lecture 6 - membranes - north seattle collegefacweb.northseattle.edu/lizthomas/lecture 6.pdf · in...
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Lecture 6 - Membranes
1 BIOL211 Spring 2012
In this lecture…
• The fluid mosaic model of the plasma membrane
– Components of the membrane
• Active vs. passive transport
• Diffusion and osmosis
• Endocytosis and exocytosis
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The plasma membrane • The boundary that separates the living cell from its
surroundings
• The plasma membrane exhibits selective permeability, allowing some substances to cross it more easily than others
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However…
• The membrane isn’t just a phospholipid bilayer
• It is composed of a huge array of phospholipids, regular lipids, proteins, and other molecules
• This is called the fluid mosaic model
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Fluid Mosaic Model
• The fluid mosaic model states that a membrane is a fluid structure with a “mosaic” of various proteins embedded in it
• Phospholipids and some proteins can drift laterally – Very rarely does someone “flip”
• How do proteins stay embedded?
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Figure 7.5
Glyco- protein
Carbohydrate
Glycolipid
Microfilaments of cytoskeleton
EXTRACELLULAR SIDE OF MEMBRANE
CYTOPLASMIC SIDE OF MEMBRANE
Integral protein
Peripheral proteins
Cholesterol
Fibers of extra- cellular matrix (ECM)
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The components of the membrane
• Phospholipids
• Proteins
• Cholesterol
• Cytoskeletal support
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What are membranes made of? Phospholipids!
• Phospholipids are amphipathic molecules, containing hydrophobic and hydrophilic regions
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Movement within the membrane
An enzyme called “flipase” (really) can catalyse the flipping of lipids
Membrane proteins
Mouse cell Human cell
Hybrid cell
Mixed proteins after 1 hour
RESULTS
How was membrane movement demonstrated?
Some different types of phospholipids
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What factors influence fluidity?
• Membranes start solidifying at cool temps
• The temperature at which a membrane solidifies depends on the degree of saturation in the fatty acid tails
– Membranes rich in unsaturated fatty acids are more fluid than those rich in saturated fatty acids
• Membranes must be fluid to work properly; they are usually about as fluid as salad oil
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Cholesterol • Cholesterol is a “fluidity buffer”
– Restrains phospholipid movement at body temps
– Also hinder close packing, so lowers the temp required for membranes to solidify
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Membrane Proteins
• A membrane’s function is defined by the proteins embedded in it
• Two types of membrane proteins: – Integral protein
• Penetrate the hydrophobic interior; can stick out of the surface
• Integral proteins that span the membrane are called transmembrane proteins
– Peripheral protein • Stick to the surface of the membrane
Figure 7.9
N-terminus
helix
C-terminus
EXTRACELLULAR SIDE
CYTOPLASMIC SIDE
Hydrophobic R groups on the helices
of the interior
Hydrophilic R groups on the water-
facing sides
Integral or peripheral?
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This protein has secondary and tertiary structure, but no quaternary structure
Structure of a membrane protein
Six Abilities of Membrane Proteins
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Many membrane proteins are glycoproteins/proteoglycans
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Membrane carbohydrates in cell-cell recognition
• Cells recognize each other by binding to surface molecules, often containing carbohydrates, on the extracellular surface of the plasma membrane
• Membrane carbohydrates may be covalently
bonded to lipids (forming glycolipids) or more commonly to proteins (forming glycoproteins)
• Carbohydrates on the external side of the plasma
membrane vary among species, individuals, and even cell types in an individual
Membrane proteins in cell-cell recognition
• Membrane proteins help HIV invade immune system cells
• HIV’s gp120 protein binds to human’s CD4 glycoprotein + CCR5 coreceptor
CCR5-Δ32 Mutation • The CCR5-Δ32 mutation deletes the CCR5
coreceptor, preventing HIV from infecting cells
• Present in 10% of people from Northern Europe
• Marrow transplantation from an immune donor confers immunity
– Immune system cells come from bone marrow
– Clinical trials underway to treat HIV+ people with their own genetically engineered marrow
• Those without CCR5 are more susceptible to West Nile Virus
What is a receptor? A coreceptor? What are they made of? How are they part of the cell
membrane?
