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Cell Membrane and Function Chapter 7 • Big Idea #2: Biological systems use energy to grow, reproduce, and maintain dynamic homeostasis. Essential Knowledge • 2B1:Cell membranes are selectively permeable due to their structure • 2B2: Growth and dynamic homeostasis are maintained by the constant movement of molecules across membranes • 2B3: Eukaryotic cells maintain internal membranes that partition the cell into specialized regions • Separates internal environment of cell from external environment. • Is selectively permeable: some substances can cross more easily than others (small, nonpolar, not charged particles) Semi-Permeability • Is due to structure of membrane • Contains phosholipids, embedded proteins, cholesterol, glycoproteins, and glycolipids Fig. 7-2 Made of a double phospholipid layer that has amphipathic molecules (hydrophobic and hydrophilic areas) Hydrophilic head WATER Hydrophobic tail WATER Fig. 7-3 Phospholipid bilayer Hydrophobic regions of protein Hydrophilic regions of protein Embedded Proteins • Can be hydrophilic w/ charged and polar side groups. • Can be hydrophobic with nonpolar side groups Fig. 7-8 Hydrophobic regions of an integral protein: made of 1 or more stretches of nonpolar amino acids, often coiled into alpha helices N-terminus C-terminus Helix EXTRACELLULAR SIDE CYTOPLASMIC SIDE Cholesterol • Steroid found in b/t phospholipids. • Affects membrane fluidity • High temps Less fluid membrane. • Low temps Hinders solidification of membrane by disrupting phospholipid packing Fig. 7-5a Membrane is fluid Moves Lateral movement (107 times per second) Flip-flop ( once per month) (a) Movement of phospholipids When Cold, Moves Less!! Cell to Cell Recognition • Cells recognize each other by binding to surface molecules, often carbs, on membrane • Membrane carbs may be covalently bonded to lipids (forming glycolipids) or to proteins (forming glycoproteins) Permeability of the Lipid Bilayer • Pass: Small, uncharged molecules and small nonpolar molecules (N2) • Large hydrophilic, polar molecules (sugars) can cross w/ help of embedded channel or transport proteins Aquaporins • Channel protein that allows water to move across Transport Proteins • Binds to molecules and changes shape to shuttle them across membrane…extremely specific Cell Walls Cell Wall • Provides a structural boundary and an internal permeability boundary. • Bacteria Cell Wall: Made of peptidoglycan • Plant Cell Wall: Made of Cellulose • Fungi Cell Wall: Made of Chitin Passive Transport • Movement of molecules in and out of cell w/out using energy. • AKA Diffusion Concentration Gradient • High to low concentrations! • Often used for import of resources/ export of wastes Osmosis • Passive transport process: movement of water across cell membrane. • Again, it follows the magic rule! Fig. 7-12 Lower concentration of solute (sugar) Higher concentration of sugar H2O Selectively permeable membrane Osmosis Video Clip! Osmosis Same concentration of sugar Tonicity • Ability of a solution to cause a cell to gain or lose water osmoregulation • Isotonic solution: Solute concentration is the same as that inside the cell; no net water movement across the plasma membrane • Hypertonic solution: Solute concentration is greater out of cell; cell loses water • Hypotonic solution: Solute concentration is high inside cell; cell gains water Fig. 7-13 Hypotonic solution H2O Isotonic solution H2O H2O Hypertonic solution H2O (a) Animal cell Lysed H2O Normal H2O Shriveled H2O H2O (b) Plant cell Turgid (normal) Flaccid Plasmolyzed Facilitated Diffusion • A channel/carrier protein carries molecules across (area of high to low conc.) • Often charged and polar molecules cross here Fig. 7-15 Facilitated Diffusion EXTRACELLULAR FLUID Channel protein Solute CYTOPLASM (a) A channel protein Carrier protein (b) A carrier protein Solute Active Transport • Energyrequiring: materials move across cell membrane from low to high conc. • Uses ATP • Done by embedded proteins Ex: Sodium-Potassium Pump • Allows cells to maintain concentration gradients that differ from their surrounding http://hig hered.mcg rawhill.com/si tes/007249 5855/stud ent_view0 /chapter2/ animation __how_th e_sodium _potassiu m_pump_ works.ht ml Fig. 7-17 Passive transport Active transport ATP Diffusion Facilitated diffusion Exocytosis • Internal vesicles fuse w/ plasma mebrane to secrete large macromolecules out of cell. • Requires ATP! Endocytosis • Cell takes in macromolecules by forming new vesicles derived from plasma membrane. Eukaryotes Compartmentalize… • Minimizes competing interactions and increases surface area. • Keep reactions and enzymes localized • Bacteria and Archaea (ancient) can’t do this