Module 10 ACT
Module 10 ACT
1. What are the different physical concepts the govern cellular membrane activities? (cite the
concepts and explain its application to cellular activities)
Plasma Membrane and Its Function
Plasma membranes are continuous, unbroken sheets and, as such,
inevitably enclose compartments. The plasma membrane encloses the
contents of the entire cell, whereas the nuclear and cytoplasmic
membranes enclose diverse intracellular spaces. The various
membrane-bounded compartments of a cell possess markedly
different contents. Membrane compartmentalization allows
specialized activities to proceed without external interference and
enables cellular activities to be regulated independently of one
another. Also, plasma membranes not only enclose compartments but
are also a distinct compartment themselves. As long as reactants are
present in solution, their relative positions cannot be stabilized and
their interactions are dependent on random collisions. Because of
their construction, membranes provide the cell with an extensive framework or scaffolding within
which components can be ordered for effective interaction. They prevent the unrestricted exchange of
molecules from one side to the other. At the same time, membranes provide the means of
communication between the compartments they separate. The plasma membrane, which encircles a
cell, can be compared to a moat around a castle: both serve as a general barrier, yet both have gated
“bridges” that promote the movement of select elements into and out of the enclosed living space.
Significantly, the plasma membrane contains the machinery for physically transporting
substances from one side of the membrane to another, often from a region where the solute is present
at low concentration into a region where that solute is present at much higher concentration. The
membrane’s transport machinery allows a cell to accumulate substances, such as sugars and amino
acids, that are necessary to fuel its metabolism and build its macromolecules. The plasma membrane
is also able to transport specific ions, thereby establishing ionic gradients across itself. This capability
is especially critical for nerve and muscle cells. Likewise, they play a critical role in the response of a
cell to external stimuli, a process known as signal transduction. Membranes possess receptors that
combine with specific molecules (ligands) or respond to other types of stimuli such as light or
mechanical tension. Different types of cells have membranes with different receptors and are,
therefore, capable of recognizing and responding to different environmental stimuli. The interaction
of a plasma membrane receptor with an external stimulus may cause the membrane to generate a
signal that stimulates or inhibits internal activities. For example, signals generated at the plasma
membrane may tell a cell to manufacture more glycogen, to prepare for cell division, to move toward
a higher concentration of a particular compound, to release calcium from internal stores, or possibly
to commit suicide.
Phospholipids: The Main Lipid Constituents of Most Bio membranes and their Assemble
The fundamental building blocks of all cell
membranes are phospholipids, which are amphipathic
molecules, consisting of two hydrophobic fatty acid chains
linked to a phosphate-containing hydrophilic head group.
Because their fatty acid tails are poorly soluble in water,
phospholipids spontaneously form bilayers in aqueous
solutions, with the hydrophobic tails buried in the interior
of the membrane and the polar head groups exposed on
both sides, in contact with water. Such phospholipid
bilayers form a stable barrier between two aqueous
compartments and represent the basic structure of all biological membranes. An important property of
lipid bilayers is that they behave as two-dimensional fluids in which individual molecules (both lipids
and proteins) are free to rotate and move in lateral directions. Such fluidity is a critical property of
membranes and is determined by both temperature and lipid composition. For example, the
interactions between shorter fatty acid chains are weaker than those between longer chains, so
membranes containing shorter fatty acid chains are less rigid and remain fluid at lower temperatures.
Lipids containing unsaturated fatty acids similarly increase membrane fluidity because the presence
of double bonds introduces kinks in the fatty acid chains, making them more difficult to pack
together. Because of its hydrocarbon ring structure, cholesterol plays a distinct role in determining
membrane fluidity. Cholesterol molecules insert into the bilayer with their polar hydroxyl groups
close to the hydrophilic head groups of the phospholipids. The rigid hydrocarbon rings of cholesterol
therefore interact with the regions of the fatty acid chains that are adjacent to the phospholipid head
groups. This interaction decreases the mobility of the outer portions of the fatty acid chains, making
this part of the membrane more rigid. On the other hand, insertion of cholesterol interferes with
interactions between fatty acid chains, thereby maintaining membrane fluidity at lower temperatures.
http://dosequis.colorado.edu/Courses/MCDB3145/Docs/Karp-120-171.pdf
https://www.khanacademy.org/test-prep/mcat/cells/transport-across-a-cell-membrane/a/passive-
transport-and-active-transport-across-a-cell-membrane-article
http://www.plantcell.org/content/11/4/643
https://phys.libretexts.org/Courses/University_of_California_Davis/UCD%3A_Biophysics_241_-
_Membrane_Biology/04%3A_Membrane-
Protein_Interactions/4.01%3A_Membrane_Permeability#:~:text=The%20permeability%20of%20a
%20membrane,permeated%20molecules%20across%20the%20biomembrane.
Intracellular Motion
Cell movement is a complex and dynamic process that causes changes in cell morphology by
reorganizing the actin cytoskeleton and modulating cell adhesions. For directional cell migration,
cells must continuously receive the polarized environmental signals and transmit the polarized
intracellular signals from a fixed direction, which orient protrusion of the leading edge. The dynamic
regulation of cyclical activation and inactivation of the Rho family small G proteins as a result of the
crosstalk between small G protein signaling pathways is particularly important for the formation and
disassembly of leading edge structures. However, the regulatory mechanisms of directionality and
small G protein dynamics have not been fully understood. Recently, it has been found that nectin, an
immunoglobulin-like cell adhesion molecule, implicated in a wide variety of fundamental cellular
events including cell adhesion, proliferation, movement, and polarity, and its related proteins such as
nectin-like molecule-5 and afadin regulate directionality and small G protein dynamics during
directional cell movement.
Over the past century relatively little attention has been paid to the physical basis of embryology.
With the discovery through the space program that the very important cytoskeletal proteins, such as
microtubules, are differentially sensitive to gravity (Portet et al., 2003), it is clear that the
fundamental conceptual basis of embryology cannot be developed merely by employing a classical
molecular genetic framework. In addition to gravity, other physical forces such as surface tension due
to intercellular adhesion (Goel et al., 1970, 1975; Gordon et al., 1972, 1975; Steinberg, 1996;
Trinkaus, 1984a), the mechanical forces exerted during cell division (Rappaport, 1996), and physical
waves of cytoskeletal expansion and contraction that traverse embryos (Gordon, 1999) all provide
important non-chemical contributions to morphogenesis of embryos. Moreover, cell differentiation
leading to morphological differences between cells in various tissues and organs are extreme
examples of what appears to be an entropy reduction process, i.e. self-organization. This apparent
contradiction of the second law of thermodynamics drew attention of many physicists beginning with
Schrödinger (1967). At the macroscopic level, living systems are thermodynamically open and far-
from-equilibrium systems, hence the balance of entropy at this level must necessarily involve
metabolic energy production as well as heat and waste product dissipation into the external
environment.