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Membrane Transport / Permeability Reading Membrane proteins & Transport Ch 7: Membranes / Transport •Pores/channels, Carriers, Pumps Ch 8: Energy •Endocytosis & Exocytosis Passive vs Active Metabolism Thermodynamics • Free Energy • Activation Energy Enzymes ATP coupling Factors on Enzymatic activity • Optimal activity graphs • Michealis Mentin Kinetics Regulation Homework Ch 9 Prequiz Cell Respiration prequiz Check your clicker grades Extra Credit Science Seminar Estimate tonicity Before: Given permeability & 2 solution concentrations Determine movement Now: given 1 solution concentration and movement Determine concentration of 2nd solution Impermeable to Na+ permeable to Ethanol The osmotic pressure is: 300 mOsm a)Inward b)Outward c)Neither 300 mOsm d)Not enough info RBCs have a tonicity equivalent to 0.9% NaCl or 0.3 M Na+ (impermeable particle concentration) Cell crenates when placed in an unknown mystery solution, The unknown solution is: a)0% NaCl 0.9% NaCl or 300 mM Na+ b)0.9 % NaCl c)10 % NaCl d) 300 mM NaCl Unknown solution e)0.3 M NaCl A cell of unknown solute concentration (potato) Cell loses weight when put in 500 mM Na+. The cytosol could possibly be: a)0 mM NaCl equivalent Unknown b)500 mM NaCl equivalent c)1000 mM NaCl equivalent 500 mM NaCl d)1 M NaCl equivalent Determine permeability Given 2 concentrations and movement Determine permeability RBCs - 0.3 M Na+ - impermeable Cell placed in 300 mM urea Outside solution is 300 mM Na+ a)Hyper-osmotic b)Hypo-osmotic c)Iso-osmotic 300 mM urea RBCs - 0.3 M Na+ - impermeable Cell placed in 300 mM urea Cell explodes Water moved: 300 mM Na+ a)In b)Out c)Neither 300 mM urea d)unknown RBCs - 0.3 M Na+ - impermeable Cell placed in 300 mM urea Cell explodes Outside solution must be: 300 mM Na+ a)Hypertonic b)Hypotonic c)Isotonic 300 mM urea d)unknown RBCs - 0.3 M Na+ - impermeable Cell placed in 300 mM urea Cell explodes Urea is: 300 mM Na+ a)Impermeable b)Permeable c)unknown 300 mM urea What Determines Permeability? Based on Plasma Membrane • Separates intracellular fluid (ICF) from extracellular fluid (ECF) – Interstitial fluid (IF) = ECF that surrounds cells Compartmentalization Permeability: Simple vs Facilitated Simple: Through the lipid bilayer Facilitated: Through a membrane protein Ex: aquaporins = water channels Simple Diffusion is Passive = no energy used Lipids Water molecules CO2 & O2 Simple diffusion: directly through the membrane What? Simple Based on lipid bilayer – lipids, H2O, O2, CO2 Direction? diffusion Based on Concentration Gradient Facilitated movement (through protein) can be passive or active (requires energy) • Exhibit specificity (selectivity) • Are saturable; rate is determined by number of carriers or channels • Can be regulated in terms of activity and quantity Facilitated • Certain lipophobic molecules (e.g., glucose, amino acids, and ions) use carrier proteins or channel proteins, both of which: Specificity Only K fits Confromational change of a K+-carrier Facilitated Diffusion Using Channel Proteins • Aqueous channels formed by transmembrane proteins selectively transport ions or water • Two types: – Leakage channels • Always open – Gated channels • Controlled by chemical or electrical signals Open channels are free flowing Facilitated Diffusion Facilitated = uses membrane protein diffusion Conc Gradient Channel – Free Diffusion Ex: Na+-channel (leakage) Or Acetylcholine-gated Na+-channel Facilitated Diffusion - Channels mostly ions selected on basis of size and charge 500 mM Na+ 10 mM Cl- Na+ Na+/Cl- Channel 50 mM Na+ 100 mM ClFree flow - Na doesn’t affect Cl but depends on conc. gradient Cl- A cell has Mg2+-channels. Which of the following is NOT permeable? a)Estrogen b)CO2 c) Ca2+ d)Mg2+ A cell has Na+/K+-channels. 