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The ABO blood group
• Your genes determine what kind of carbohydrate you get on the surface of your red blood cells
• Three types of glycoproteins: A, B, O
• Your body recognizes a “not you” group, gets mad, and destroys the cell bearing it
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The internal cytoskeleton supporting the membrane
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Selective permeability
• Nonpolar molecules can dissolve in the lipid bilayer and pass through indiscriminately – Carbon dioxide, oxygen, hydrocarbons
• Hydrophobic membrane interior prevents polar molecules from easily crossing
• Transport proteins help the helpless – Allow hydrophilic substances to pass through
• So…selective permeability depends both on the lipid bilayer and on the transport proteins
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What is the fluid mosaic model? Describe how the following components fit into the fluid
mosaic model:
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• Phospholipid saturation • Cholesterol • Membrane proteins • Glycoproteins and proteoglycans • Cytoskeleton
Properties of the plasma membrane
• Selective permeability
• Passive transport
– Diffusion
– Osmosis
– Facilitated diffusion
• Active transport
– Exocytosis
– Endocytosis
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Passive vs. active transport across the membrane
• In some cases molecules will spontaneously diffuse across the membrane
– Passive transport
• Other molecules require a protein or other force to bring them across the membrane
– Active transport
Diffusion
• Passive transport
• Molecules tend to diffuse out evenly into available space due to random movements
• A substance will diffuse where it is more concentrated to where it is less concentrated – Diffuse down its diffusion gradient
– “The region along which the density of a chemical substance increases or decreases”
– Spontaneous, no energy input required
Figure 7.13 Molecules of dye
Membrane (cross section)
WATER
(a) Diffusion of one solute
(b) Diffusion of two solutes
Net diffusion Net diffusion
Net diffusion Net diffusion
Net diffusion Net diffusion
Equilibrium
Equilibrium
Equilibrium
Diffusion of water - Osmosis
• Osmosis is the diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane
• Water diffuses across a membrane from the region of lower solute concentration to the region of higher solute concentration until the solute concentration is equal on both sides
Figure 7.14 Lower concentration of solute (sugar)
Higher concentration of solute
Sugar molecule
H2O
Same concentration of solute
Selectively permeable membrane
Osmosis
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What happens in cells without walls? Hypertonic or hypotonic environments create osmotic problems for organisms
…and cells with walls?
• Cell walls help maintain water balance
• A plant cell in a hypotonic solution swells until it hits the wall; the cell is now turgid (firm)
• If a plant cell and its surroundings are isotonic, there is no net movement of water into the cell; the cell becomes flaccid (limp), and the plant may wilt
• In a hypertonic environment, plant cells lose water; the membrane pulls away from the wall, a usually lethal effect called plasmolysis
• (Lysed means the plasma membrane has broken)
If you don’t water your plant…(or yourself)
• Water osmoses out of the plant cells and evaporates, turning the entire plant limp
Reverse osmosis: turning seawater drinkable
• Drawing salt out of seawater is called desalination
• Pressure applied to seawater forces it through a semipermeable membrane
• The membrane allows water through, but not solutes
Osmosis Vocabulary
• Tonicity is the ability of a surrounding solution to cause a cell to gain or lose water
• Isotonic solution: Solute concentration is the same as that inside the cell; no net water movement across the plasma membrane
• Hypertonic solution: Solute concentration is greater than that inside the cell; cell loses water
• Hypotonic solution: Solute concentration is less than that inside the cell; cell gains water
Hypotonic solution
Isotonic solution
Hypertonic solution
(a) Animal cell
(b) Plant cell
H2O H2O H2O H2O
H2O H2O H2O H2O Cell wall
Lysed Normal Shriveled
Turgid (normal) Flaccid Plasmolyzed
The protist Paramecium, which is hypertonic to its pond water environment, has a contractile vacuole that acts as a pump
Facilitated Diffusion • Transport proteins speed the passive movement of
molecules across the plasma membrane
• Channel proteins provide corridors that allow a specific molecule or ion to cross the membrane.
