Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a...

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Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable

Transcript of Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a...

Page 1: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

Cell Membrane

Selectively Permeable

Page 3: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

Phospholipids

• Phosphate “heads” are water-soluble

• They like water and are attracted to water

• Fatty acid “tails” are not soluble in water

• They repel water and want to stay away from it

Page 4: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

Permeability

• Small molecules that dissolve in lipids can pass right through the phospholipid bilayer

• Oxygen, carbon dioxide and some water can also pass through

Page 5: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

Permeability

• Glucose, amino acids, and other large molecules that do not dissolve in lipids cannot pass through

• Most water molecules, and ions such as H+, NA+, K+, and Ca+ cannot pass through

Page 6: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

Some molecules need help

• We use proteins embedded in the membrane to help get these molecules across the cell membrane

Page 7: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

Phospholipid bilayer plus

Notice that there are many structures stuck in the phospholipid bilayer

Page 8: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

Proteins scattered throughout

Page 9: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

A Gallery of Membrane Proteins

• Adhesion proteins: Help cells of the same type stick together in tissues

• Cell to cell communication proteins: match up with another cell to pass on a signal

Page 10: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

A Gallery of Membrane Proteins

• Receptor proteins: stick out of the membrane to bind hormones.

• Recognition proteins: Identify each

person’s cells as their own

• Must be matched in transplants, blood transfusions, etc.

Page 11: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

A Gallery of Membrane Proteins

• Passive Transporter proteins: allow molecules to move through them without requiring energy

• Active transporters: use energy to pump molecules “uphill” across the membrane

Page 12: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

Transport Across Cell Membranes

Passive or Active

Page 13: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

Movement

• Is either passive or active• Passive does not require cell energy• Active uses cell energy

Page 14: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

Passive Mechanisms of Transport

• Diffusion: molecules spread or scatter from regions of higher concentration toward regions of lower concentration

• Molecules will travel down the concentration gradient

Page 15: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

Passive Mechanisms of Transport

• Facilitated Diffusion: molecules cannot

pass through the lipid bilayer without the help of a membrane protein. The molecule being transported combines with a carrier molecule which moves it to other side

Page 16: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

Passive Mechanisms of Transport

• Osmosis: the diffusion of water. Water moves from a region of higher concentration to a region of lower concentration

• In this example, the membrane is NOT permeable to the solute

Page 17: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

Passive Mechanisms of Transport

• Filtration: forces molecules through membranes

• Often used to separate solids from liquids

• Kidneys filter blood, the force coming from blood pressure

Page 18: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

Active Mechanisms of Transport

• Active transport: uses energy and carrier proteins to move molecules from areas of LOW concentration to areas of HIGH concentration

• Against the concentration gradient; a pump

Page 19: Cell Membrane Selectively Permeable. Basic Structure Double layer of phospholipids Referred to a bilayer A phospholipid has a head and two tails The phospholipids.

Active Mechanisms of Transport

• Endocytosis: uses cellular energy to form a vesicle from a section of cell membrane to bring IN substances

• Exocytosis: uses energy to secrete a substance stored in a vesicle