Ovido
Lingua
  • Inglese
  • Spagnolo
  • Francese
  • Portoghese
  • Tedesco
  • Italiano
  • Olandese
  • Svedese
Testo
  • Maiuscole

Utente

  • Accedi
  • Crea account
  • Passa a Premium
Ovido
  • Home
  • Accedi
  • Crea account

bioch lec 6- bio membranes

What are lipids?

Mostly non-polar, hydrophobic, water-insoluble molecules. Includes fatty acids, triacylglycerols, membrane lipids, cholesterol. Typically contain fatty acids.

General structure of fatty acids

Long-chain hydrocarbon carboxylic acids, up to 24 carbons (16 & 18 most common). Amphipathic. Formula: CH₃(CH₂)ₙCOO⁻. Can be saturated or mono/polyunsaturated. Usually cis double bonds.

Effect of cis double bonds on fatty acid structure

Introduce kinks, lower melting point, prevent close packing. Most natural double bonds are cis. (Image on page 3 shows this clearly.)

Shorthand fatty acid notation

(# carbons):(# double bonds)Δ(position)
Example: 16:1Δ⁷ = 16 carbons, 1 double bond at C7.

ω, α, β carbon positions

ω (omega): last carbon (methyl end).

α: first carbon after carbonyl.


β: next after α.

Cis vs trans double bonds

Cis: bent → lower melting point, low packing.

Trans: straighter → pack like saturated fats → higher melting point.

Factors affecting fatty acid melting point

Chain length: ↑ length → ↑ melting temp.

Unsaturation: ↑ unsaturation → ↓ melting temp (stronger effect than length).

Why do unsaturated fatty acids pack poorly?

The bend in cis double bonds disrupts van der Waals interactions → lower melting point. Trans fatty acids pack better than cis.

What are triacylglycerols (TAGs)?

Storage molecules for fatty acids, extremely hydrophobic, composed of glycerol + 3 fatty acyl esters. Mixed TAGs are common.

Factors affecting TAG melting point

TAGs melt lower when they contain shorter or more unsaturated fatty acids.

Three major classes of membrane lipids

Glycerophospholipids

Sphingolipids


Cholesterol

All are amphipathic (large polar head + hydrophobic tails).

Why glycerophospholipids form membranes but TAGs do not

TAGs lack a polar head group (fully hydrophobic), while glycerophospholipids have a large polar head → amphipathic → form bilayers.

Cholesterol characteristics

Rigid, non-polar ring structure

Weakly amphipathic (1 OH)


~30–35% of mammalian plasma membranes


Regulates membrane fluidity and rigidity


Cannot form membranes alone

OH associates with polar head groups.

Amphipathic lipids in water

Fatty acids → micelles

Membrane lipids → bilayers → liposomes

What determines bilayer properties?

Lipid composition:

Acyl chain length (typically 16–20 C)


Degree of unsaturation


Polar head group identity


Presence of cholesterol

Bilayers are fluid yet stable. Thickness: 4–6 nm.

Membrane melting (transition) temperature

Temperature at which membrane changes from ordered/gel to fluid state. Depends on chain length and unsaturation. Homogeneous bilayers have sharp transitions; natural membranes do NOT (mixed lipids/proteins).

Molecular dynamics of a fluid membrane

Acyl chains move freely; head groups interact with water; membrane is dynamic but cohesive. (Illustrated on page 14.)

How organisms maintain membrane fluidity in cold temperatures

Increase unsaturated fatty acids and shorter fatty acids.
In heat, increase saturated and longer fatty acids.

How cholesterol affects membrane rigidity

High T: decreases motion → increases rigidity

Low T: prevents close packing → increases fluidity

Cholesterol broadens the temperature range over which the membrane remains functional.

Types of lipid movement

Lateral diffusion: rapid & common

Transverse diffusion (flip-flop): extremely slow without enzymes


Flippases / floppases / scramblases: catalyze flip-flop; maintain leaflet asymmetry.

What defines an integral membrane protein?

Must have hydrophobic amino acids contacting acyl chains. Polar residues cluster near head groups; charged residues flank membrane. (Image on page 18.)

What secondary structures cross membranes?

α-helices and β-barrels.
MCQ alert: Transmembrane α-helices are typically hydrophobic → TRUE

Fluid mosaic model

Proteins & lipids move laterally

Restricted by cytoskeleton


Carbohydrates attach to extracellular surface

Dynamic, non-covalent assembly.