• Channel proteins include
– Aquaporins, for facilitated diffusion of water • 3 billion water molecules/second
– Ion channels that open or close in response to a stimulus (AKA ion-gated channels)
• Carrier proteins undergo a conformational change that brings the molecule from one side to the other
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Active transport
• Uses energy to move molecules against their gradients
• All carrier proteins
• Includes ion pumps and endocytosis/exocytosis
The electrochemical gradient and ion pumps
• All cells have voltages across their membranes – Voltage is electrical potential energy – a separation of
two opposite charges
– Called a membrane potential
– Inside of the cell is -50 to -200millivolts because of a higher proportion of anions:cations
– “The cytoplasmic side is negative relative to the outside because of unequal distribution of cations and anions”
• The membrane potential favors cations passively diffusing across – Anions must use active transport
• So two forces actually drive the diffusion of ions across a membrane: the concentration gradient and electrical force – Does not apply to solutes like glucose, only charged
ions
• Combination of the two forces is called the electrochemical gradient
• Cells create an electrochemical gradient by pumping ions inside or outside the cell
• The electrochemical gradient can be taken advantage of to perform chemical reactions – Convert electrical potential energy to chemical
potential energy
Channel protein
Cotransport: changing between different types of potential energy
• A substance that has been pumped across the membrane can do work as it moves back across by diffusion – Water pumped uphill that spins a turbine as it
flows back down
• A cotransport protein can couple the “downhill” passive diffusion to a second “uphill” active transport of a different substance
Final result: expending ATP to bring in sucrose What a cotransporter actually looks like (the Na-K-Cl transporter)
Cotransporters in diarrhea • Bodily fluid high in salt is pumped into the
intestine to help digestion
• Normally sodium in waste is reabsorbed in the colon
• With diarrhea, waste is expelled so rapidly sodium cannot be reabsorbed fast enough and levels fall to dangerous levels
• A salt-glucose solution is administered, which is taken up by sodium-glucose cotransporters
• Mortality rate of cholera (causes massive diarrhea) dropped from 70% to 30% after we figured out to administer this hypertonic solution
Type of movement across the membrane
‘Helping’ agent Requires energy?
Diffusion Diffusion gradient No
Facilitated Diffusion Diffusion gradient + transport proteins
Sometimes, in the form of ATP
Active transport Transport proteins Yes, in the form of ATP
Endocytosis and Exocytosis: other forms of active transport
Endocytosis: Engulfing food/foreign material
Exocytosis: Expelling waste products/unneeded material
Ex: nerve cell releasing neurotransmitters
Exocytosis in nerve cells
Endocytosis and Exocytosis
Pinocytosis: “Cellular drinking” A type of endocytosis
Phagocytosis: “Cellular eating” Another type of endocytosis
Pinocytosis in muscle cells
Phagocytosis in white blood cells
Phagocytosis in amoeba
Receptor-mediated endocytosis: Targeted swallowing of material
Receptors on the cell surface membrane only bind to certain things, triggering endocytosis of that specific thing
A summary of the various -cytoses
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Type of Cell Action Description of action
Exocytosis
Endocytosis Pinocytosis
Endocytosis Phagocytosis*
Endocytosis Receptor-mediated endocytosis
Receptor-mediated endocytosis and HIV
• Viruses infect our cells by attaching to cell-surface receptors meant for receptor-mediated endocytosis
– They ‘fool’ the receptor by mimicking the natural protein that would usually bind
– HIV’s gp120 protein binds to a white blood cell’s CD4 and CCR5 protein
• Triggers endocytosis of the HIV virus
Gp120 is a glycoprotein
Structure of gp120
(CCR5)
protein blocking the binding
of gp120 to CCR5,
preventing HIV entry
Vocabulary
• Fluid mosaic model • Selective permeability • Glycolipid, glycoprotein, proteoglycan • Transmembrane proteins • Cholesterol • Active transport, passive transport, facilitated diffusion • Diffusion gradient • Osmosis • Ion channels • Cotransport • Endocytosis, exocytosis
– Phagocytosis – Receptor-mediated endocytosis