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Structure of the Cell Membrane. The composition of nearly all cell membranes is a double-layered sheet called a lipid bilayer.
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Structure of the Cell Membrane • The composition of nearly all cell membranes is a double-layered sheet called a lipid bilayer. • Because the various components of the bilayer (phospholipids, proteins, carbohydrate chains & cholesterol) are able to move around, it is often referred to as a fluid-mosaic model.
Functions of the Plasma Membrane • Embedded enzyme proteins help carry out chemical reactions of the cell • Receptor proteins allow to receive chemical messages • Surface carbohydrate molecules allow recognition & communication between cells • Transport proteins serve as channels or pumps to move materials in and out of cells • Proteins from adjacent cells allow intracellular joining • Embedded cholesterol molecules provide reinforcement
Diffusion Through Cell Boundaries • Particles in a solution tend to move from an area where they are more concentrated to an area where they are less concentrated.(visualize this as a downhill movement, [high] to [low]) • This process is called diffusion • When the concentration of the solute is the same throughout a system, the system has reached equilibrium.
Osmosis • The diffusion of water through a selectively permeable membrane.
Osmotic Pressure & Tonicity • If you compare two solutions, the more concentrated solution (less water) ishypertonic. • The more dilute (more water) solution is hypotonic. • When the concentration is equal in both solutions, the solution is described as isotonic.
Facilitated Diffusion • Cell membranes have protein channels that act as channels (pores) or carrier molecules, making it easy for certain molecules to cross. • The movement of specific molecules across cell membranes through protein channels is known as facilitated diffusion. • This process usually involves solute molecules (rather than solvent molecules) and is a form of passive transport because it requires no energy, ([high] to [low])
Aquaporins • Membrane proteins channels; Critical role in water transport into and out of cells (facilitated diffusion) • At least 11 variants in humans; understanding of their specific physiological roles is currently a major area of research • Important role in kidneys (maintain body fluid balance)
Active Transport • Active transport involves the use of energy (ATP) to move substances across a cell membrane • Ex) Movement of materials in the opposite direction from which the materials would normally move - against a concentration difference • This is achieved by membrane proteins that act as pumps • Visualize this as UPHILL, [low] to [high]) • Large materials also move by active transport regardless of concentration gradient
Endocytosis is the process of taking large materials into the cell using vesicles, or pockets, of the cell membrane.(endo=enter) Phagocytosis – cell “eating”; actively moving solids into the cell Pinocytosis – cell “drinking”; actively moving liquids into the cell Exocytosis, the membrane of the vesicle surrounding the material fuses with the cell membrane, forcing the contents out of the cell (exo=exit) Active Transport of Large Materials(“Bulk Transport”)
Life depends on the fact that energy can be converted from one form to another.
Energy • Energy: the capacity to rearrange matter/ “do work” • There are two basic forms of energy: • Kinetic energy- energy of motion; moving objects do work by transferring motion to other matter • Examples: think of an example where this is true • Includes: heat (random motion of molecules) & light • Potential energy- stored energy as a result of location or structure • Includes: Chemical energy- energy available to cell to do work
Energy Transformations • Thermodynamics- study of energy transformation that occur in a system (collection of matter) What is the difference between an open and closed system? • 1st Law: Law of Energy Conservation • 2nd Law: Energy conversions increase entropy of the universe • Efficiency of car vs cell energy conversions
Energy conversion Waste products Fuel Heat energy Carbon dioxide Gasoline Which do you think is more efficient? Combustion Kinetic energy of movement Water Oxygen Energy conversion in a car Heat Cellular respiration Carbon dioxide Glucose Oxygen Water Energy for cellular work Energy conversion in a cell
Explain the following statement: “In a thermodynamic sense, a cell or an organism is an island of low entropy in an increasingly random universe.” Concept: Chemical reactions either release or store energy. How could one detect if energy was released or stored?
In an exergonic reaction, energy is released. • Bonds of reactants contain more energy than those in the products. Examples of exergonic reactions? Reactants Amount of energy released Potential energy of molecules Energy released Products
Endergonic reaction, energy is absorbed from surroundings. • Products contain more energy in bonds than reactants. Examples of endergonic reactions? Products Amount of energy required Energy required Potential energy of molecules Reactants
Identify the following as exergonic or endergonic. • Use of gasoline in a lawn mower • Photosynthesis • Synthesis of a protein in a cell • Synthesis of glycogen in a cell • Cell Respiration • Hydrolysis of ATP All the chemical reactions that take place in an organism is referred to as metabolism. A Metabolic pathway is a series of rxns that builds or breaks down a complex molecule (controlled steps) Energy released from exergonic rxns drives endergonic rxnsin a cell – energy coupling
Adenosine ATP: a. Ribose b. Adenine c. 3 negatively charged phosphate groups Phosphate group Adenine ATP analogy: “compressed spring”” Triphosphate (ATP) Is the hydrolysis of ATP exergonic or endergonic? Ribose Hydrolysis + Diphosphate (ADP) Adenosine
ATP drives cellular work Cellular work: • Transport • Chemical • Mechanical * Phosphorylating certain molecules results in work to be completed. Explain this based on what you learned about energy.
Key Point: ATP is a renewable resource the cell can regenerate. Phosphorylation Hydrolysis Energy for endergonic reactions Energy from exergonic reactions
Why don’t macromolecules such as DNA, carbohydrates, lipids spontaneously break down into simpler less energetic molecules? • Energy barrier must be overcome, bonds between atoms must be weakened • Referred to as energy of activation (EA) • How can this be accomplished? 1. add heat- problem? 2. enzyme- proteins that function as biological catalyst, lowers EA and are not consumed in reaction
Figure 5.14 The effect of an enzyme is to lower EA Reaction without enzyme EA without enzyme EA with enzyme Reactants Energy Net change in energy (the same) Reaction with enzyme Products Progress of the reaction
Catalytic cycle of an enzyme: Substrate(sucrose) c. Active site b. Enzyme (sucrase) a. Induced Fit d. Products released f. Substrate hydrolyzed e.
Enzyme Functioning • If enzyme shape changes (denatured) then it can no longer function. • Denaturation can be caused by: temperature, pH, pressure. • Enzyme non-protein helpers: cofactor(inorganic- Zn, Fe, Cu ions) or coenzyme (organic- vitamins) • Enzyme function can be blocked by an inhibitor
Enzyme Inhibitors • Important in regulating cell metabolism • Feedback inhibition- product of metabolic reaction blocks the reaction from occurring • Important to medicine and agriculture: • Component to medicines and pesticides-blocks enzyme functioning • Some antibiotics work by inhibiting enzymes of pathogenic bacteria • Some HIV drugs (proteases) target viral enzymes • Many toxins and poisons interrupt metabolism in this way- cause irreversible effects • Nerve gases bind in the active site of an enzyme vital to the transmission of nerve impulses • Some pesticides work by targeting the corresponding enzyme in insects