150mM Na+ outside, 10 mM Inside 20mM K+ outside, 80mM Inside What happens to these ions? 150 Na+ 20mM K+ Na+ /K+ a)Na+ influx, K+ influx b)Na+ outflux, K+ influx c) Na+ influx, K+ outflux 10 Na+ 80mM K+ d)Na+ outflux, K+ outflux e)None of the above Facilitated Diffusion: Carrier Proteins • transport specific polar molecules (e.g., sugars and amino acids) • Binding causes shape change in carrier Carrier – set ratios Ex: Na+-carrier Na+/Glucose-symport 3Na+/2K+-antiport Symport or antiports Glucose Symport – carrier that transports substrates in the same direction Antiport – carrier that transports substrates in opposite directions Can be sequential or simultaneous X # of molecules each time Facilitated Diffusion - Carriers 500 mM Na+ 10 mM Cl- Na+ Na+/Cl- antiport 50 mM Na+ 100 mM Cl- Fixed Ratio: For every Na In one Cl out & vice versa For every Na Out one Cl In Depends on conc. gradient Cl- Facilitated Diffusion - Carriers 500 mM Na+ 10 mM ClNa+/Cl- symport Na+ Cl- No movement Or impaired Na wants In Cl wants out 50 mM Na+ 100 mM ClFixed Ratio: For every Na In one Cl In & vice versa For every Na Out one Cl Out Depends on conc. gradient A cell has Na+/K+-symports. 150mM Na+ outside, 10 mM Inside 80mM K+ outside, 20mM Inside What happens in the ABSENCE of ACh? 150 Na+ 80mM K+ a)Na+ influx, K+ influx Na+/K+ symport b)Na+ outflux, K+ influx c) Na+ influx, K+ outflux 10 Na+ 20mM K+ d)Na+ outflux, K+ outflux e)None of the above A cell has Na+/K+-antiports. 150mM Na+ outside, 10 mM Inside 80mM K+ outside, 20mM Inside 150 Na+ 80mM K+ a)Na+ influx, K+ influx Na+/K+ antiport b)Na+ outflux, K+ influx c) Na+ influx, K+ outflux 10 Na+ 20mM K+ d)Na+ outflux, K+ outflux e)None of the above Gated Channels Receptor closed ligand open Receptor – anything that can bind another molecule Can refer to protein as a whole or only a specific region of the protein Ligand – something that binds to a receptor Usually a small molecule (ie- not a protein) A cell has Ach-gated Ca2+-channels. Which of the following is permeable in the presence of ACh a)Na+ Ca2+ b)Clc) Ca2+ d)Mg2+ e) None of the above A cell has Ach-gated Ca2+-channels. Which of the following is permeable in the absence of ACh a)Na+ Ca2+ b)Clc) Ca2+ d)Mg2+ e) None of the above A cell has Ach-gated Na+-channels. 150mM Na+ outside, 10 mM Inside What happens in the presence of ACh? 150 Na+ Na+ a)Na+ influx b)Na+ outflux 10 Na+ c)No movement A cell has Ach-gated Na+/K+-channels. 150mM Na+ outside, 10 mM Inside 20mM K+ outside, 80mM Inside What happens in the presence of ACh? 150 Na+ 20mM K+ Na+ /K+ a)Na+ influx, K+ influx b)Na+ outflux, K+ influx c) Na+ influx, K+ outflux 10 Na+ 80mM K+ d)Na+ outflux, K+ outflux e)None of the above A cell has Ach-gated Na+/K+-channels. 150mM Na+ outside, 10 mM Inside 80mM K+ outside, 20mM Inside What happens in the presence of ACh? 150 Na+ 80mM K+ Na+ /K+ a)Na+ influx, K+ influx b)Na+ outflux, K+ influx c) Na+ influx, K+ outflux 10 Na+ 20mM K+ d)Na+ outflux, K+ outflux e)None of the above Active Transport- Primary PUMP – Like Carrier but uses ATP Independent of conc. gradient Active Transport- Primary Na+-K+ pump = ATPase = enzyme Uses ATP to drive Ion movement Antiport Transported substances move in the opposite direction Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP) source of usuable energy = “molecular currency” The cell’s rechargable battery Adenine RNA nucleotide with two additional phosphate groups Active Transport- Primary 500 mM Na+ 10 mM Cl- 50 mM Na+ 100 mM Cl- Na pump that pumps Na out Na+ Na pump that pumps Na In Independent of conc. gradient Na+ A cell has 3Na+/2K+-pump. 