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Chapter 5 Membrane Structure & Function. Membrane structure, I Selective permeability Amphipathic polar & non-polar regions (ex. hydrophilic & hydrophobic)

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 5 Membrane Structure & Function. Membrane structure, I Selective permeability Amphipathic polar & non-polar regions (ex. hydrophilic & hydrophobic)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 5 Membrane Structure & Function

2 Membrane structure, I Selective permeability Amphipathic polar & non-polar regions (ex. hydrophilic & hydrophobic) Davson-Danielli (1935-1970) protein “sandwich” Singer-Nicolson: “fluid mosaic” model currently widely accepted

3 Membrane structure, II Phospholipids membrane fluidity Cholesterol fluidity/stabilization “Mosaic” Structure Integral proteins trans-membrane proteins Peripheral proteins surface of membrane Membrane carbohydrates cell to cell recognition; Oligosaccharides (cell markers); glycolipids glycoproteins

4 Membrane structure, III Membrane protein function: transport enzymatic activity signal transduction intercellular joining cell-cell recognition ECM attachment

5 Membrane traffic Diffusion movement of a substance from an area of high concentration of that substance to an area of low concentration of that substance. Concentration gradient imbalance in concentration Passive transport diffusion of a substance across a biological membrane without the need for energy Osmosis the diffusion of water from an are of high concentration of water to an are of low concentration of water across a selectively permeable membrane

6 High Concentration Low Concentration Passive (with gradient) Diffusion, Osmosis, Facilitated Diffusion Active-Need ATP (against (or with) gradient) Active Transport

7 Water balance Osmoregulation control of water balance Hypertonic higher concentration of solutes Hypotonic lower concentration of solutes Isotonic equal concentrations of solutes Cells with Walls: Turgid (very firm) Flaccid (limp) Plasmolysis plasma membrane pulls away from cell wall

8 Specialized Transport Transport proteins Facilitated diffusion passage of molecules and ions with transport proteins across a membrane down the concentration gradient Active transport movement of a substance against its concentration gradient with the help of cellular energy

9 Types of Active Transport Sodium-potassium pump Exocytosis secretion of macromolecules by the fusion of vesicles with the plasma membrane Endocytosis import of macromolecules by forming new vesicles with the plasma membrane phagocytosis pinocytosis receptor-mediated endocytosis (ligands)

10 A Closer Look at Cell Membranes  Aim: How do large particles enter and exit cells?  Do Now: Name some molecules/materials that enter and exit the cell. How would you describe the cell membrane that allows passage of these materials?

11 Exocytosis and Endocytosis  Exocytosis (out of the cell) The fusion of a vesicle with the cell membrane, releasing its contents to the surroundings  Endocytosis (into the cell) The formation of a vesicle from cell membrane, enclosing materials near the cell surface and bringing them into the cell

12 Endocytosis and Exocytosis Examples

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14 Three Pathways of Endocytosis  Bulk-phase endocytosis Extracellular fluid is captured in a vesicle and brought into the cell; the reverse of exocytosis  Receptor-mediated endocytosis Specific molecules bind to surface receptors, which are then enclosed in an endocytic vesicle  Phagocytosis Pseudopods engulf target particle and merge as a vesicle, which fuses with a lysosome in the cell

15 Phagocytosis (“engulfment”)

16 Membrane Cycling  Exocytosis and endocytosis continually replace and withdraw patches of the plasma membrane  New membrane proteins and lipids are made in the ER, modified in Golgi bodies, and form vesicles that fuse with plasma membrane

17 Exocytic Vesicle

18 5.5 Key Concepts: Membrane Trafficking  Large packets of substances and engulfed cells move across the plasma membrane by processes of endocytosis and exocytosis  Membrane lipids and proteins move to and from the plasma membrane during these processes


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