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LE 5-10 MEMBRANE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION • Membranes organize the chemical activities of cells Outside of cell – Membranes provide structural order for metabolism • Form most of the cell's organelles • Compartmentalize chemical reactions – The plasma membrane forms a boundary between a living cell and its surroundings Cytoplasm • Exhibits selective permeability • Controls traffic of molecules in and out Membrane phospholipids form a bilayer Hydrophilic head • Phospholipids are the main structural components of membranes – Two nonpolar hydrophobic fatty acid "tails" – One phosphate group attached to the hydrophilic glycerol "head" In membranes, phospholipids form a bilayer • Two-layer sheet with – Phospholipid heads facing outward and tails facing inward – Selectively permeable Phosphate group • Polar lipid-soluble molecules pass through • Nonpolar molecules not soluble in lipids do not pass through Symbol Water Hydrophilic heads Hydrophobic tails Hydrophobic tails Water LE 5-12 The membrane is a fluid mosaic of phospholipids and proteins Extracellular matrix Glycoprotein Carbohydrate • A membrane is a mosaic – Proteins and other molecules are embedded in a framework of phospholipids • A membrane is fluid – Most protein and phospholipid molecules can move laterally • Membrane glycoproteins and glycolipids function in cell identification Glycolipid Plasma membrane Phospholipid Proteins Microfilaments Cholesterol Cytoplasm of cytoskeleton 1 LE 5-13a Proteins make the membrane a mosaic of function • Proteins perform most membrane functions – – – – Identification tags Junctions between adjacent cells Enzymes Receptors of chemical messages from other cells (signal transduction) – Transporters of substances across the membrane Enzyme activity LE 5-13b LE 5-13c Messenger molecule Receptor Activated molecule ATP Signal transduction Transport LE 5-14a Passive transport is diffusion across a membrane Molecules of dye • Diffusion is the tendency for particles to spread out evenly in an available space from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration – Passive transport across membranes occurs when a molecule diffuses down a concentration gradient – Small nonpolar molecules such as O2 and CO 2 diffuse easily across the phospholipid bilayer of a membrane Equilibrium Membrane Same concentration on both sides 2 LE 5-14b Transport proteins may facilitate diffusion across membranes Equilibrium • In facilitated diffusion – Transport proteins that span the membrane bilayer help substances diffuse down a concentration gradient – To transport the substance, a transport protein may • Provide a pore for passage • Bind the substance, change shape, and then release the substance LE 5-15 Solute molecule Osmosis is the diffusion of water across a membrane • In osmosis, water molecules diffuse across a selectively permeable membrane – From an area of low solute concentration to an area of high solute concentration – Until the solution is equally concentrated on both sides of the membrane – The direction of movement is determined by the difference in total solute concentration Transport protein • Not by the nature of the solutes LE 5-16 Lower concentration of solute Higher concentration of solute Equal concentration of solute Water balance between cells and their surroundings is crucial to organisms H2O Solute molecule • Osmoregulation is the control of water balance • Tonicity is the tendency of a cell to lose or gain water in solution Selectively permeable membrane Water molecule Solute molecule with cluster of water molecules Net flow of water 3 LE 5-17 • Hypotonic solution: solute concentration is lower outside the cell than inside. Isotonic solution – Cell gains water through osmosis – Animal cell lyses; plant cell becomes turgid • Hypertonic solution: solute concentration is higher outside the cell than inside Hypertonic solution H 2O H 2O H 2O H 2O Animal cell – Cell loses water through osmosis – Animal cell shrivels; plant cell plasmolyzes Lysed Normal H 2O • Isotonic solution: solute concentration is the same in the cell and in the solution – No net movement of water – Animal cell volume remains constant; plant cell becomes flaccid Hypotonic solution H 2O Shriveled Plasma membrane H 2O H 2O Plant cell Flaccid Turgid Plasmolysis Shriveled (plasmolyzed) Turgid Elodea Video: Turgid Elodea LE 5-18 Cells expend energy for active transport • Active transport requires energy to move solutes against a concentration gradient – ATP supplies the energy – Transport proteins move solute molecules across the membrane Transport protein Solute Solute binding ATP P ADP P Protein changes shape Transport Phosphorylation Phosphate P detaches Protein reversion 4 LE 5-19a Exocytosis Exocytosis and Endocytosis transport large molecules Fluid outside cell • To move large molecules or particles through a cell membrane – A vesicle may fuse with the membrane and expel its contents outside the cell (exocytosis) – Membranes may fold inward, enclosing material from the outside (endocytosis) LE 5-19b Vesicle Protein Cytoplasm LE 5-19c Endocytosis can occur in three ways Food being ingested LM 230× Pseudopodium of amoeba Vesicle forming Phagocytosis Material bound to receptor proteins PIT TEM 96,500× TEM 54,000× Plasma membrane Cytoplasm Pinocytosis Receptor-mediated endocytosis LE 5-20 Faulty membranes can overload the blood with cholesterol Phospholipid outer layer • Cholesterol is carried in the blood by lowdensity lipoprotein (LDL) particles • Normally, body cells take up LDLs by receptormediated endocytosis • Harmful levels of cholesterol can accumulate in the blood if membranes lack cholesterol receptors LDL particle Vesicle Cholesterol Protein Plasma membrane Receptor protein Cytoplasm – People with hypercholesterolemia have more than twice the normal level of blood cholesterol 5 Animation: Membrane Selectivity Animation: Diffusion Animation: Osmosis Animation: Active Transport Animation: Exocytosis and Endocytosis Introduction Animation: Exocytosis Animation: Receptor-Mediated Endocytosis Animation: Pinocytosis Animation: Phagocytosis 6