Ch.12

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The stimulation of a motor neuron ultimately results in the release of a neurotransmitter at the synapse between the neuron and a muscle cell. What type of neurotransmitter is used at these neuromuscular junctions? (a) acetylcholine (b) glutamate (c) GABA (d) glycine

(a)

Pumps are transporters that are able to harness energy provided by other components in the cells to drive the movement of solutes across membranes, against their concentration gradient. This type of transport is called _____________. (a) active transport (b) free diffusion (c) facilitated diffusion (d) passive transport

(a) active transport

Figure Q12-41 illustrates changes in membrane potential during the formation of an action potential. What membrane characteristic or measurement used to study action potentials isindicated by the arrow? (a) effect of a depolarizing stimulus (b) resting membrane potential (c) threshold potential (d) action potential

(a) effect of a depolarizing stimulus

Transporters, in contrast to channels, work by ________________. (a) specific binding to solutes (b) a gating mechanism (c) filtering solutes by charge (d) filtering solutes by size

(a) specific binding to solutes

We can test the relative permeability of a phospholipid bilayer by using a synthetic membrane that does not contain any protein components. Some uncharged, polar molecules are found to diffuse freely across these membranes, to varying degrees. Which of the following has the lowest rate of diffusion across an artificial membrane? Why? (a) glucose (b) water (c) glycerol (d) ethanol

(a). Glucose will have a negligible degree of diffusion across the synthetic bilayer. Not only is it polar, it is also larger than other molecules that are able to diffuse across the membrane.

Voltage-gated channels contain charged protein domains, which are sensitive to changes in membrane potential. By responding to a threshold in the membrane potential, these voltage sensors trigger the opening of the channels. Which of the following best describes the behavior of a population of channels exposed to such a threshold? (a) Some channels remain closed and some open completely. (b) All channels open completely. (c) All channels open partly, to the same degree. (d) All channels open partly, each to a different degree.

(a). Individual channels are either completely open or completely closed. However, in a given population there will be a mixture of open and closed channels.

Although the extracellular environment has a high sodium ion concentration and the intracellular environment has a high potassium ion concentration, both must be neutralized by negatively charged molecules. In the extracellular case, what is the principal anion? (a) HCO3- (b) Cl- (c) PO43- (d) OH-

(b) Cl-

Figure Q12-39 illustrates changes in membrane potential during the formation of an action potential. What membrane characteristic or measurement used to study action potentials isindicated by the arrow? (a) effect of a depolarizing stimulus (b) resting membrane potential (c) threshold potential (d) action potential

(b) resting membrane potential

Active transport requires the input of energy into a system so as to move solutes against their electro chemical and concentration gradients. Which of the following is not one of the common ways to perform active transport? (a) Na+-coupled (b) K+-coupled (c) ATP-driven (d) light-driven

(b). Because K+ is a positively charged ion and the outside of the plasma membrane is positively charged, K+ has a very small electrochemical gradient across the membrane even though its concentration gradient is large. Because there is little net movement across the membrane for K+, it would not make a good source of energy to drive the transport of other molecules against their respective gradients.

Ion channels are classified as membrane transport proteins. Channels discriminate by size and charge. In addition to Na+, which one of the following ions would you expect to be able to freely diffuse through a Na+ channel? Explain your answer. (a) Mg2+ (b) H+ (c) K+ (d) Cl-

(b). If an ion channel is open, it will allow any ion that is under a certain size and that has the correct charge to pass through. H+ is the only ion listed that is both smaller and has the same charge of +1.

You have generated antibodies that recognize the extracellular domain of the Ca2+ pump. Adding these antibodies to animal cells blocks the active transport of Ca2+ from the cytosol into the extracellular environment. What do you expect to observe with respect to intracellular Ca2+? (a) Ca2+ pumps in vesicles membranes keep cystosolic calcium levels low. (b) Ca2+ pumps in the ER membrane keep cystosolic calcium levels low. (c) Ca2+ pumps in the Golgi apparatus keep cystosolic calcium levels low. (d) Ca2+ concentrations in the cytosol increase at a steady rate.

(b). In addition to the Ca2+ pumps in the plasma membrane, they are also found in the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum. Those in the ER membrane will continue to remove calcium ions from the cytosol, keeping calcium levels low.