150mM Na+ outside, 10 mM Inside 80mM K+ outside, 20mM Inside a)Na+ influx, K+ influx b)Na+ outflux, K+ influx c)Na+ influx, K+ outflux d)Na+ outflux, K+ outflux e)not enough info A cell has 3Na+/2K+-pump. Given time, the concentration of Na and K will be: a)Na+ high outside, K+ High Outside b)Na+ high out, K+ High In c)Na+ high In, K+ High out d)Na+ high In, K+ High In Membrane Potential Typical conc’s – Electrochemical gradient Secondary active transport use of an exchange pump (such as the Na+/K+-pump) indirectly to drive the transport of other solutes Extracellular fluid Glucose Na+-K+ pump Na+-glucose symport transporter loading glucose from ECF Na+-glucose symport transporter releasing glucose into the cytoplasm Symport Transported substances move in the same direction Endocytosis – enables large particles and macromolecules to enter the cell Receptor mediated Endocytosis – specific macromolecules Pinocytosis – nonspecific small Phagocytosis – whole cells / solid particles PHAGOCYTOSIS • In phagocytosis a cell engulfs a particle • fuses with a lysosome to digest the particle 1 Extracellular fluid Plasma membrane Cytoplasm Transport vesicle Uncoated endocytic vesicle Lysosome (a) (b) Figure 3.12 PINOCYTOSIS • In pinocytosis, molecules are taken up when extracellular fluid is “gulped” into tiny vesicles RECEPTOR-MEDIATED ENDOCYTOSIS • In receptor-mediated endocytosis, binding of ligands to receptors triggers vesicle formation • A ligand is any molecule that binds specifically to a receptor site of another molecule Exocytosis – moves substance from the cell interior to the extracellular space An Introduction to Metabolism •the totality of an organism’s chemical reactions The living cell is a miniature chemical factory where thousands of reactions occur The cell extracts energy and applies energy to perform work All metabolic pathways interconnect Metabolic Pathways • A metabolic pathway begins with a specific molecule and ends with a product • Each step is catalyzed by a specific enzyme Enzyme 1 Enzyme 2 B A Reaction 1 Starting molecule Enzyme 3 C Reaction 2 D Reaction 3 Product The beginning and end are arbitrary and only a tool for conceptualization •Requirements for chemical reaction •Factors affecting enzyme reaction rate Can this reaction happen? How fast is the reaction? We will use: Cell respiration / photosynthesis as models Looking at Particular pathways as examples Energy requirement. Many reactions need energy to allow it to proceed Thermodynamics - study of energy transformations ALL chemical reactions result in a change in the amount of energy What is Energy? • Energy is the capacity to cause change (WORK) • Energy exists in various forms Can’t see it – can’t define it “some blob of” So often measured as ability to do something “work” Magic! Physics: work = movement / mechanical chemistry: work = mechanical + other forms - energy & work are intertwined - the energy released from 1 reaction can be used in another reaction. So is said to “drive” that reaction = work Forms of Energy: BONDS HAVE ENERGY Essentially: Things that can do work • Kinetic energy is energy associated with motion • Heat (thermal energy) is kinetic energy associated with random movement of atoms or molecules • Potential energy is energy that matter possesses because of its location or structure - Gravity, electrical (charge) • Chemical energy is potential energy available for release in a chemical reaction (in bonds) Measured in terms of work calorie (cal) = energy to raise 1 g water 1°C 1 Calorie (Cal or kcal) Thermodynamics The Laws of Energy Transformation Laws = phenomenon: observations that have never been observed to be wrong first law of thermodynamics, the