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Chapter 5 Membrane Structure and Function Chapter 5 Outline • 5.1 Structure of a Membrane Related to Its Function • 5.2 How Do Substances Move Across Membranes? • 5.3 How Do Specialized Junctions Allow Cells to Connect and Communicate? Functions Plasma Membrane • __________ the cell’s contents from environment • ______________ of essential substances • _______________ with other cells • Creates _______________ within and between other cells • ______________ biochemical reactions Membranes Are “Fluid Mosaics” • Membranes are dynamic, ever-changing structures • ______________ model of a membrane proposed in 1972 – A lumpy, constantly shifting mosaic of “tiles” or __________ – Proteins float around in a sea of _________________ The Phospholipid Bilayer • Phospholipids are the basis of membrane structure – Polar, ____________ head – Two non-polar, ___________ tails The Phospholipid Bilayer • The cell exterior and interior face _______________ environments The Phospholipid Bilayer • Hydrophobic and hydrophilic interactions drive phospholipids into bilayers – ______ row of phospholipids – Polar heads face _______ _______________ – Non-polar tails mingle _______ the membrane – Cholesterol in animal membranes keeps them ___________ The Phospholipid Bilayer • Phospholipid bilayer is a _____________ membrane to allow for cellular _______ ____________ • Individual phospholipid molecules are ____ __________ to one another The Phospholipid Bilayer • Some of the phospholipids have _______________ fatty acids, whose double bonds introduce “kinks” into their “tails” • The above features make the membrane _______ Membrane Proteins Form a Mosaic • Proteins are embedded in the phospholipid bilayer – Some proteins can ____ and drift – Other proteins are ___________ by protein filaments in the cytoplasm – Many proteins have attached carbohydrates (__________________) Membrane Proteins Form a Mosaic • Categories of membrane proteins – – – – – _____________Proteins ____________ Proteins _____________ Proteins _________________ Proteins _________________ Proteins Membrane Proteins Form a Mosaic • Receptor Proteins – Trigger cellular responses upon ______ ___________________, e.g. hormones Membrane Proteins Form a Mosaic • Recognition Proteins – Serve as ____________________ on the surface of a cell Membrane Proteins Form a Mosaic • Enzymes – Promote ________________ that synthesize or break apart biological molecules • Attachment Proteins – ________ the cell membrane to inner _________________, to proteins outside the cell, and to other cells Membrane Proteins Form a Mosaic • Transport Proteins – Include _________ and __________ proteins – Regulate _____________ of hydrophilic molecules Section 5.2 Outline • 5.2 How Do Substances Move Across Membranes? – Molecules in Fluids Move in Response to ______________ – Movement Across Membranes Occurs by Both ____________________ Transport – Passive Transport Includes ___________ __________________________________ – ___________ Plays an Important Role in Cells Section 5.2 Outline • 5.2 How Do Substances Move Across Membranes? continued – Active Transport Uses________ to Move Molecules Against Their Concentration Gradients – Cells Engulf Particles or Fluids by ____________________ – _________________ Moves Material Out of the Cell – Exchange of Materials Across Membranes Influences Cell _____________________ Movement of Molecules in Fluids • Definitions relevant to substance movement – A ______ is a substance that can move or change shape in response to external forces – A ____________ is a substance that can be dissolved (dispersed as ions or molecules) in a solvent – A ___________ is a fluid capable of dissolving a solute Movement of Molecules in Fluids • Definitions relevant to substance movement (continued) – The concentration of molecules is the __________ of them in a given _______unit – A gradient is a physical ___________ in temperature, pressure, charge, or concentration in two adjacent regions Movement of Molecules in Fluids • Why molecules move from one place to another – Substances move in response to a __________________________ • Molecules move from ______________ concentration (____________) until dynamic ________________ is reached Movement of Molecules in Fluids • The greater the concentration gradient, the ________ the rate of diffusion • _____________ cannot move molecules rapidly over long distances Movement Across Membranes • Concentration gradients of _________________ exist across the plasma membranes of all cells • There are two types of movement across the plasma membrane Movement Across Membranes • Passive transport – Substances move _____________________ gradients across a membrane – _____________ is expended – Membrane proteins and phospholipids may limit which molecules can cross, but not the ___________ of movement Movement Across Membranes • Energy-requiring transport – Substances