BIO 240 Cell Membrane
Sodium-potassium pump
Actively transports sodium ions out of the cell and potassium ions into the cell. For every 3 Na+ trasported out of the cell, two K+ are let inside, lowering the charge of the cytoplasm by 1+.
Fasclitated Diffusion
diffusion across a membrane with the help of membrane proteins
Synaptic signaling
local cell signaling in nerve cells where an electrical signal triggers the release of molecules that travel across a synapse to a target cell; can also be long distance signaling when the signal "jumps" sections of the axon
Paracrine signaling
local cell signaling through the use of molecules called growth regulators
Active Transport
moving a substance up its concentration gradient, from lower concentration to higher concentration, requiring the use of ATP
Fluid mosaic model
The currently accepted model of cell membrane structure, which envisions the membrane as a mosaic of individually inserted protein molecules drifting laterally in a fluid bilayer of phospholipids.
Osmosis
The diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane. Water moves from hypo to hyper.
Peripheral proteins
Protein appendages loosely bound to the surface of the membrane or integral proteins and not embedded in the lipid bilayer.
G protein-coupled receptor
a cell surface transmembrane receptor that works with a g protein
Phagocytosis
a cell takes in food
Pinocytosis
a cell takes in samples of extracellular fluid to bring a mixture of substances/materials inside the cell
G protein
a protein that binds GTP (energy source similar to ATP) to a protein
signal transduction pathway
a series of changes, usually involving the change in shape of many molecules, that results in a triggering a cellular response
Transduction
a series of steps through a signal transduction pathway that transforms the chemical signal into one that can be interpreted by the cell
Transport proteins
a transmembrane protein that helps a substance or a group of substances exit or enter the cell; channel and carrier proteins are examples
Electrogenic pump
a transport protein that helps create voltage by transporting ions
cyclic AMP
cAMP, a second messenger; a sudden increase or decrease in the concentration of cAMP can act as a transduction signal; usually activates protein kinase A.
Receptor Mediated endocytosis
cells take in a large amount of one substance at a time by using receptors on the extracellular side of the membrane to capture them
local cell signaling
occurs by sending molecules through junctions; ex: paracrine and synaptic signaling
carbohydrates
used in cell-cell recognition by acting as 'tags' or labels; usually short branched chains that bond to other molecules to make glycoproteins or glycolipids
Concentration gradient
the regions where the concentration of a substance increases or decreases
Reception
the target cell detects the signaling molecule (ligand) when it binds to a receptor on the membrane
Response
the translated signal from transduction causes a cellular response, usually regulation of proteins and protein synthesis
Channel proteins
transport proteins that have hollow hydrophilic channels that let certain charged molecules or ions go in and out of a cell; ex: aquaporins
amphipathic
A molecule that has both a hydrophilic region and a hydrophobic region.
Ligand
A molecule that is specific to bind to a receptor site of another molecule.
selective permeability
A property of biological membranes that allows some substances to cross more easily than others.
Ion channels
Channel proteins that functin as gated channels for ions, opening or closing in response to stimuli
Hypertonic
Having a higher concentration of solute than another solution. An animal cell shrivels in this solution. A plant cell is plasmolysed.
Hypotonic
Having a lower concentration of solute than another solution. An animal cell lyses in this solution. A plant cell is turgid and healthy.
Isotonic
Having a stable concentration of solute in two regions separated by a selectively permeable membrane. An animal cells is healthy in this solution. A plant cell is flaccid.
Cholesterol
In animal cell membranes they help resist changes in membrane fluidity
Diffusion
The tendency for molecules to move from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration. Requires NO energy.
phosphorylation
The transfer of a phosphate group, usually from ATP, to a molecule.
function of membrane proteins
Transport, enzymatic activity, cell-cell recognition, intercellular joining, attachment to the cytoskeleton or extracellular matrix, signal transduction
Integral proteins
Typically transmembrane proteins with hydrophobic regions that completely span the hydrophobic interior of the membrane. Usually contain nonpolar amino acids chains that form alpha helices
Endocrine signaling
hormones released by cells travel all over the body through the circulatory system
lignad-gated ion channels
proteins that change into a gated ion channel when a signal molecule binds to it
Carrier proteins
proteins that shuttle charged molecules across a membrane by changing its shape (opening one end causes the other to close)
stages of cell signaling
reception, transduction, response
Long distance cell signaling
signaling that occurs through the use of hormones in the endocrine system
Second messengers
small, nonprotein, water soluble molecules or ions that can spread easily through cell diffusion and continue a signal in a cell
Coupled transport
the coupling of the "downhill" transport of one substance with the active "uphill" transport of another
Electrochemical gradient
the diffusion gradient of an ion due to its concentration gradient AND membrane potential (an ion will diffuse down its concentration gradient and toward charge balance)
Membrane potential
the electrical potential energy, or voltage, across the plasma membrane. The cytoplasm is negatively charged compared to the extracellular side of a cell, due to differences in ion concentrations.
protein kinase
the enzyme that transfers a phosphate from ATP to a molecule, usually activating a molecule
protein phosphatase
the enzyme that transfers a phosphate from a molecule to ADP, usually deactivatin a molecule
Endocytosis
the formation of vesicles from the plasma membrane, encasing molecules to bring them inside a cell
Exocytosis
the fussion of a vesicle with the cell membrane, expelling or secreting the vesicles contents outside the cell
Phospholipids
the hydrophobic interactions of these molecules are what hold a cell membrane together