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Concept 5.2: Membrane structure results in selective permeability

Concept 5.2: Membrane structure results in selective permeability


Introduction

  • The biological membrane is an example of a supramolecular structure

    • Supramolecular structure - many molecules ordered into a higher level of organization

  • Steady traffic of small molecules and ions move across the plasma membrane in both directions

    • Sugars, amino acids, and other nutrients enter the cell, and metabolic waste products leave it

      • The cell takes in oxygen for use in cellular respiration and expels carbon dioxide

      • The cell regulates its concentration of inorganic ions, such as Na+, K+, Ca2+, and Cl- by shuttling them one way or another in the plasma membrane

  • Cell membranes are selective in their permeability

    • Substances do not cross the barrier randomly

    • The cell is able to take up some small molecules and ions and exclude others


The Permeability of the Lipid Bilayer

  • Nonpolar molecules are hydrophobic

    • They can dissolve in the lipid bilayer of the membrane and cross through it easily without the help of membrane proteins

  • The hydrophobic interior of the membrane slows down the flow of ions and polar molecules (hydrophilic) through the membrane

    • Polar molecules (glucose and other sugars) pass only slowly through a lipid bilayer

    • Water, a polar molecule, does not cross rapidly 

      • A charged atom or molecule is even less likely to penetrate the hydrophobic interior of the membrane 

  • The lipid bilayer is only one aspect of the cell’s selective permeability

    • Proteins built into the membrane play key roles in regulating transport


Transport Proteins

  • Specific ions and a variety of polar molecules can’t move through cell membranes on their own

    • These hydrophilic substances can avoid contact with lipid bilayer by passing through transport proteins

      • Transport proteins - a transmembrane protein that helps a certain substance or class of closely related substances to cross the membrane

        • A transport protein is specific for the substance it moves, allowing only a certain substance to cross the membrane

    • Some transport proteins called channel proteins function by having a hydrophilic channel that certain molecules or atomic ions use as a “tunnel” through the membrane

      • Aquaporin - a channel protein in the plasma membrane that specifically facilitates osmosis, the diffusion of free water across the membrane

      • Most aquaporin proteins consist of 4 identical polypeptide subunits

        • Each polypeptide forms a channel that allows single-file passage of up to 3 billion water molecules per second

      • Carrier proteins hold onto their passengers and change shape in a way that shuttles them across the membrane

AS

Concept 5.2: Membrane structure results in selective permeability

Concept 5.2: Membrane structure results in selective permeability


Introduction

  • The biological membrane is an example of a supramolecular structure

    • Supramolecular structure - many molecules ordered into a higher level of organization

  • Steady traffic of small molecules and ions move across the plasma membrane in both directions

    • Sugars, amino acids, and other nutrients enter the cell, and metabolic waste products leave it

      • The cell takes in oxygen for use in cellular respiration and expels carbon dioxide

      • The cell regulates its concentration of inorganic ions, such as Na+, K+, Ca2+, and Cl- by shuttling them one way or another in the plasma membrane

  • Cell membranes are selective in their permeability

    • Substances do not cross the barrier randomly

    • The cell is able to take up some small molecules and ions and exclude others


The Permeability of the Lipid Bilayer

  • Nonpolar molecules are hydrophobic

    • They can dissolve in the lipid bilayer of the membrane and cross through it easily without the help of membrane proteins

  • The hydrophobic interior of the membrane slows down the flow of ions and polar molecules (hydrophilic) through the membrane

    • Polar molecules (glucose and other sugars) pass only slowly through a lipid bilayer

    • Water, a polar molecule, does not cross rapidly 

      • A charged atom or molecule is even less likely to penetrate the hydrophobic interior of the membrane 

  • The lipid bilayer is only one aspect of the cell’s selective permeability

    • Proteins built into the membrane play key roles in regulating transport


Transport Proteins

  • Specific ions and a variety of polar molecules can’t move through cell membranes on their own

    • These hydrophilic substances can avoid contact with lipid bilayer by passing through transport proteins

      • Transport proteins - a transmembrane protein that helps a certain substance or class of closely related substances to cross the membrane

        • A transport protein is specific for the substance it moves, allowing only a certain substance to cross the membrane

    • Some transport proteins called channel proteins function by having a hydrophilic channel that certain molecules or atomic ions use as a “tunnel” through the membrane

      • Aquaporin - a channel protein in the plasma membrane that specifically facilitates osmosis, the diffusion of free water across the membrane

      • Most aquaporin proteins consist of 4 identical polypeptide subunits

        • Each polypeptide forms a channel that allows single-file passage of up to 3 billion water molecules per second

      • Carrier proteins hold onto their passengers and change shape in a way that shuttles them across the membrane