boundary that separates living cells from non living surroundings
1. in all cells
2. separates internal/external enviornments
3. controls molecular traffic in and out of cell by being selectively permeable
collage of different proteins in fluid matrix and made up of 4 components
phospholipids, membrane proteins, carbs, and cholesterol
main lipid of PM because of amphipathic nature meaning it has hydrophilic and hydrophobic regions
fluid and held together by hydrophilic bonds which are weaker than covalent bonds
drift laterally but rarely flip flop to other side during creation or merging of vesicles
Lipid steroid wedged between phospholipid molecules in animal PM to stabilize membrane fluidity
Amphipathic and individually dispersed into bilayer with hydrophilic regions protruding outwards facing H2O and hydrophobic regions facing non-aqueous enviornments
Will draft laterally at a slow pace and determine most of PM's specific functions
extreme temperatures/pH which alters permeability of PM
Peripheral and integral proteins
Partially embedded in bilayer and most attached to membrane surface, held together by cytoskeleton filaments to stabilize membrane structure
Mostly/fully embedded in bilayer but may protrude outwards causing molecules/ions to move
Restricted to exterior surface
Glycolipids and glycoproteins
carb attached to phospholipid head
carb attached to protein
ID cells that identify self and non-self cells and reject non self cells
channel, carrier, receptor, cell recognition, and enzymatic proteins
Span membrane and provide hydrophilic membrane which allow specific ions and polar molecules such as O2 and CO2 to freely cross following concentration gradient and may have a gate that opens when specific ions/molecules bind to it
1. H+ ions flow into inner mitochonrial membrane to help w ATP creation
2. Cystic fibrosis - Genetic disorder in CFTR gene that disrupts Cl- channels and builds mucus in airways
Bind to specific passenger molecules/ions and transport them across PM - used during facilitated and active transport
carb chain attached to protein in animals --> forms a glycoprotein and contains glycocalyx
sugar coat in cell-recogniton protein that protects and glues cells together --> found on external side of PM
ID tags that get recognized by other cells during cell-cell recognition
ABO blood system with four blood types
15 monosaccharides but can have up to 100 - which is what makes cells unique to each other and enable them to identify pathogens and trigger immune response
protein that has a specific binding site that fits chemical messenger/signal molecule such as a hormone which gets recieved by a cell, making the cell grow and sends message to the inside of it
Liver stores glucose after receiving signal from insulin
Membrane protein that may be an enzyme with active site exposed to substances/substrates and may act as a team to carry out steps of metabolic pathway
hydrophobic interior
charged molecules, hydrophilic ions, and uncharged hydrophilic polar (macro) molecules from crossing
hydrophobic hydrocarbons and non polar O2 and CO2 to dissolve and cross membrane + allow uncharged hydrophilic polar molecules to pass between hydrophilic heads
Requires chemical energy such as ATP and carrier protein and includes endocytosis and excytosis
requires kinetic energy in molecules and ions and includes diffusion, osmosis, and facilitated transport
movement of molecules from an are aof high to low concentration until equilibrium is reached
the state of stability
individually and dont affect each other
small, noncharged molecules such as O2, CO2, H2O, and alcohol (gases and liquids)
Diffusion of H2O across a semipermeable membrane
solute differences in solutions on either side of membrane
H2O move form an area of low to high solute AKA opposite diffusion gradient
H2O absorbed by kidneys, taken in by capillaries in tissue due to osmotic pressure
Solute in cells typically the same as in extracellular fluid which makes cells isotonic to its surroundings
osmotic pressure or solute of solution
No net osmosis occuring as equilibrium is reached and cell maintains its size
IV solutions at hospitals and red blood cells having 0.9% tonicity
Will wilt because central vacuole isn't fully saturated
Outside solution has lower solute than that of a cell
H2O enters faster than it leaves, cell swells, cytolysis occurs
Bursting of cells
RBCs bursting
H2O enters via osmosis, filling central vacuole and pusing PM against cell wall which prevents bursting AKA tugor pressure
Outside solution has higher solute than that of a cell
will shrivel/crenate and lose H2O
1. Increase in salt in lake may kill animals
2. Salt on slug
Will shrink and lose H2O, making PM move away from cell wall AKA plasmolysis
Carrier proteins
concentration gradient
diffusion of solutes through carrier proteins in PM
energy because substances follow the concentration gradient
alternate between 2 shapes
in either direction as long as concentration gradient is followed
100 times per second
hundreds of times faster than other sugars
imposter molecules which inhibits actual solute from binding
enters carrier protein's binding site which undergoes conformation increase and then is releassed to other side and carrier protein returns to original conformation
concentration gradient
pumping of ions/molecules/solutes against concentration gradient from low to high area
ATP and carrier proteins
maintain internal concentration of small ions/molecules that differ from ones surroundings
iodine pumped into thyroid gland
sodium-potassium pump in which is active in animal cells for nerve impulse conduction
endocytosis and exocytosis
secretes macromolecules by fusing vesciles in PM
budded from GA and moved by microtubule cytoskeleton to PM where the phospholipids and proteins of it is rearranged with PM to become continous and contents spill outside of cell
pancreatic cells make insulin but only secrete it via exocytosis when insulin is needed to decrease blood glucose
takes in macromolecules by forming vesicles derived from PM around substances which is called invagination
phagocytosis and pinocytosis
cellular eating
a cell engulfs a particle by wrapping pseudopoding around it and packing it within a larger vesicle in which the particle is digested when fused with lysosome
specific
cellular drinking
a cell "gulps" droplets of extracellular fluid in tiny vesicles and any solutes in which are dissolved in droplets are taken in
non specific
membrane proteins with specific receptor sites are exposed to extracellular fluid
substances that bind to sites such asa vitamins, peptide hormones, and lipoproteins
coated pits
a lining of a fuzzy protein layer called a cytoplasmic site AKA invagination which forms a vesicle
lysosome when formed and RME enables cell to acquire bulk quantities of specific substances
pinocytosis because of HIGH selectivity
humans take in cholesterol for membrane synthesis and as a steroid/precursor
high blood cholesterol levels because lipoprotein's receptor proteins are defective meaning that lipoproteins can't enter cells
atherosclerosis
caused by lipoproteins in which fatty buildup called plaque is formed on blood vessel lining
high blood pressure, blocked/occluded arteries, heart attacks, and strokes