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Fluid Mosaic Model
- Cell (plasma) membrane: semipermeable phospholipid bilayer
- Semipermeable: chooses which particles can enter and leave the cell
- Selection mediated by various ion channels, carriers and the membrane itself
- Cell membrane permits fat-soluble compound to cross easily
- Larger and water-soluble compounds must seek alternative paths
- Semipermeable: chooses which particles can enter and leave the cell
- Fluid Mosaic model: the theory that underlies the structure and function of the cell membrane
General Membrane Structure and Function
- Phospholipid bilayer is a lipid layer that includes proteins and distinct signaling areas within it.
- Glycoprotein Coat: carbohydrates that associate with the membrane-bound proteins
- Cell Wall: found in plants and has a higher level of carbohydrates
- Main function of cell membrane is to protect the interior of the cell from the external environment
- Selectively regulate traffic into and out of the cell
- Involved in both intracellular and intercellular communication and transport
- Some proteins that are embedded in the lipid bilayer can act as cellular receptors during signal transduction.
Membrane Dynamics
- The membrane itself is a stable semisolid barrier, however the components that make it up are always in a state of constant flux.
- Phospholipids move rapidly, in the plane of the membrane, through diffusion
- Lipid Rafts are a collection of similar lipids regardless of the associated proteins
- Function as attachment points for other molecules and play a role in signaling
- Lipid rafts and proteins have the ability to slowly move through the plane of the membrane
- Lipids are also able to move between the two membrane layer, but this is energetically unfavorable
- Polar head group of phospholipid must be forced through the non-polar tail region in the interior of the membrane.
- Flippases can assist in the transition or “flip” between layers
- Lipids are also able to move between the two membrane layer, but this is energetically unfavorable
Membrane Components
Lipids
- Main component of the cell membrane
Fatty Acids and Triacylglycerols
- Fatty Acids: carboxylic acid that contain a hydrocarbon chain and a terminal carboxyl group
- Triacylglycerols (triglycerides): storage lipid for human metabolic processes
- Three fatty acid chains esterified to a glycerol molecule
- Fatty acid chains can either be saturated or unsaturated
- Unsaturated fatty acids: have one or more double bonds and exist in liquid form at room temp.
- Regarded as being healthier
- Impart fluidity to the membrane
- Only a few can be synthesized, rest must be ingested through diet.
- These are transported as triacylglycerols from the intestine through chylomicrons
- Saturated Fatty acids: main component of animal fats and are solid at room temp.
- Decrease overall membrane fluidity so are considered less healthy
Phospholipid
- Glycerophospholipid (phospholipid): One fatty acid chain of triglyceride is substituted with a phosphate group
- Polar head groups join the non-polar tails
- Phospholipids spontaneously assemble into micelles (small monolayer vesicles) or liposomes (bi-layered vesicle)
- Used for membrane synthesis and can produce a hydrophilic surface layer on lipoproteins
- Primary component of cell membranes: structural and act as second messengers in signal transduction
- Phosphate group provides an attachment for water-soluble groups
Sphingolipids
- Hydrophilic region and two fatty acid-derived hydrophobic tails
- Structure similar to phospholipids
- Organized into classes based on the identity of the hydrophilic region
- Classes: ceramide, sphingomyelins, cerebrosides, and gangliosides
Cholesterol and Steroids
- Cholesterol regulates membrane fluidity and is necessary for the synthesis of all steroids.
- Cholesterol has a similar structure to phospholipids: a hydrophobic and a hydrophilic region
- Cholesterol stabilizes the membrane through interactions with its two different regions
- Cholesterol also occupies spaces between adjacent phospholipids, which prevents the formation of crystal structures in the membrane
- Increases fluidity at lower temperatures
- At high temps, this decreases the fluidity and helps to hold the membrane intact.