Which molecules cross membranes by simple diffusion?

Small, non-polar molecules. No protein required. Rate depends on size, gradient, and lipid solubility.

Passive vs active transport

Passive: ΔG < 0, spontaneous, down gradient

Active: ΔG > 0, requires energy

Transport proteins lower activation energy for solute movement.

ΔG for transport

ΔG = RT ln([X]destination / [X]source)
If ΔG < 0 → passive; ΔG > 0 → requires energy. Overall ΔG must be negative.

Porins (passive transporters) (5)

Found in bacteria, mitochondria

β-barrel structure, large pore


Often trimers, each with a pore


Non-selective up to ~1.5 kDa

Ion channels: highly selective based on pore size & side chain chemistry (K⁺ example on page 23)

Transporter (carrier) proteins (5)

No pores

Undergo conformational changes


Highly specific


Can be passive or active

Alternates between outward-facing & inward-facing states.

Types of carrier transport (3)

Uniport: one solute

Symport: two solutes, same direction


Antiport: two solutes, opposite directions

Primary vs secondary active transport

Primary (1°): Uses ATP hydrolysis directly

Secondary (2°): Uses ion gradient established by primary transporter (e.g., Na⁺ gradient)

For secondary: ΔGsolute > 0 but ΔGion < 0 → net ΔG < 0.

Na⁺/K⁺ ATPase

Primary active antiporter

Pumps 3 Na⁺ out, 2 K⁺ in


Electrogenic


ATP + H₂O → ADP + Pi + H⁺

Maintains major ion gradients used for many secondary transport processes.

Na⁺–glucose symporter

Secondary active transport

Glucose moves against gradient (ΔG > 0)


Na⁺ moves down gradient (ΔG < 0)

Net ΔG < 0 → glucose import is powered by Na⁺ gradient.

What increases membrane fluidity?

More unsaturated fatty acids

Shorter fatty acids


Cholesterol at low temperatures

What decreases membrane fluidity?

More saturated fatty acids

Longer fatty acids


Cholesterol at high temperatures

Why is transverse lipid movement rare?

Requires moving hydrophilic head through hydrophobic core → huge energy barrier. Only enzymes (flippases) can catalyze it.

Which transport processes saturate?

Carriers saturate (limited by turnover). Channels and simple diffusion do not saturate.

Porins vs channels vs carriers

Porins: Large, non-selective, β-barrels

Channels: Selective, pore-forming, fast


Carriers: Alternating-conformation, slow, saturable

What determines membrane thickness?

Acyl chain length, cholesterol content, head group size → typically 4–6 nm.

What are three biological/medical uses of liposomes (lipid vesicles)?

Delivery of lipid-soluble drugs (inside the bilayer).

Delivery of water-soluble drugs (inside the aqueous core).


Delivery of DNA in gene therapy (DNA in the core or associated with the surface).

How do the kinetics of passive transport by carrier proteins compare to porins/simple diffusion?

Carrier-mediated passive transport shows saturable, hyperbolic kinetics (like enzyme Km/Vmax).

Porins/simple diffusion give a more linear increase in rate with concentration (no saturation until very high).

Besides speeding flip-flop, why are flippases (and related enzymes) important for membranes?

They allow cells to maintain different lipid compositions in the two leaflets of the bilayer, which is crucial for membrane asymmetry and function.

Quiz
Bioch lec 5- enzymes
ATR dalijimai
Functional groups
SCIENCE 3
sysb1
Stars Trivia
LOC
Reported Speech
hge
Voc U7
Tyska
psycholgie de l'enfant Q1
qa
culture G
text 10
text 9
questions fr
politik ish
français
S.185-187
eco
milho FIT141
M13
M12
M11
engels
TD6-TD9
chem seperation techniques
begrepp utvecklingspsykopatologi
Jämföra statsskick
Unit 4 (3.Klasse)
läsfärdighet4 시험 어휘
PGCD PPCM
1
spanska glosor till brev
spanska brev meningar
économie politique
tegeltjes
SES
pharmaco
Geometria 1
histoire
miljökemi
Hip abductors and glute max
fek formler kap 8&9
fek begrepp kap 8&9
v ord v49
eng glosor v49
Le surréalisme
gal 2 tenta 2025-10-07