The Nernst equation can be used to calculate the membrane potential based on the ratio of the outer and inner ion concentration. In a resting cell, membrane potential is calculated taking only K+ ions into account. What is V when Co = 15 mM and Ci = 106 mM? (a) 438.1 mV (b) -52.7 mV (c) 52.7 mV (d) -5.3 mV

(b). Knowing that: V = 62 × log(Co/Ci), substitute the outer and inner concentration values: V = 62 × log(15/106) V = 62 × -0.849 V = -52.7

When using the Nernst equation to calculate membrane potential, we are making several assumptions about conditions in the cell. Which of the following is not a good assumption? (a) The temperature is 37°C. (b) The plasma membrane is primarily permeable to Na+. (c) At rest, the interior of the cell is more negatively charged than the exterior. (d) K+ is the principal positive ion in the cell.

(b). The cell has K+ leak channels. At rest, the cell is mostly permeable to K+, because of the presence of these channels.

A hungry yeast cell lands in a vat of grape juice and begins to feast on the sugars there, producing carbon dioxide and ethanol in the process: C6H12O6 + 2ADP + 2Pi + H+ ® 2CO2 + 2CH3CH2OH + 2ATP + 2H2O Unfortunately, the grape juice is contaminated with proteases that attack some of the transport proteins in the yeast cell membrane, and the yeast cell dies. Which of the following could account for the yeast cell's demise? (a) toxic buildup of carbon dioxide inside the cell (b) toxic buildup of ethanol inside the cell (c) diffusion of ATP out of the cell (d) inability to import sugar into the cell

(d) inability to import sugar into the cell

Both excitatory and inhibitory neurons form junctions with muscles. By what mechanism do inhibitory neurotransmitters prevent the postsynaptic cell from firing an action potential? (a) by closing Na+ channels (b) by preventing the secretion of excitatory neurotransmitters (c) by opening K+ channels (d) by opening Cl- channels

(d). Inhibitory neurons release inhibitory neurotransmitters such as GABA and glycine. They bind to and open ligand-gated Cl- channels. If Na+ channels are open, Cl- ions will rush into the cell as well, neutralizing the positive charges carried by Na+.

The stimulation of auditory nerves depends on the opening and closing of channels in the auditory hair cells. Which type of gating mechanism do these cells use? (a) voltage-gated (b) extracellular ligand-gated (c) intracellular ligand-gated (d) stress-gated

(d). Sound waves cause vibrations of the tectorial membrane. These vibrations cause the bundles of stereocilia to tilt. This tilting physically pulls the filament that links one cilia to the channel in neighboring cilia, which then pulls the gate on that ion channel open.

A molecule moves down its concentration gradient by __________________ transport, but requires __________________ transport to move up its concentration gradient. Transporter proteins and ion channels function in membrane transport by providing a __________________ pathway through the membrane for specific polar solutes or inorganic ions. __________________ are highly selective in the solutes they transport, binding the solute at a specific site and changing its conformation so as to transport the solute across the membrane. On the other hand, __________________ discriminate between solutes mainly on the basis of size and electrical charge.

A molecule moves down its concentration gradient by passive transport, but requires active transport to move up its concentration gradient. Transporter proteins and ion channels function in membrane transport by providing a hydrophilic pathway through the membrane for specific polar solutes or inorganic ions. Transporter proteins are highly selective in the solutes they transport, binding the solute at a specific site and changing its conformation so as to transport the solute across the membrane. On the other hand, ion channels discriminate between solutes mainly on the basis of size and electrical charge.

The differences in permeability between artificial lipid bilayers and cell membranes arise from variations in phospholipid content.

False. The primary difference between cell membranes and artificial membranes is that cell membranes have proteins responsible for creating a selective permeability, which varies with the location and function of the membrane.

Transporters are similar to channels, except that they are larger, allowing folded proteins as well as smaller organic molecules to pass through them.

False. Transporters work by changing conformation after specific binding of the solute to be transported. Channels exclude molecules on the basis of size and charge, but do not depend on specific recognition of the molecules moving through.

For an uncharged molecule, the direction of passive transport across a membrane is determined solely by its __________________ gradient. On the other hand, for a charged molecule, the __________________ must also be considered. The net driving force for a charged molecule across a membrane therefore has two components and is referred to as the __________________ gradient. Active transport allows the movement of solutes against this gradient. The transporter proteins called __________________ transporters use the movement of one solute down its gradient to provide the energy to drive the uphill transport of a second gradient. When this transporter moves both ions in the same direction across the membrane, it is considered a(n) __________________; if the ions move in opposite directions, the transporter is considered a(n) __________________. antiport coupled

For an uncharged molecule, the direction of passive transport across a membrane is determined solely by its concentration gradient. On the other hand, for a charged molecule, an additional force called the membrane potential must also be considered. The net driving force for a charged molecule across a membrane therefore has two components and is referred to as the electrochemical gradient. Active transport allows the movement of solutes against this gradient. The transporter proteins called coupled transporters use the movement of one solute down its gradient to provide the energy to drive the uphill transport of a second gradient. When this transporter moves both ions in the same direction across the membrane, it is considered a(n) symport; if the ions move in opposite directions, the transporter is considered a(n) antiport.

