1 / 23

Chapter 5

Chapter 5. Cellular Membranes. Membrane Structure. The “fluid” portion of the cell membrane is made of phospholipids A phospholipid molecule has a hydrophilic end and a two hydrophobic ends

faye
Download Presentation

Chapter 5

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 5 Cellular Membranes

  2. Membrane Structure • The “fluid” portion of the cell membrane is made of phospholipids • A phospholipid molecule has a hydrophilic end and a two hydrophobic ends • If surrounded by water, the hydrophobic ends face away from water, the hydrophilic ends are the outer faces • Most membranes are made of phospholipid bilayers

  3. Phospholipid bilayer

  4. Fluid Mosaic Model • Phospholipids are different in length of fatty acids, hydrophilic heads • Glycolipids have sugar monomers attached to the head end • Cholesterols • Phystosterols • Bilayers shift sideways and move over each other creating a fluid-like movement from an otherwise solid object.

  5. Membrane proteins • Integral proteins- situated throughout the lipid bilayer with their hydrophilic ends going through both layers • Peripheral proteins- positioned at the surface of the bilayer

  6. Membrane proteins • Adhesion proteins- glycoproteins that help cells stay connected to each other in a tissue • Communication proteins- form channels that allow materials to flow between two cells • Receptor proteins- binding sites for hormones that can trigger changes within a cell • Recognition proteins- identify the cell as a specific type, helps develop tissues and helps cells recognize each other • Transport proteins- passively allow water-soluble materials to flow through cell membranes

  7. Membrane Proteins

  8. Diffusion • All membranes show selective permeability • Gases and small neutral molecules can move across the membrane easily • Glucose and other large molecules use transport proteins • Concentration gradient refers to the differences in concentrations of a substance in a given volume(s)

  9. Diffusion

  10. Diffusion • The thermal energy of molecules keeps them moving • Molecules tend to move down a gradient from high concentration to low • The net movement of particles down a gradient is called diffusion • Affected by Temp, gradient, molecule size, electric gradients, pressure gradients • Diffusion is passive- does not use energy

  11. Crossing mechanisms • Passive- do not use energy, move down gradients • Diffusion • Facilitated diffusion • Ion transport • osmosis • Active – use energy, move up/against gradients

  12. Osmosis • Movement of water across a permeable membrane in response to solution gradients, pressure gradients or both • For example, place a cube of sugar in water, the water will move to dissolve or dilute the sugar concentration

  13. Osmosis

  14. Osmosis • Tonicity denotes the relative concentration of solutes in two fluids • Isotonic- the solute concentrations are equal • Hypotonic– fluid has a lower solute concentration than the cell. Water will enter the cell • Hypertonic- fluid has a higher solute concentration than the cell. Water will leave the cell

  15. Tonicity

  16. Osmosis • Fluid pressure-hydrostatic force is directed against a membrane, the greater the solute concentration, the greater the pressure • Countered by osmotic pressure that prevents further increase in volume • When plant cells lose water there is a shrinkage in the cytoplasm called plasmolysis- wilting

  17. Active transport • Exocytosis and Endocytosis • Exocytosis- a vesicle moves large particles or bundles of molecules to the cell membrane to be release out of the cell • Endocytosis- large particles or molecules are brought into the cell using vesicles • Sodium-Potassium Pump- moves Na+ into the cell and K+ out of the cell against their concentration gradients

  18. Endocytosis • Receptor mediated-specific molecules are brought to specialized regions of the membrane that form pits in the membrane • Bulk-phase- a vesicle forms around a amall volume of extracellular fluid regardless of what it contains • Phagocytocis- a cell engulfs microorganisms, debris or other particles- usu. Seen in protists

  19. Endocytosis

  20. Exocytosis

  21. Sodium-Potassium Pump

  22. Membrane cycling • During endocytosis and exocytosis- the membrane is disrupted, however it happens at a rate that the membrane can be replaced

More Related