energy of the universe is constant: • Energy can be transferred and transformed, but it cannot be created or destroyed • The first law is also called the principle of conservation of energy The Second Law of Thermodynamics Every energy transfer or transformation increases the entropy (= disorder) of the universe • Heat and entropy related (heat causes molecules to spread) • During every energy transfer / transformation, some energy is unusable (often lost as heat) Everything is falling apart – will happen spontaneously losing energy / order (like diffusion – why molecules spread) A reaction must be losing energy in order for it to occur Spontaneity determines if a reaction will occur ∆G, Free-energy (useful work) • A living system’s free energy is energy that can be extracted to do work • Some energy can never be extracted or recovered (2nd law of thermodynamics) All reactions that occur have a negative ∆G Said to be spontaneous We conceptually categorize reactions separately though Exergonic reaction release of free energy spontaneous Endergonic reaction absorbs free energy from its surroundings not spontaneous Always driven by another reaction (even if only heat) Catabolic pathways release energy by breaking down (degredation) complex molecules into simpler compounds (DISORDER) • Cellular respiration breakdown of glucose CO2 & Energy Anabolic pathways consume energy to build complex (synthesis) molecules from simpler ones (MORE ORDERED) • The synthesis of protein from amino acids is an example of anabolism All reactions that occur have a negative ∆G Said to be spontaneous Measured for each reaction as ∆G° naught Standard conditions Empirically determined (ie- must be given) T = 25°C P = 1 atm [C]=1 M, all reactants Water 55.6M H+ conc = 10-7M (pH=7.0) Standard conditions are convenient, but unrealistic Equilibrium and Metabolism Under these conditions Reactions in a closed system eventually reach equilibrium and then do no work If you alter the concentrations ∆G changes At Equilibrium Possible ΔG’s as concentration changes A B standard 1M 0M ΔG° = -5 kcal/mol More realistic 0.1M 0.01M ΔG = -1 kcal/mol equilibrium 0.1M 0.1M ΔG = 0 kcal/mol reversed 0M 1M ΔG = 2 kcal/mol No longer ΔG° Equilibrium and Metabolism • Cells are not in equilibrium; cells are open systems experiencing a constant flow of materials open hydroelectric system ∆G < 0 • A defining feature of life is that metabolism is never at equilibrium • A catabolic pathway in a cell releases free energy in a series • Closed and open of reactions hydroelectric systems can serve as analogies Fig. 8-7c • A catabolic pathway in a cell releases free energy in a series of reactions multistep open hydroelectric system ∆G < 0 ∆G < 0 ∆G < 0 0 ∆G Under standard conditions How does cell build up products then? How can you get an endergonic reaction? endergonic A + B AB Reaction is coupled to an energy releasing reaction ATP powers cellular work by coupling exergonic reactions to endergonic reactions • three main kinds of work: – Chemical – Transport – Mechanical • To do work, cells manage energy resources by energy coupling, the use of an exergonic process to drive an endergonic one • Most energy coupling in cells is mediated by ATP • Overall, the coupled reactions are exergonic ATP ADP + Pi + Energy is exergonic ΔG° = - 7.3kcal/mol P P P Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) H2O P i Inorganic phosphate + P P Adenosine diphosphate (ADP) Energy for cellular work (endergonic, energy-consuming processes) + Energy Fig. 8-9 Fig. 8-10 Often we talk about a reaction as the overall result Couple it to ATP hydrolysis NH2 Glu Really 2 reactions Glutamic acid NH3 + Glu ∆G = +3.4 kcal/mol Glutamine