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Membrane Transport 膜转运. Xia Qiang (夏强) , PhD Department of Physiology Room C518, Block C, Research Building, School of Medicine Tel: 88208252 Email: xiaqiang@zju.edu.cn. Objective. How molecules and ions get and out of cells?. Organelles have their own membranes.
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Membrane Transport 膜转运 Xia Qiang(夏强), PhD Department of Physiology Room C518, Block C, Research Building, School of Medicine Tel: 88208252 Email: xiaqiang@zju.edu.cn
Objective • How molecules and ions get and out of cells?
Phospholipid bilayer • Lipids • Proteins • Carbohydrates
Membrane proteins Integral (intrinsic) proteins Peripheral (extrinsic) proteins Integral protein Peripheral protein
Adhesion Some glycoproteins attach to the cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix. Functions of membrane proteins
Carbohydrates Glycoprotein Glycolipid
Lipid Bilayer -- primary barrier, selectively permeable Membrane Transport
Membrane Transport • Simple Diffusion(单纯扩散) • Facilitated Diffusion(易化扩散) • Active Transport(主动转运) • Endocytosis and Exocytosis(出胞与入胞)
START: Initially higher concentration of molecules randomly move toward lower concentration. Over time, solute molecules placed in a solvent will evenly distribute themselves. Diffusional equilibrium is the result (Part b).
At time B, some glucose has crossed into side 2 as some cross into side 1.
Note: the partition between the two compartments is a membrane that allows this solute to move through it. Net flux accounts for solute movements in both directions.
Simple Diffusion • Relative to the concentration gradient • movement is DOWN the concentration gradient ONLY (higher concentration to lower concentration) • Rate of diffusion depends on • The concentration gradient • Charge on the molecule • Size • Lipid solubility
Facilitated Diffusion • Carrier-mediated
In simple diffusion, flux rate is limited only by the concentration gradient. In carrier- mediated transport, the number of available carriers places an upper limit on the flux rate.
Characteristics of carrier-mediated diffusion net movement always depends on the concentration gradient • Specificity • Saturation • Competition
Channel-mediated 3 cartoon models of integral membrane proteins that function as ion channels; the regulated opening and closing of these channels is the basis of how neurons function.
The opening and closing of ion channels results from conformational changes in integral proteins. Discovering the factors that cause these changes is key to understanding excitable cells.
Characteristics of ion channels • Specificity • Gating(门控)
Three types of passive, non-coupled transport through integral membrane proteins
I II III IV Outside + + + + + + + + + + + + Inside NH2 CO2H Voltage-gated Channel • e.g. Voltage-dependent Na+ channel
Na+ channel Balloonfish or fugu
Closed Activated Inactivated Na+ channel conformation • Open-state • Closed-state
Ligand-gated Channel • e.g. N2-ACh receptor channel
Aquaporin • Aquaporins are water channels that exclude ions • Aquaporins are found in essentially all organisms, and have major biological and medical importance
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2003 "for structural and mechanistic studies of ion channels" "for discoveries concerning channels in cell membranes" "for the discovery of water channels" Peter Agre Roderick MacKinnon
The dividing wall between the cell and the outside world – including other cells – is far from being an impervious shell. On the contrary, it is perforated by various channels. Many of these are specially adapted to one specific ion or molecule and do not permit any other type to pass. Here to the left we see a water channel and to the right an ion channel.
Peter Agre’s experiment with cells containing or lacking aquaporin. The aquaporin is necessary for making the cell absorb water and swell
Passage of water molecules through the aquaporin AQP1. Because of the positive charge at the center of the channel, positively charged ions such as H3O+, are deflected. This prevents proton leakage through the channel.
membrane In both simple and facilitated diffusion, solutes move in the direction predicted by the concentration gradient. In active transport, solutes move opposite to the direction predicted by the concentration gradient.
Active transport • Primary active transport(原发性主动转运) • Secondary active transport(继发性主动转运)
Primary Active Transport making direct use of energy derived from ATP to transport the ions across the cell membrane
Here, in the operation of the Na+-K+-ATPase, also known as the “sodium pump,” each ATP hydrolysis moves three sodium ions out of, and two potassium ions into, the cell.
Na-K Pump electrogenic pump(生电性泵)
Maintaining the Na+ and K+ gradients across the cell membrane • Partly responsible for establishing a negative electrical potential inside the cell • Controlling cell volume • Providing energy for secondary active transport Physiological role of Na+-K+ pump
Other primary active transport • Primary active transport of calcium • Primary active transport of hydrogen ions
The ion gradients established by primary active transport permits the transport of other substances against their concentration gradients Secondary Active Transport
Cotransport(同向转运) the ion and the second solute cross the membrane in the same direction (e.g. Na+-glucose, Na+-amino acid cotransport) Countertransport(逆向转运) the ion and the second solute move in opposite directions (e.g. Na+-Ca2+, Na+-H+ exchange)