- Makes up about 20 percent of the membrane by mass percent and 50 percent of membrane by mole fraction
- Large concentration is to ensure that the membrane stays fluid
Waxes
- Class of lipids that are extremely hydrophobic and are rarely found in the cell membranes of animals, and sometimes in those of plants
- Composed of long-chain fatty acids and a long-chain alcohol
- Means that the substance has a high melting point
- Provide stability and rigidity within the non-polar tail region of cell membranes
- However, main function is extracellular: protection and waterproofing
Proteins
- Transmembrane proteins: pass completely through the lipid bilayer
- Transporters, channels and receptors are usually these type
- Embedded proteins: associated with only the interior or exterior surface of the cell membrane
- Integral Proteins: proteins that have an association with the interior of the plasma membrane. Above two proteins are grouped together into this class.
- Membrane Associated (peripheral): proteins that are bound through electrostatic interactions with the lipid bilayer, or to other integral proteins
Carbohydrates
- Generally attached to protein molecules on the extracellular surface of cells.
- Since they are hydrophilic, interactions with glycoprotein and water can form a coat around the cell
- Can also act as signaling and recognition molecules
- Blood antigens are simply sphingolipids with their carbohydrate sequence changed
Membrane Receptors
- Membrane receptors can activate or deactive some of the transporters for facilitated diffusion and active transport.
- E.g. – ligand gated ion channels are membrane receptors that open a channel in response to the binding of a specific ligand
- Can also participate in Biosignaling
- E.g. – G-protein couple receptors are involved in several different cascades
- Generally, are proteins, but can be carbohydrate or lipid receptors (common in viruses)
Cell-Cell Junctions
- Cells have the ability to form a cohesive layer between themselves via intercellular junctions
- Provide direct pathways of communication between neighboring cells
- Compromised of cell adhesion molecules (CAM): proteins that allow cells to recognize each other and contribute to proper cell differentiation and development
Gap Junctions
- Allow for direct cell-cell communication and often found in small bundles together
- Also called connexons: formed by the alignment and interaction of pores that are composed of six molecules of conjnexin
- Permit the movement of water and some solutes directly between cells
- Proteins are generally not transferred through gap junctions.
Tight Junctions
- Prevent solutes from leaking into the space between cells via a paracellular route.
- Found in epithelial cells and function as a physical link between cells since they form a single layer of tissue
- Can limit permeability enough to create a voltage difference that is based on differing concentration of ions on either side of the epithelium
- Must form a continuous band around the cell in order for these junctions to be useful.
Desmosomes
- Bind adjacent cells by anchoring to their cytoskeletons
- Formed by interactions between the transmembrane proteins of adjacent cells and their associated intermediate filaments
- Primarily found at the interface between two layers of epithelial tissue
- Hemidesmosomes: similar to desmosomes, but their main function is to attach epithelial cells to underlying structures
Membrane Transport
Concentration Gradients
- Passive Transport: spontaneous processes that do not require energy (negative DG)
- Diffusion, facilitated diffusion and osmosis
- The rate of these increases as temperature increases
- Active Transport: non-spontaneous and require energy
- May or may not be affected by temperature, depends on enthalpy
Passive Transport
- Do not require intracellular energy, use concentration gradient instead
Simple diffusion
- Substrate moves down their concentration gradient, directly across the membrane
- Only possible for particles that are able to freely move across the membrane
Osmosis
- Specific kind of simple diffusion that is for water
- Water moves from a region of lower solute concentration (more dilute solution) to an area of higher solute concentration (more concentrated solution)
- Hypotonic: concentration of solutes inside the cell are higher than the surrounding solution. Causes the cell to swell as water rushes in
- Hypertonic: solution that is more concentrated than the cell. Water moves out of the cell.
- Isotonic: solution inside and outside is equimolar.
- Prevents net movement of particles, does not stop all movement
- Osmotic Pressure: can quantify the driving force behind osmosis.
- Colligative property: physical property that is dependent on the concentration of dissolved particles, but not a chemical identity of those molecules
- Defined as the pressure to sufficiently counterbalance the tendency of water to flow across the membrane:
- M is the molarity of the solution, R is the ideal gas constant, and T is the absolute temperature,
- Van’t Hoff Factor (i): equal to the number of particles obtained from the molecule when in solution.
