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Chapter 7 Membranes
Essential knowledge: Cell membranes are selectively permeable due to their structure.
• Function of the Membrane: – Cell membranes separate the internal
environment of the cell from the external environment.
• Selective permeability is a direct consequence of membrane structure, as described by the fluid mosaic model.
The Fluid Mosaic Model
Fluid Mosaic Model: Cell membranes are made of the phospholipids, cholesterol, protein, glycoprotein and glycolipids. These molecules can be fixed in place or move laterally through the fluid like phospholipid bilayer:
Phospholipid molecules:
• Give the membrane both hydrophilic and hydrophobic properties.
Embedded proteins:
• Can be hydrophilic, with charged and polar side groups, or hydrophobic, with nonpolar side groups.
• Give cell membranes of different cell types their unique properties
Cholesterol:
• Help make the cell membrane stronger and less fluid.
Glycoproteins and Glycolipids: • Proteins or Lipids with short branched chains of
carbohydrate attached.• Serve as identification of cell types or make the
extracellular matrix.• In which organelle was the sugar attached to the
protein or lipids?
Membranes are Selectively Permeable• Molecules pass through the Membrane
through specific mechanisms depending on size, polarity or charge.
example Type of movement PictureSmall polar and nonpolar molecules
N2, CO2 Diffusion directly through membrane (in-between phospholipids)
Large polar hydrophilic molecules
Glucose Embedded protein channels or pumps
Water H2O Through embedded protein channels called aquaporins
Ions Na+, K+, Cl-, Mg2+, Ca2+
Embedded protein channels or pumps
Diffusion and Osmosis
• Substances will move from a region of high concentration to low concentration.
• Once dynamic equilibrium is established molecules still move, but there is no net movement.
Diffusion
Osmosis
• External environments can be hypotonic, hypertonic or isotonic to internal environments of cells. – This will determine the direction of net movement
of molecules into or out of the cell.
Essential knowledge: Growth and dynamic homeostasis are maintained by the constant movement of molecules across
membranes.
• Passive transport does not require the input of metabolic energy; the net movement of molecules is from high concentration to low concentration (diffusion/osmosis)
• Passive transport plays a primary role in the import of resources and the export of wastes.
• Membrane proteins play a role in facilitated diffusion of charged and polar molecules through a membrane.
Active transport
• Active transport requires energy to move molecules against the concentration gradient.
• Energy is used by proteins embedded in the membrane to move substances across the membrane and to establish and maintain concentration gradients.
• Membrane proteins are necessary for active transport.
Passive Transport: Molecules must go with the concentration gradient
• Facilitated Diffusion: Diffusion through a membrane protein.
Active Transport
• ATP-Dependent Transport: • Uses ATP to change the shape
of a protein to pump material against concentration gradient.
Active Transport is used by Neurons to maintain a potential difference (voltage) across the membrane
Na+ / K+ ATPase
•Pumps 3 Na+ out and 2 K+ in •Requires one ATP to perform this work.
Co-Transport (a form of Active Transport):
• Moves one molecule against its concentration gradient by moving another molecule down its concentration gradient.
• The images used in this handout are from either Campbell Reece 7th edition or BioVisions Inner life of the Cell.