are driven __________ their concentration gradients – __________ is expended Passive Transport • Plasma membranes are selectively permeable – Different molecules move across at different ______________________ – A concentration gradient drives all three types of passive transport:___________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ Passive Transport • Simple diffusion – _________ soluble molecules (e.g. vitamins A and E, gases) and ______________ molecules diffuse ___________ across the phospholipid bilayer Passive Transport • Facilitated diffusion – Water soluble molecules like ions, amino acids, and sugars diffuse with the ________ _______________ ______________ proteins Passive Transport • Osmosis – the special case of water diffusion – Water diffuses from _________________ (high purity) to __________________ (low purity) across a membrane – Dissolved substances ________________ _________________ of free water molecules (and hence the purity of water) in a solution Passive Transport • The flow of water across a membrane depends on the concentration of water in the internal or external solutions Passive Transport • Comparison terms for solutions on either side of a membrane – Isotonic solutions have _____ concentrations of water and equal concentrations of dissolved substances • ___________________ occurs across the membrane Passive Transport • Comparison terms for solutions on either side of a membrane (continued) – A hypertonic solution is one with _______ water concentration or ________ dissolved particle concentration • Water moves across a membrane towards the hypertonic solution Passive Transport • Comparison terms for solutions on either side of a membrane (continued) – A hypotonic solution is one with higher water concentration or ___________________ particle concentration • Water moves across a membrane _____ from the hypotonic solution Passive Transport • The effects of osmosis are illustrated when red blood cells are placed in various solutions Passive Transport • Osmosis explains why fresh water protists have _____________ vacuoles • Water __________ continuously because the cytosol is __________to fresh water • Salts are pumped into the vacuoles, making them hypertonic to the cytosol • Water follows by osmosis and is then ________________ by contraction Active Transport • Cells need to move some substances against their concentration gradients Active Transport • Active-transport membrane proteins move molecules across using ________ – Proteins span the entire membrane – Often have a ___________ binding site and an ___________ binding site – Often referred to as ___________ Endocytosis • Cells import _______________________ via endocytosis • Plasma membrane pinches off to form a ___________ in endocytosis – Types of endocytosis • _______________ • _______________________ endocytosis • ____________________ Endocytosis • Types of endocytosis – Pinocytosis _________________ brings in droplet of extracellular fluid Endocytosis • Types of endocytosis – Receptor-mediated endocytosis moves ___________________ into the cell Endocytosis • Types of endocytosis – Phagocytosis (“cell eating”) moves _______ ___________________________ into the cell Exocytosis • Exocytosis – Vesicles join the membrane, _____________ contents in exocytosis Cell Size and Shape • ______________ affects cell size and shape – As a spherical cell enlarges, its innermost parts get farther away from the plasma membrane – Also, its ___________ increases more rapidly than its ___________ area – A larger cell has a relatively ___________ area of membrane for nutrition exchange than a small cell Section 5.3 Outline • 5.3 How Do Specialized Junctions Allow Cells to Connect and Communicate? – _______________ Attach Cells Together – _____________ Make Cell Attachments Leakproof – ___________________________ Allow Direct Communication Between Cells Desomosomes • Desmosomes attach cells together – Found where __________ _____________ together under the stresses of movement (e.g. the skin) Tight Junctions • Tight junctions make the cell leakproof – Found where tubes and sacs ______________ ___________________ (e.g. the urinary bladder) Gap Junctions and Plasmodesmata • Gap junctions and plasmodesmata allow for communication – Cell-to-cell __________ allowing for passage of ______________________ in animal cells are gap junctions Gap Junctions and Plasmodesmata – Plant cells have cytoplasmic connections called _____________________ Caribous Legs and Membranes • Membrane function varies between organisms Caribous Legs and Membranes • Plasma membrane phospholipids in caribous legs adapted for cold – Cold areas near hooves have more membrane ___________ fatty acids to keep cell membranes fluid Viscous Venoms • Snake and spider venoms contain _______________, enzymes that break down phospholipids • Venoms attack cell membranes, causing cells to _________________ • Cell death destroys tissue around bite