- E.g. – glucose stays intact so igluc=1; salt turns into two ions (Na+ & Cl–) so iNaCl=2
- Osmotic pressure can be thought of as a sucking pressure which draws water into the cell in proportion to the concentration of the solution
- If the osmotic pressure exceeds the pressure that the cell membrane can withstand, the cell will lyse
Facilitated Diffusion
- Simple diffusion for molecules that impermeable to the membrane (large, polar or charged)
- Requires integral membrane proteins to serve as transporters or channels
- Carriers: proteins that are only open to one side of the cell membrane at any given point
- Binding of substrate molecule to transporter protein induces a conformational change
- Occluded state: carrier is not open to either side of the membrane, occurs for a brief time during conformational change.
- Channels: can be in either an open or closed formation
- In open, channels are open to both sides and act like a tunnel
Active Transport
- Results in the net movement of a solute against its concentration gradient
- Primary active transport: uses ATP or another energy molecule to directly power the transport of molecules across a membrane
- Usually involves the use of a transmembrane ATPase
- Secondary Active transport (coupled transport): No direct coupling to ATP hydrolysis
- Harnesses the energy released by one particle going down its electrochemical gradient in order to drive another particle up its gradient.
- Symport: both particles flow in the same direction across the membrane
- Antiport: particles flow in opposite directions
- Maintains the membrane potential of neurons, and secondary active transport is used in the kidneys
Endocytosis and Exocytosis
Endocytosis
- Cell membrane invaginates and engulfs material to bring it into the cells
- Material is encased in a vesicle
- Pinocytosis: endocytosis of fluids and dissolved particles
- Phagocytosis: ingestion of large solids like bacteria
- Process is initiated by a substrate binding to specific receptors on the membrane
- Vesicle-coating proteins will then carry out invagination (e.g. – clathrin)
Exocytosis
- Occurs when secretory vesicles fuse with the membrane, which results in the release of materials from inside of the cell to the extracellular environment
- Crucial in the nervous system, like exocytosis of neurotransmitters from synaptic vesicles
Specialized Membranes
Membrane Potential
- Membrane Potential, VM: difference in electric potential across the cell membrane. This is caused by the impermeability of the cell membrane to ions and the selectivity of ion channels
- For most cells, this potential is between -40 and -80 mV
- Leak channels: ions may passively diffuse the cell membrane over time by using these
- Maintaining resting potential requires energy due to these
- Sodium-Potassium pump: regulates the concentration of intracellular and extracellular sodium and potassium ions
- Chloride ions are also involved in maintaining membrane potential.
- Nernst Equation: used to determine the membrane potential from the intra- and extracellular concentrations of various ions:
- Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation: takes into account the relative contribution of each major ion:
- P is the permeability of the relevant ion
Sodium-Potassium Pump
- Na+/K+ ATPase functions to maintain a low concentration of sodium ions and high concentration of potassium ions inside the cell
- Does this by pumping three sodium ions out for every two potassium ions pumped in
- Removes one positive charge for each movement, which subsequently maintains the negative resting potential
- Leak channels also allow ions to passively diffuse into or out of the cell
- Cell membranes are more permeable to K+ than Na+ leak channels
- Combination of above two is what maintains a stable resting membrane potential
Mitochondrial Membrane
Outer Mitochondrial Membrane
- Highly permeable since it has many pores that allow for the passage of ions and small proteins
- Completely surrounds the inner mitochondrial membrane, small intermembrane space between the two layers
Inner Mitochondrial Membrane
- Much more restricted permeability
- Contains Cristae: numerous interfolding that increase the available surface area for the integral proteins that are involved in the electron transport chain and in ATP synthesis
- Encloses the mitochondrial matrix: where citric acid cycle produces high-energy electron carriers that are used in the electron transport chain
- Inner membrane does not contain cholesterol and has high levels of cardiolipin.