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Molecular Basis of Membrane Transport. Manoj S. Nair, Ph.D Postodoctoral Fellow, Biochemistry 812 Biosciences bldg, 484 w. 12 th ave Columbus, OH 43210 Nair.30@osu.edu. Outline of Talk. Types of transport across membranes Passive transport Carrier mediated Active transport
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Molecular Basis of Membrane Transport Manoj S. Nair, Ph.D Postodoctoral Fellow, Biochemistry 812 Biosciences bldg, 484 w. 12thave Columbus, OH 43210 Nair.30@osu.edu
Outline of Talk • Types of transport across membranes • Passive transport • Carrier mediated • Active transport • Nernst equilibrium for ion transport • Mechanism of ion transport (K-selectivity filter) • Endocytosis of proteins/protein domains
Introduction to Cellular Biophysics A. Molecular Basis of Membrane Transport. Essential Cell Biology Alberts, Bray, et al.
Active transport • Transport up a concentration gradient • Uses energy (ATP) • May also cause charge gradient across the membrane causing the molecule to move against the membrane potential.
Properties of “Active” membrane pumps Example of a Na+/K+ pump ATPases (sometimes GTPases) Na+/K+ pump uses 30% resting ATP Active Pumps are used to transport materials against their electrochemical gradient Essential Cell Biology Alberts, Bray, et al.
a) Uniport: 1 type of solute is transported Eg: Valinomycin (K+ transport)
Valinomycin is a carrier for K+. It is a circularmolecule, made up of 3 repeats of the sequence shown above.
Puckering of the ring, stabilized by H-bonds, allows valinomycin to closely surround a single unhydrated K+ ion. Six oxygen atoms of the ionophore interact with the bound K+, replacing O atoms of waters of hydration. Valinomycin is highly selective for K+ relative to Na+. The smaller Na+ ion cannot simultaneously interact with all 6 oxygen atoms within valinomycin. Thus it is energetically less favorable for Na+ to shed its waters of hydration to form a complex with valinomycin.
Whereas the interior of the valinomycin-K+ complex is polar, the surface of the complex is hydrophobic. This allows valinomycin to enter the lipid core of the bilayer, to solubilize K+ within this hydrophobic milieu. Crystal structure
Valinomycin is a passive carrier for K+. It can bind or release K+ when it encounters the membrane surface. Valinomycin can catalyze net K+ transport because it can translocate either in the complexed or uncomplexed state. The direction of net flux depends on the electrochemical K+ gradient.
b) Symport: 2 different solutes transported together in one direction Eg: Glucose –Na+ tranporter in epithelial cells Lactose permease: H+ -lactose symport c)Antiport: 2 different solutes transport in opposite directions Eg: Adenine nucleotide translocase (ATP/ADP exchanger)
Passive transport: Ion channels & Pores Properties of transmembrane -helices: Amphiphilic nature Designer Peptides of Ser & Leu: Formed a hexamer channel in phospholipid membranes. S.R.Goodman. 1998
What is the mechanism for ion selectivity of channels? This is a frontier of biophysics. With Passive Channels, ions or other substances move DOWN their electrochemical gradient + - + - - + - + - + -
Basic structure of the potassium channel. Doyle et al. Science, 1998. Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2003
“Gated” channels i.e. channels that open in response to physiological stimuli Receptor-activated gate Essential Cell Biology Alberts, Bray, et al.