Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGary Mitchell Modified over 8 years ago
1
MEMBRANE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION
2
Cell Membrane: Fluid Mosaic Model Membranes are composed of phospholipids, cholesterol and proteins –Membranes are commonly described as a fluid mosaic –Mosaic because of the variety of proteins embedded in the phospholipids –Fluid because most of the proteins can drift about in the phospholipids
3
Hydrophilic head WATER Hydrophobic tail WATER Revisiting the Phospholipid Bilayer
4
Phospholipid bilayer Hydrophobic regions of protein Hydrophilic regions of protein
5
Many membrane phospholipids are made from unsaturated fatty acids –This prevents them from packing tightly together, which keeps them liquid (more like oil!) –This is aided by cholesterol wedged into the bilayer to help –keep it liquid at lower temperatures –keep it from turning to mush at higher temperatures
6
Membrane proteins: –Integral proteins: those proteins that enter the lipid bilayer –Transmembrane proteins: those proteins that go across the entire membrane span and stick out both sides –Peripheral proteins: those proteins that are stuck like “post-it notes” onto the outside or inside of the plasma membrane
7
5.1 Membranes are a fluid mosaic of phospholipids and proteins
8
Membranes contain integrins, which give the membrane a stronger framework –Integrins attach to the extracellular matrix on the outside of the cell as well as span the membrane to attach to the cytoskeleton. –These are, of necessity, transmembrane proteins. Integrins
9
5.1 Membranes are a fluid mosaic of phospholipids and proteins Some glycoproteins in the membrane serve as identification tags that are specifically recognized by membrane proteins of other cells –For example, cell-cell recognition enables cells of the immune system to recognize and reject foreign cells, such as infectious bacteria –Carbohydrates that are part of the extracellular matrix are significantly involved in cell-cell recognition
11
Functions of Membrane Proteins – Structure (Integrins) – Cell-cell recognition (Glycoproteins) – Enzymes – Signal transduction – Transport
12
Enzymes
13
Messenger molecule Activated molecule Receptor Signal Transduction The “message” gets across, but not the original molecule. This is a “second messenger” system.
14
Transport Molecules actually make it from one side to another.
15
Cell membranes exhibit “Selective Permeability” Selective permeability: Cell membranes are designed to allow some substances to cross more easily than others. Nonpolar molecules (carbon dioxide and oxygen) cross easily Polar molecules (glucose and other sugars) do not cross easily
16
Two Kinds of Transport 1. Passive Transport 2. Active Transport
17
Passive transport: No energy is spent Diffusion is a process in which particles spread out evenly in an available space –Particles move from an area of more concentrated particles to an area where they are less concentrated –This means that particles diffuse down their concentration gradient –Eventually, the particles reach equilibrium where the concentration of particles is the same throughout
18
Diffusion across a cell membrane does not require energy, so it is called passive transport –The concentration gradient itself represents potential energy for diffusion Molecules of dye MembraneEquilibrium
19
Two different substances MembraneEquilibrium 2 Substances Diffuse Independently of One Another
20
The Rate of Diffusion depends on… 1. The steepness of the concentration gradient 2. The size of the solute 3. The temperature of the solvent 4. The presence of charged groups
21
Osmosis: A Special Type of Diffusion Diffusion of water down its concentration gradient Water will always move to dilute. Osmosis Practice Problems!
22
Real-Life Osmosis: Tonicity
23
Using a Protein to Get Material Across the Cell Membrane
24
Facilitated Diffusion Diffusion proceeds down a concentration gradient, but through a protein NO ATP REQUIRED (the concentration gradient runs the show)
25
Water How Does Water Get Across the Membrane?
26
Aquaporins: Facilitated Osmosis
27
2. Active Transport Moves molecules against their concentration gradient (uphill) Going uphill requires energy…in the form of ATP
28
Types of Active Transport Symport and Antiport
29
Na+/K+ ATPase: Primary Active Transport httphttp:ATPase
30
Secondary Active Transport You’ve pushed Na+ uphill against its concentration gradient…now use it! Secondary Active Transport
31
Phagocytosis (Cell Eating) (Active Transport)
32
Pinocytosis (Cell Drinking) (Active Transport)
33
Receptor-Mediated Endocytosis (Active Transport)
34
Exocytosis (Cell “Spitting”) Endocytosis and Exocytosis
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.