Ammonia P ∆G = -2.5 kcal/mol + Glu ATP Glu + ADP NH2 P ∆G = -1.4 kcal/mol Glu Different reactions but energy exchanged is equivalent to adding them together Where does rest go? + NH3 Glu + P i Thermodynamics summary • ALL chemical reactions result energy change • Measured for each reaction as ∆G° Changes with concentration, temp, etc. • ∆G must be negative for it to… be spontaneous Standard conditions T = 25°C P = 1 atm [C]=1 M pH=7.0 / happens as a reaction reaches equilibrium ∆G approaches 0 and can be reversed if concentrations are altered (pos) +∆G reactions must be coupled to -∆G reactions • biology - often ATP hydrolysis • in reality there is a new reaction ATP ADP + Pi ΔG° = -7.3kcal/mol • Concentration (and other conditions) affect ∆G Reactions must never reach equilibrium in a living organism Must always replenish substrates and remove products Which of the following will occur (spontaneously)? a)ΔG = +6.5kcal/mol b)ΔG = +1.5kcal/mol c)ΔG = +0.1kcal/mol d)ΔG = -6.5kcal/mol Which of the following would NOT work if coupled to ATP hydrolysis? a)ΔG = -6.5kcal/mol b)ΔG = +1.5kcal/mol c)ΔG = +6.1kcal/mol d)ΔG = +33kcal/mol Probably not coupled Coupling C D ΔG° = 5 kcal/mol ATP ADP + Pi ΔG° = -7.3kcal/mol C + ATP D + ADP + Pi ΔG° = -2.3kcal/mol E F ΔG° = 14 kcal/mol Cannot be coupled to ATP, but maybe another reaction G H ΔG° = -3 kcal/mol Can be coupled but probably isn’t because it is already spontaneous Just because it is -ΔG doesn’t mean it will occur by itself • Glucose CO2 + H2O ΔG = -686 kcal/mol • Requires activation energy – enzymes ΔG calculations are more to assess if a reaction is feasible under cellular conditions (not standard) or if another component is likely required (ie- ATP) Enzymes speed up metabolic reactions by lowering energy barriers • A catalyst is a chemical agent that speeds up a reaction without being consumed by the reaction • An enzyme is a catalytic protein Enzymes -ase Hydrolase – breaks apart molecules using H2O Nuclease – breaks down nucleotides Protease – breaks down nucleotides Kinase – adds phosphate group Notable exception: ribosome The Activation Energy Barrier • Every chemical reaction between molecules involves bond breaking and bond forming • The initial energy needed to start a chemical reaction is called the free energy of activation, or activation energy (EA) • Activation energy is often supplied in the form of heat from the surroundings A B C D Transition state A B C D EA Reactants A B ∆G < O C Fig. 8-14 D Products Enzymes – by reducing activation energy Course of reaction without enzyme EA without enzyme EA with enzyme is lower Reactants Course of reaction with enzyme ∆G is unaffected by enzyme Products Progress of the reaction Fig. 8-15 Enzyme Holds the 2 Places them in perfect orientation Enzymes – by reducing activation energy • substrate binds to the active site of the enzyme • The active site can lower an EA barrier by – Orienting substrates – Straining substrate bonds – Providing a favorable microenvironment – Covalently bonding to the substrate active site - Small portion of overall protein Other parts for shape, supporting role, or regulatory Carbonic anhydrase Active site – where substrates bind and where electron transfer occurs Carbonic anhydrase Structural biology H2O + CO2 H2CO3 biochemistry High Specificity - Lock & Key Fit Model substrate binds to the active site of the enzyme Lock and Key Fit Enzyme is rigid structure vs induced fit Induced Fit Model Substrate Enzyme Enzyme-substrate complex Active site • Substrate causes a change in shape of enzyme new • shape brings groups in active site into positions that enhance their ability to catalyze the reaction Fig. 8-16 • More accepted model