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BC368 Biochemistry of the Cell II. Biological Membranes Chapter 11: Part 1 February 11, 2014. Plasma Membrane.
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BC368Biochemistry of the Cell II Biological Membranes Chapter 11: Part 1 February 11, 2014
Plasma Membrane “Possibly the decisive step [in the origin of life] was the formation of the first cell, in which chain molecules were enclosed by a semi-permeable membrane which kept them together but let their food in.” J. B. S. Haldane, 1954
Plasma Membrane Membrane is composed of: • Lipids • Phospholipids • Sterols • B. Proteins • Integral • Peripheral • C. Carbohydrates • Glycolipids • Glycoproteins
Plasma Membrane • Variable components in different membrane types
Membrane Lipids • Amphiphilic lipids • Major types: phospholipids, glycolipids, sterols sphingosine Glycolipid glycerophospholipid sphingolipid
Phospholipids • Two classes: glycerophospholipids (aka phosphoglycerides) and sphingolipids Fig 10-7
Membrane Lipids: 1A. Glycerophospholipids • Two fatty acids and a polar “head group” on glycerol. • Vary in the FA’s and head group.
Membrane Lipids: 1B. Sphingolipids • Named for the enigmatic Sphinx • Common in nerve and brain cell membranes
note amide linkage Membrane Lipids: 1B. Sphingolipids • Named for the enigmatic Sphinx • Sphingosine replaces glycerol, so only 1 FA tail
Membrane Lipids: 1B. Sphingolipids • Example: sphingomyelin
Glycolipids • Two classes: glycosphingolipids and galactolipids Fig 10-7
Membrane Lipids: 2A. Glycosphingolipids • Sphingolipids with carbohydrate head group; common on cell surfaces • Examples: cerebrosides and gangliosides
Membrane Lipids: 2B. Galactolipids • Diglycerides with galatose groups • Common in plant (thylakoid) membranes
Membrane Lipids: 3. Sterols • Cholesterol and cholesterol-like compounds
Lipid Components of Membranes • Lipid composition varies across different membranes. Fig 11-2
Turnover of Membrane Lipids Fig 10-16
Defects in Membrane Turnover Deposits of gangliosides in Tay Sachs brain
Lipid Aggregates • Lipids spontaneously aggregate in water as a result of the Hydrophobic Effect.
Lipid Aggregates • Amphiphilic lipids form structures that solvate their head groups and keep their hydrophobic tails away from water. • Above the critical micelle concentration, single-tailed lipids form micelles. Fig 11-4
Lipid Aggregates Fig 11-4 • Double-tailed lipids form bilayers, the basis of cell membranes. • Bilayers can form vesicles enclosing an aqueous cavity (liposomes). Fig 11-4
Lipid Components of Membranes • Different types of membranes have characteristic lipid compositions.
Lipid Components of Membranes • Lipid composition varies across the two leaflets of the same membrane.
Membrane Proteins • Integral proteins (includes lipid-linked): need detergents to remove • Peripheralproteins: removed by salt, pH changes • Amphitropicproteins: sometimes attached, sometimes not
Single Transmembrane Segment Proteins • Usually alpha-helical, ~20-25 residues, mostly nonpolar. • Example: glycophorin of the erythrocyte. Fig 11-8
Multiple Transmembrane Segment Proteins • 7 alpha-helix motif is very common. • Example: bacteriorhodopsin Fig 11-10
Beta Barrel Transmembrane Proteins • Multiple transmembrane segments form β sheets that line a cylinder. • Example: porins.
Lipid-Linked Membrane Proteins • Attached lipid provides a hydrophobic anchor. Fig. 11-14 • An important lipid anchor is GPI (glycosylated phosphatidylinositol.
Membrane Carbohydrates • On exoplasmic face only
Membrane Carbohydrates • On exoplasmic face only • An example is the blood group antigens
Membrane Dynamics • At its transition temperature (TM), the bilayer goes from an ordered crystalline state to an a disordered fluid one. Fig 11-16
Membrane Dynamics • Phospholipids in a bilayer have free lateral diffusion. Fig 11-17
Membrane Dynamics • Phospholipids in a bilayer have restricted movement between the two faces. Fig 11-17
Membrane Dynamics • Flippases, floppases, and scramblases catalyze movement between the two faces.
Fluorescent Recovery After Photobleaching • Fluorescent tag is attached to a membrane component (lipid, protein, or carbohydrate). • Fluorescence is bleached with a laser. • Recovery is monitored over time.
Fluorescent Recovery After Photobleaching FRAP Movie
Protein Mobility in the Membrane • Some membrane proteins have restricted movement. • May be anchored to internal structures (e.g., glycophorin is tethered to spectrin). Fig. 11-20
Protein Mobility in the Membrane • Lipid rafts are membrane microdomains enriched in sphingolipids, cholesterol, and certain lipid-linked proteins. • Thicker and less fluid than neighboring domains. Fig. 11-21
Protein Mobility in the Membrane • Lipid rafts are membrane microdomains enriched in sphingolipids, cholesterol, and certain lipid-linked proteins. • Thicker and less fluid than neighboring domains. Lipid Rafts
Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 4, 414-418 (May 2003) Domains of gel/fluid lipid segregation in a model membrane vesicle, which is a mixture of fluid dilaurylphosphatidylcholine phospholipids with short, disordered chains and gel dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine phospholipids with long, ordered chains. A red fluorescent lipid analogue (DiIC18) partitions into the more ordered lipids, whereas a green fluorescent lipid analogue (BODIY PC) partitions into domains of more fluid lipids. These domains in a model membrane are much larger than the domains of cell membranes.
Membrane Permeability • Membranes are selectively permeable. • Permeable to nonpolars and small polar molecules. • Impermeable to ions and large polar molecules.
Membrane Permeability • What actually gets across a membrane depends on several factors: • Solubility in the nonpolar lipid environment • The concentration gradient • Whether a protein transporter exists