecule moves randomly, in all directions.
  • Diffusion occurs as molecules move randomly, but
    the NET movement of a population of molecules is
    to move AWAY from high concentration to lower
    concentration until it reaches equilibrium.

25
Osmosis
  • Osmosis is a special kind of diffusion. It is the
    diffusion of water across a selectively permeable
    membrane.
  • Water moves from where it is MORE concentrated to
    where it is LESS concentrated.

26
Effect of Osmosis on Water Balance
  • If there is a difference in the concentration of
    solutes in the water on either side of a
    membrane, the water level may change as it
    diffuses across the membrane.
  • It is the difference in free water concentration
    that makes the difference.

Why does the level of water go up on the
right-hand side of the tube?
27
3 Solutions a Cell Could be in
  • Isotonic Solution a solution where the
    concentration of solutes is EQUAL inside and
    outside the cell
  • Hypertonica solution where the concentration of
    solutes is GREATER in the water outside the cell.
    (More solutes less water)
  • Hypotonica solution where the concentration of
    solutes is LESS in the water outside the cell.
    (Less solutes more water)

Hypertonic
Hypotonic
28
What happens to cells in the 3 conditions?
Iso equal
Hyper Greater than
Hypo Less than
29
Water Balance in Cells with Cell Walls ( mostly
Plants!)
  • The cells of plants, prokaryotes, fungi and some
    protists have cell walls.
  • When such a cell is placed in a hypotonic
    solution, the wall helps maintain the cells
    water balance.

30
Facilitated Diffusion Passive Transport Aided by
Proteins
  • Facilitated diffusion occurs when transport
    proteins embedded in the membrane aid the
    movement of substances. (Note it is still moving
    DOWN the concentration gradient!)
  • Two types of transport proteins

Channel protein
Carrier Proteins
31
Passive Transport Animation
  • http//www.northland.cc.mn.us/biology/biology1111/
    animations/passive1.swf

32
Active Transport
  • Active transport uses the cells energy (ATP) to
    move materials across the membrane.
  • Materials that must move AGAINST the
    concentration gradient must be moved with active
    transport.

33
The Need for Energy in Active Transport
  • To pump a solute across a membrane against its
    gradient requires work the cell must expend
    energy.
  • Carrier proteins embedded in the membrane can
    move these solutes.

34
One Example Sodium-Potassium Pump
  • The sodium-potassium pump exchanges sodium ions
    (Na) for potassium (K) across the cell
    membrane.
  • Each ion is in high concentration on one side of
    the membrane. The cell needs to maintain that
    higher concentration.

35
Sodium-Potassium Pump Animations
  • http//highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072495855/s
    tudent_view0/chapter2/animation__how_the_sodium_po
    tassium_pump_works.html
  • http//www.brookscole.com/chemistry_d/templates/st
    udent_resources/shared_resources/animations/ion_pu
    mp/ionpump.html

36
How Ion Pumps Maintain Membrane Potential
  • All cells have voltages across their plasma
    membranes.
  • Voltage is electrical potential energya
    separation of opposite charges.
  • The cytoplasm is negative (-) the extracellular
    fluid is positive ().

37
Membrane Potential
  • The voltage across a membrane is called membrane
    potential. It ranges from about 50 to 200
    millivolts.
  • The membrane potential acts like a battery, an
    energy source that affects the traffic of all
    charged substances (either or -).
  • The membrane potential favors charged ions.
    Why?

38
Membrane Potential
  • Two forces drive the diffusion of ions across the
    membrane
  • 1)a chemical force (the concentration gradient)
  • 2)an electrical force (the membrane potential)
  • Together, these are called the electrochemical
    gradient

In the above example, there are more negative
charges inside the cell than outside. Ions such
as Na are more likely to move inside. Why? (2
reasons!)
39
Electrogenic Pumps
  • Some membrane proteins that actively pump ions
    contribute to the membrane potential.
  • The Sodium-Potassium pump is an example because
    it pumps out 3 Na ions for every 2 K ions,
    creating a difference in charge.

An electrogenic pump creates voltage across a
membrane. With each crank of the pump, there
is a net transfer of one charge, a process that
stores energy as voltage.
40
Proton Pumps
  • The main electrogenic pump of plants, fungi, and
    bacteria is a proton pump.
  • A proton pump actively pumps out hydrogen ions
    (protons, H).
  • The pumping of H transfers charge from the
    cytoplasm, generating voltage.

41
Cotransport
  • A single ATP-powered pump that transports a
    specific solute can indirectly drive the active
    transport of other solutes as well.
  • A substance that has been pumped across the
    membrane can do work as it moves back across by
    diffusion.

An example of cotransport A carrier protein such
as this sucrose-H transporter is able to use the
diffusion of H down its electrochemical gradient
to drive the uptake of sucrose.
42
Exocytosis
  • Exocytosis the cell secretes (transports out
    of the cell) certain biological molecules by
    fusing vesicles with the plasma membrane.
  • The contents of the vesicle then spill to the
    outside of the cell and the vesicle membrane
    becomes part of the cell membrane.

43
Endocytosis
  • In endocytosis, the cell takes in biological
    molecules (such as food) by forming new vesicles
    from the plasma membrane.
  • A small area of the plasma membrane sinks inward
    to form a pocket.
  • As the pocket deepens, it pinches in, forming a
    vesicle.

44
Phagocytosis Cell Eating
  • In Phagocytosis, a cell engulfs a particle by
    wrapping pseudopodia around it and packaging it
    within a membrane-enclosed sac that can be large
    enough to be called a vacuole.
  • The particle is then digested by a lysosome.

45
Pinocytosis Cell Drinking
  • In pinocytosis, a cell gulps in droplets of
    extracellular fluid into tiny vesicles.
  • It is not the fluid itself that is needed by the
    cell, but the molecules dissolved in the
    droplets.

46
Receptor-Mediated Endocytosis
  • Receptor-mediated endocytosis enables the cell to
    bring in bulk quantities of specific substances,
    even if they are not in high concentrations
    outside the cell.

47
Coated Pits
  • Embedded in the membrane are proteins with
    specific receptor sites exposed to the
    extracellular fluid.
  • The receptor proteins are usually clustered in
    regions of the membrane called coated pits.
  • These coated pits are lined on the inside of the
    cell with fuzzy proteins.
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