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Active Transport, Transmembrane Proteins, and Neurons. AP Biology 2006. Carrier Proteins. Exocytosis and Endocytosis. Movement of large molecules out of the cell http://www.bbc.co.uk/education/asguru/biology/01cellbiology/05pathways/09endoexo/index.shtml. Receptor Mediated Endocytosis.
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Active Transport, Transmembrane Proteins, and Neurons AP Biology 2006
Exocytosis and Endocytosis • Movement of large molecules out of the cell • http://www.bbc.co.uk/education/asguru/biology/01cellbiology/05pathways/09endoexo/index.shtml
LIGANDS • a ligand is an atom, ion or functional group that donates its electrons through a coordinate covalent bond to one or more central atoms or ions, usually metals. An array of such ligands around a center is termed a complex.
Ligands • Can open a gated channel • Can participated in cell signalling • Can participate in receptor mediated endocytosis
Primary Active Transport • http://www.bbc.co.uk/education/asguru/biology/01cellbiology/05pathways/08active/index.shtml
Active Transport • http://www.stolaf.edu/people/giannini/flashanimat/transport/secondary%20active%20transport.swf
ABC Transporters • Transporters are transmembrane proteins that expose a ligand-binding domain at one surface • ATP-binding domain at the other surface.The ligand-binding domain is usually restricted to a single type of molecule
ABC • ABC ABC ("ATP-Binding Cassette"). The ATP bound to its domain provides the energy to pump the ligand across the membrane. The human genome contains 48 genes for ABC transporters. Some examples:
Examples • CFTR — the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator • TAP, the transporter associated with antigen processing. the transporter that liver cells use to pump the salts of bile acids out into the bile. • ABC transporters that pump chemotherapeutic drugs out of cancer cells thus reducing their effectiveness. ABC transporters must have evolved early in the history of life. The ATP-binding domains in archaea, eubacteria, and eukaryotes all share a homologous structure, the ATP-binding "cassette".
The Action Potential • The action potential is electrical in nature • It moves along the neuron like a wave • The action potential involves highly selective and controlled ion movement through specialized channels and pumps • The distribution of ions outside and inside of a membrane is maintained by these transmembrane proteins • Na+ is the major extracellular ion and K+ and P- ( proteins) are the major intracellular ions • The outside has a positive charge in regard to the outside Na + K+ Cl- P-
Ion Channels and the Action Potential • The membrane is polarized. This is the resting potential of the membrane • The sodium channel opens and sodium ions rush into the inside of the axon • The potassium gates open up and potassium rushes out of the cell • The potssium gates are slower • This is the action potential. It produces a wave of - charge that moves down the neuron • The sodium pumps binds three sodiums and passes them to the outside and two potassium and passes them to the inside- this is like a “ swinging door”. • Finally the membrane returns to the resting potential
The Origin and Transmission of Neural Impulses • Neural impulses are generated by an action potential • The action potential is generated when the membrane of the neuron which has a positive charge on the outside is depolarized in a wave along its length ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ---------------------------------- -60mv polarized ---------------------------------- ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 30mv depolarized
The Wave The Wave +++-----+++++ ---+++++------ The axon Repolarized – depolarized - polarized