Lecture 1 (Cell Memb Comp and Functions
Lecture 1 (Cell Memb Comp and Functions
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Membrane Structure and Function
Cells must contain a cell membrane, cytoplasm and genetic material.
The cell membrane is the EDGE, “boundary of life”, while the cytoplasm is the
site of all the reactions of life and the genetic material is the information
required for life.
SELECTIVELY PERMEABLE means that the CM allows some substances
across more easily than others… some it helps and some it inhibits or rejects
all together.
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Plasma Membrane
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Membrane structure
Development of models as a scientific process
Models include
Overton – proposed lipid base
Langmuir (phospholipids) – made membrane
Gorter and Grendel (two layers)
Davson and Danielli (sandwich image, protein outside)
Singer and Nicolson = Fluid Mosaic Model
Required electron microscopy
1972
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Membrane structure
Phospholipids – phosphate and fatty acid tails
Hydrophilic
phosphates
Hydrophobic fatty acid tails
Two layers
With tails together
Protein
Embedded throughout - integral
Some just surface – peripheral
Motility 5
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Membrane Components
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Phospholipid bilayer
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Phospholipid bilayer
Contains 2 fatty
Make that
acid chains up the
arecell
nonpolarmembrane
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Concept of membrane fluidity
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Concept of membrane fluidity
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Membrane proteins
Transport – substance across membrane, specificity to
substance, active pumps
Enzymatic activity – sequence reactions
Transmit signals – conformational change when
combine with substrate = message.
Junctions – glue cells into tissues
Recognition – glycoproteins act as targets or ID
Attach to cytoskeleton – change shape of cell
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Membrane proteins
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Traffic across the Membrane
The cell membrane is made of 2 layers of phospholipids called the lipid
bilayer
Hydrophobic molecules pass easily; hydrophillic DO NOT.
Small non-charged molecules move through easily. Examples: O2, and CO2 .
Ions, and large molecules such as glucose and amino acids do not move
through the membrane on their own. They must use transport proteins
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Transport Proteins
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Cells in Solutions
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Diffusion of Liquids
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Diffusion of Liquids
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Active Transport
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Na-K Pump
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Bulk transport of material
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Pinocytosis
Most common form of endocytosis.
Takes in dissolved molecules as a vesicle.
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Phagocytosis
Used to engulf large particles such as food, bacteria, etc.
into vesicles- Called cell eating.
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Receptor Mediated endocytosis
Some integral proteins have receptors on their surface
to recognize & take in hormones, cholesterol, etc.
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Membranes functions and importance
1. Plasma membranes form closed compartments around cellular
protoplasm to define cell boundaries.
2. It shows selective permeability
acts as a barrier, maintaining differences in composition between the
inside and outside of the cell.
Done by specific proteins named transporters and ion channels.
3. The plasma membrane exchanges material with the
extracellular environment by
Exocytosis
endocytosis, and
gap junctions
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Membranes functions and importance
4. plays key roles in cell–cell interactions and in transmembrane
signaling.
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