If ATP production is blocked in an animal cell, the cell will swell up. Explain this observation.

ATP is required to power the Na+-K+ pump, which is necessary for maintaining osmotic balance. The pump requires ATP hydrolysis to drive its pumping cycle. So, in the absence of ATP production, the Na+ concentration inside the cell will increase. This is followed by passive diffusion of water across the membrane, causing the cell to swell.

It is thought that the glucose transporter switches between two conformational states in a completely random fashion. How is it possible for such a system to move glucose across the membrane efficiently in a single direction?

Although the opening of the glucose transporter on one side of the membrane or the other is random, the binding of glucose into the binding site of the transporter is not a random event. The affinity between the glucose molecule and the transporter governs the binding event: transporter + glucose Û transporter-glucose At high glucose concentrations the complex formation is favored; at low glucose concentrations dissociation of glucose from the transporter is favored. So, as long as there is a large concentration gradient, efficient transport can occur by the simple rules of binding equilibria.

Fill in Table Q12-15. In the "type of transport" column, designate whether the transporter works by uniport, symport, or antiport mechanisms. Na+-K+ pump Na-glucose Ca2+ pump bacteriarhopdosin

Na+-K+ pump is antiport that requires ATP the main function is to maintain the gradients of Na n K ion across plasma membrane Na-glucose symport energy source Na gradient the import of glucose across plama membrane Ca pump uniport requires ATP function is to export CA ion from the cytosol bacteriarhopdosin is a uniport energy source light exporting H ions from the cell

Cells expend energy in the form of ATP hydrolysis so as to maintain ion concentrations that differ from those found outside the cell.

True

CO2 and O2 are water-soluble molecules that diffuse freely across cell membranes.

True.

Which of the following best describes the behavior of a gated channel? (a) It stays open continuously when stimulated. (b) It opens more frequently in response to a given stimulus. (c) It opens more widely as the stimulus becomes stronger. (d) It remains closed if unstimulated.

b) It opens more frequently in response to a given stimulus.

K+ leak channels are found in the plasma membrane. These channels open and close in an unregulated, random fashion. What do they accomplish in a resting cell? (a) They set the K+ concentration gradient to zero. (b) They set the membrane potential to zero. (c) They disrupt the resting membrane potential. (d) They keep the electrochemical gradient for K+ at zero.

d) They keep the electrochemical gradient for K+ at zero.

Ca2+ pumps in the plasma membrane and endoplasmic reticulum are important for _____________. (a) maintaining osmotic balance (b) preventing Ca2+ from altering the activity of molecules in the cytosol (c) providing enzymes in the endoplasmic reticulum with Ca2+ ions that are necessary for their catalytic activity (d) maintaining a negative membrane potential

(b). The major purpose of the Ca2+ pumps is to keep the cytosolic concentration of Ca2+ low. When Ca2+ does move into the cytosol, it alters the activity of many proteins; hence Ca2+ is a powerful signaling molecule. It is not involved in the catalytic activity of ER enzymes (choice (c)). Because the levels of Ca2+ are very low relative to the levels of K+ and Na+, the Ca2+ gradient does not have a significant effect on the osmotic balance of the cell (choice (a)) or the membrane potential (choice (d)).

Figure Q12-38 illustrates changes in membrane potential during the formation of an action potential. What membrane characteristic or measurement used to study action potentials isindicated by the arrow? (a) effect of a depolarizing stimulus (b) resting membrane potential (c) threshold potential (d) action potential

(c) threshold potential

If Na+ channels are opened in a cell that was previously at rest, how will the resting membrane potential be affected? (a) The membrane potential is not affected by Na+. (b) It becomes more negative. (c) It becomes more positive. (d) It is permanently reset.

(c). As Na+ ions move into the cell, the net charge becomes more positive (less negative) and the membrane potential changes to reflect the Co/Ci for both Na+ and K+ ions.

The Na+-K+ ATPase is also known as the Na+-K+ pump. It is responsible for maintaining the high extracellular sodium ion concentration and the high intracellular potassium ion concentration. What happens immediately after the pump hydrolyzes ATP? (a) Na+ is bound. (b) ADP is bound. (c) The pump is phosphorylated. (d) The pump changes conformation.

(c). The phosphorylation of the pump causes the conformational change, and it occurs after the binding of Na+.

