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Membrane Transport Structure of Biological Membranes

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Presentation on theme: "Membrane Transport Structure of Biological Membranes"— Presentation transcript:

1 Membrane Transport Structure of Biological Membranes
Diffusion and Fick’s First Law Partition Coefficients and Movement Osmosis and Osmotic Movement Charge Gradients Across the Membrane Donnan Equilibrium Passive Transport Straight Diffusion Facilitated Diffusion -- Cystic Fibrosis Active Transport -- Na/K ATPase Coupled Transport

2 Membrane Protein/Lipid Ratio
Myelin Plama Membrane Liver Cell Intestinal cell 4.6 RBC Ghost E.R Size Plasma Membrane 9-10 nm Mitochondria outer nm Golgi 8 nm

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4 Membrane Lipids Membranes vary in thickness but all appear to be lipid bilayers Components-- phosphoglycerides, sphingolipids and cholesterol Cholesterol stabilizes membrane 40%-60% lipid by weight Most common lipid phosphatidylcholine

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8 Osmosis Osmosis is the special case of the diffusion of water across a membrane Osmosis = Gas constant x absolute temperature x concentration gradient p = CRT where C = concentration in moles l-1; R = gas constant of .082 l atm/Ko-1 mole-1;T= temperature

9 Water Movement Diffusive water movement is much less than osmotic flux
Water pores have been postulated by never documented Diffusion may be limited by unstirred layers on either side of the membrane

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13 Crossing Membranes Diffusion Diffusion shows linear kinetics
Fick’s First Law Revisited Rate = DA [C]/x or the amount of a substance crossing the membrane per unit time = the diffusion coefficient (cm2/sec) x area of the membrane (cm2) x the concentration gradient (moles/cm3)/ the thickness of the membrane (cm) Diffusion shows linear kinetics

14 Permeability The permeability coefficient in units of cm-sec is a measure of how easily a substance penetrates and crosses the membrane Solutes must break hydrogen bonds with water, move into the lipid phase and cross to an aqueous phase Solute charge, size of molecule, temperature and membrane type all determine permeability

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16 Donnan Equilibrium Both concentration gradients and charge gradients contribute to the distribution of ions on either side of a membrane If one side of the membrane contains a charge impermeant solute like protein, the concentrations of the permeant ions on either side will not be equal

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19 Transport Types Straight Diffusion
Facilitated Diffusion through a protein channel or pore Active transport Coupled Transport

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21 Facilitated Diffusion
Movement is through a protein based channel in the membrane Diffusion is greater than it would be without the channel The chloride channel in cystic fibrosis is a good example of a regulated channel Facilitated diffusion displays saturation kinetics

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25 Coupled Transport In coupled transport, an actively established ion gradient is used to drive the movement of another solute Example: sugar and amino acid uptake in the small intestine is linked to uptake of Na which depends upon a favorable gradient created by Na/K ATPase

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