Cell Membrane: Structure and Function

Contributed by:
Sharp Tutor
A brief description of what a membrane is, its functions, and its structure. The cell membrane is a biological membrane that separates the interior of all cells from the outside environment and protects the cell from its environment.
1. Membrane Structure and
Function
Don’t be semiknowledgeable in the
semipermeable domain
2. Chapter 7: Membranes
I. Membrane Structure:
A. Membrane models have evolved to fit
new data: Science as Process
B. A membrane is a Fluid Mosaic of
lipids, proteins, carbos
3. More Membranes
Traffic Across Membranes
a. Molecular organization of membrane=selective permeability
b. Passive Transport=Diffusion across a membrane
c. Osmosis=passive transport of water
d. Balancing water uptake/loss=cell survival
e. Specific proteins facilitate transport of selected solutes
f. Active transport=pumping solutes against gradient
g. Some ion pumps generate voltage across membranes
h. Cotransport: A membrane protein couples the transport of one
solute to another
i. Exocytosis/Endocytosis transport large molecules
4. Artificial Membranes
5. Fluid Mosaic Model
6. General Membrane Characteristics
• Held together by hydrophobic interactions
• Most lipids/proteins can drift laterally
• Molecules rarely flip transversely
• Phospholipids move faster than proteins
• Some proteins are connected to the cytoskeleton,
can’t move far
• Unsaturated Hydrocarbon tails on lipids increase
fluidity
• Cholesterol decreases fluidity at warmer temps,
more fluid at colder temps. (plant survival
adaptation)
7. The Fluidity of Membranes
8. MOSAICISM
• Membranes are mosaics of floating
proteins in a lipid bilayer. 2 ways:
– Integral Proteins: transmembrane, have
both hydropohilic and hydrophobic parts
– Peripheral Proteins: Attached to
membrane’s surface by:
• Attachment to integral proteins or ECM
fibers (outside)
• Attachment to filaments of cytoskeleton
(inside)
9. The Structure of a Transport Protein
10. Membranes are Bifacial
• 2 lipid layers may
differ in composition
• Membrane proteins
have distinct
directional orientation
• Inside of vesicles, ER,
Golgi is the same as
the outside of the
membrane
11. Sidedness of the Plasma Membrane
12. Membrane Carbohydrates
• Allow Cell to Cell Recognition:
The ability of a cell to recognize if
other cells are alike or different
from itself. Immunity
repercussions? This cell-cell
recognition is the basis for:
*sorting an embryo’s cells into
tissues/organs
*rejection of foreign cells by
immune sys.
13. OH! More Carbos
• Act as markers on cell’s surface for recognition
purposes
• Usually branched oligosaccharides (<15 monomers)
• Some are covalently bonded to lipids (glycolipids)
• MOST are covalently bonded to proteins
(glycoproteins)
• Vary between species, individuals of same sp., and
between cells in same organism
14. The Detailed Structure of
Membranes
15. Traffic Across Membranes
• Selective
permeability
depends on
solubility
characteristics of
the lipid bilayer,
and presence of
specific integral
proteins
16. Permeability of the Lipid Bilayer
NONPOLAR Molecules POLAR Molecules
• Dissolve in membranes, • Small, polar, uncharged
cross with ease molecules can slip through
• Smaller of 2 will cross • Larger, polar, uncharged
faster will not get through easily
(glucose)
• All ions have trouble
getting through
hydrophobic layer
17. Transport Proteins
• Hydrophilic Substances like ions and
moderately sized polar molecules can avoid
going through the hydrophobic core of the
membrane by going through transport
proteins: Integral membrane proteins that
transport specific ions or molecules across
the membrane. They may provide a
hydrophilic tunnel or may bind to, and
physically carry a substance across. These
are specific
18. Some Functions of Membrane Proteins
19. REVIEW ON YOUR OWN:
• Passive transport: Concentration Gradient, Net
directional movement, diffusion
• Osmosis: Hypertonic, hypotonic, isotonic, osmotic
concentration, osmotic pressure
• Water balance in organisms without cell walls:
Live in isotonic environment, osmoregulation
• Water balance in cells with walls: Turgidity,
plasmolysis
20. Proteins Facilitate Passive Transport
• Facilitated Diffusion: specific transport
proteins help solutes diffuse across
membrane
– Is passive transport (down conc. Gradient)
– Helps many polar molecules/ions get through
the lipid bilayer
– SPECIFIC-Have binding site like active site
– Can be saturated with solute: rate limited
– Can be due to conformational changes
– Can be gated channels
21. ACTIVE TRANSPORT
• Endergonic process by which a transport
protein pumps a molecule across a
membrane AGAINST its concentration
gradient.
• These maintain concentration gradients
across membranes
• Use ATP as energy source.
• Ex. Sodium-Potassium Pump
22. Passive/Active Transport
23. Facilitated Transport
24. Water Balance in Cells w/Walls
25. MEMBRANE POTENTIAL
• Voltage across membranes happens when
anions/cations are unequally distributed across cell
membranes
• Potential ranges from -50 to -200 mv
• Negative sign indicates the inside of the cell is –
charged.
• Affects traffic of charged subs. across membrane,
favors diffusion of anions out, cations in.
26. Passive Transport of Ions Depends
On:
• Concentration gradient of the Ion
• Effect of the membrane potential of the ion
The Electrochemical Gradient is the
diffusion gradient created from the
combined effects of both of the above
27. Factors Contributing to Membrane
Potential:
• Neg. charged proteins in the cells interior
• Plasma membrane’s selective permeability to
various ions
• The Sodium-Potassium Pump is an
ELECTROGENIC PUMP: a transport protein which
generates voltage across a membrane. Na+/K+
ATPase is the major one in animals, a Proton pump
is the major one in Plants, bacteria, fungi (also
Mitochondria, Chloroplasts use it to make ATP)
28. An Electrogenic Pump
29. Na, Na, Na, Na, K, K, K Goodbye!
30. COTRANSPORT
• A process where a single ATP-powered
pump actively transports one solute, and
indirectly drives the transport of other
solutes against their concentration gradients
31.
32. Exocytosis/Endocytosis Transport el
Moleculo LARGO
Exocytosis Endocytosis
• Exportation of • Importation of
macromolecules by the macromolecules into a cell
fusion of vessicles by forming vessicles from
w/membrane membrane
• Vessicle comes from ER • Used by cells to
or Golgi incorporate extracellular
• Used by secretory cells to substances
export products
33. ENDOCYTOSIS
• Phagocytosis: “Cell eating” solid particles
involved. Cell engulfs them with
pseudopods. The vessicle then fuses w/ a
food vacuole
• Pinocytosis: “Cell drinking” fluid droplets
involved
• Receptor-Mediated endocytosis: stay tuned..
34. Receptor-Mediated Endocytosis
• Importation of specific macromolecules
into the cell by the inward budding of
vessicles formed from COATED PITS
• A layer of CLATHRIN , a fibrous protein,
lines and reinforces the coated pit, probably
causing it to deepen the pit to form a
vessicle
• This is specific, and is ligand/receptor
triggered
• Ex. Cholesterol and LDL’s