Which of the following statements is true? (a) Amoebae have transporter proteins that actively pump water molecules from the cytoplasm to the cell exterior. (b) Bacteria and animal cells rely on the Na+-K+ pump in the plasma membrane to prevent lysis resulting from osmotic imbalances. (c) The Na+-K+ pump allows animal cells to thrive under conditions of very low ionic strength. (d) The Na+-K+ pump helps to keep both Na+ and Cl- ions out of the cell.

(d). The Na+-K+ pump keeps Na+ out directly by pumping it out and keeps Cl- out indirectly by helping to maintain the negative membrane potential. Cells do not have pumps for moving water molecules across the membrane (choice (a)), since the lipid bilayer is permeable to water. Bacteria do not have Na+-K+ pumps in their plasma membranes (choice (b)). The Na+-K+ pump cannot directly remove water molecules from the cell; it helps maintain osmotic balance by pumping out the Na+ that leaks in, which would not help if the cell were in a solution of very low ionic strength (choice (c)).

Cells make use of H+ electrochemical gradients in many ways. Which of the following proton transporters is used to regulate pH in animal cells? (a) light-driven pump (b) H+ ATPase (c) H+ symporter (d) Na+-H+ exchanger

(d). The high extracellular concentration of Na+ is employed by a transporter that pumps protons out of animal cells as Na+ is brought into the cell. The other transporters are found only in bacterial cells.

A. Gap junctions are large pores that connect the cytosol to the extracellular space. B. Aquaporin channels are found in the plasma membrane, allowing the rapid passage of water molecules and small ions in and out of cells. C. The ion selectivity of a channel completely depends solely on the charge of the amino acids liningthe pore inside the channel. D. Most ion channels are gated, which allow them to open and close in response to a specific stimulus rather than allowing the constant, unregulated flow of ions.

A. False. Gap junctions are used to connect the cytosol of adjacent cells, allowing the sharing of ions and small metabolites. Because gap junctions are large channels, if they were open while facing the extracellular environment, the ability of the plasma membrane to serve as a permeability barrier would be greatly reduced. B. False. Charged molecules (even protons, which are very small), are not able to pass through aquaporins. C. False. Selectivity depends on three parameters: the diameter, shape and charge of the ion trying to pass through the pore of the channel. D. True.

A. Facilitated diffusion can be described as the favorable movement of one solute down its concentration gradient being coupled with the unfavorable movement of a second solute up its concentration gradient. B. Transporters undergo transitions between different conformations, depending on whether the substrate-binding pocket is empty or occupied. C. The electrochemical gradient for K+ across the plasma membrane is small. Therefore, any movement of K+ from the inside to the outside of the cell is driven solely by its concentration gradient. D. The net negative charge on the cytosolic side of the membrane enhances the rate of glucose import into the cell by a uniporter.

A. False. This describes coupled transport, which is one type of active transport. Facilitated diffusion can also be called passive transport, in which a solute always moves down its concentration gradient. B. True. C True. D. False. Glucose is an uncharged molecule, and its import is not directly affected by the voltage difference across the membrane if glucose is being transported alone. If the example given were the Na/glucose symporter, we would have to consider the charge difference across the membrane.

A. The acetylcholine receptor in skeletal muscle cells is a(n) __________________ ion channel. B. __________________ ion channels are found in the hair cells of the mammalian cochlea. C. __________________ ion channels in the mimosa plant propagate the leaf-closing response. D. __________________ ion channels respond to changes in membrane potential. E. Many receptors for neurotransmitters are __________________ ion channels

A. The acetylcholine receptor in skeletal muscle cells is a(n) ligand-gated ion channel. B. Stress-gated ion channels are found in the hair cells of the mammalian cochlea. C. Voltage-gated ion channels in the mimosa plant propagate the leaf-closing response. D. Voltage-gated ion channels respond to changes in membrane potential. E. Many receptors for neurotransmitters are ligand-gated ion channels.

A. Neurotransmitters are small molecules released into the synaptic cleft after the fusion of synaptic vesicles with the presynaptic membrane. B. Action potentials are usually mediated by voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. C. Voltage-gated Na+ channels become automatically inactivated shortly after opening, which ensures that the action potential cannot move backward along the axon. D. Voltage-gated K+ channels also open immediately in response to local depolarization, reducing the magnitude of the action potential.

A. True. B. False. Action potentials are usually mediated by voltage-gated Na+ channels. C. True. D. False. Voltage-gated K+ channels respond more slowly than the voltage-gated Na+ channels. Because they do not open until the action potential reaches its peak, they do not affect its magnitude. Instead, they help to restore the local membrane potential quickly while the voltage-gated Na+ channels are in the inactivated conformation.

You have prepared lipid vesicles (spherical lipid bilayers) that contain Na+-K+ pumps as the sole membrane protein. All of the Na+-K+ pumps are oriented in such a way that the portion of the molecule that normally faces the cytosol is on the inside of the vesicle and the portion of the molecule that normally faces the extracellular space is on the outside of the vesicle. Assume that each pump transports one Na+ ion in one direction and one K+ ion in the other direction during each pumping cycle (see Figure Q12-16 for how the Na+-K+ pump normally functions in the plasma membrane).

A. Without any ATP to provide energy for the Na+-K+ pumps, no ions will be pumped. B. The pumps will use the energy from ATP hydrolysis to transport Na+ out of the vesicles and K+ into the vesicles. (The pumps will stop working either when the amount of ATP inside the vesicle is depleted or when the K+ outside the vesicles is depleted.) C. The pump will bind a molecule of Na+, causing the ATPase activity to hydrolyze ATP and transfer the phosphate group onto the pump. A conformational change will occur, leading to the release of Na+ from the vesicle. However, because there is no K+ outside the vesicle, the pump will get stuck at that step and subsequent steps of the cycle will not occur.

Circle the molecule in each pair that is more likely to diffuse through the lipid bilayer. A. amino acids or benzene B. Cl- or ethanol C. glycerol or RNA D. H2O or O2 E. adenosine or ATP

A. benzene (small nonpolar versus larger uncharged) B. ethanol (polar versus charged) C. glycerol (small polar versus very large, highly charged) D. O2 (nonpolar versus polar) E. adenosine (polar versus highly charged)

Neurons communicate with each other through specialized sites called __________________. Many neurotransmitter receptors are ligand-gated ion channels that open transiently in the __________________ cell membrane in response to neurotransmitters released by the __________________ cell. Ligand-gated ion channels in nerve cell membranes convert __________________ signals into __________________ ones. Neurotransmitter release is stimulated by the opening of voltage-gated __________________ in the nerve terminal membrane.

Neurons communicate with each other through specialized sites called synapses. Many neurotransmitter receptors are ligand-gated ion channels that open transiently in the postsynaptic cell membrane in response to neurotransmitters released by the presynaptic cell. Ligand-gated ion channels in nerve cell membranes convert chemical signals into electrical ones. Neurotransmitter release is stimulated by the opening of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels in the nerve terminal membrane.

The action potential is a wave of __________________ that spreads rapidly along the neuronal plasma membrane. This wave is triggered by a local change in the membrane potential to a value that is __________________ negative than the resting membrane potential. The action potential is propagated by the opening of __________________-gated channels. During an action potential, the membrane potential changes from __________________ to __________________. The action potential travels along the neuron's __________________ to the nerve terminals. Neurons chiefly receive signals at their highly branched __________________.

The action potential is a wave of depolarization that spreads rapidly along the neuronal plasma membrane. This wave is triggered by a local change in the membrane potential to a value that is less negative than the resting membrane potential. The action potential is propagated by the opening of voltage-gated channels. During an action potential, the membrane potential changes from negative to positive. The action potential travels along the neuron's axon to the nerve terminals. Neurons chiefly receive signals at their highly branched dendrites.

The movement of glucose into the cell, against its concentration gradient, can be powered by the co-transport of Na+ into the cell. Explain this movement with respect to the net entropy of the system (i.e. thermodynamics).

The movement of Na+ ions from an area that has a high Na+ concentration to a new area of low Na+ concentration is energetically favorable because the net entropy in the system is increasing. As long as the difference in Na+ ion concentration across the membrane is large, the entropic factor will be sufficient to drive the import of glucose into the cell, which represents a decrease in entropy with respect to the population of glucose molecules inside the cell.

You have generated antibodies that recognize the extracellular domain of the Ca2+ pump. Adding these antibodies to animal cells blocks the active transport of Ca2+ from the cytosol into the extracellular environment. What do you expect to observe with respect to intracellular Ca2+? (a) Ca2+ pumps in vesicles membranes keep cystosolic calcium levels low. (b) Ca2+ pumps in the ER membrane keep cystosolic calcium levels low. (c) Ca2+ pumps in the Golgi apparatus keep cystosolic calcium levels low. (d) Ca2+ concentrations in the cytosol increase at a steady rate.

d). If the pump is mechanistically similar to the Na+-K+ pump, then the transport of ions is driven by ATP hydrolysis and the pump is transiently phosphorylated; phosphorylation is stimulated by one ion and dephosphorylation is stimulated by the other ion. Because all of the protein is in the phosphorylated form in the absence of Zn2+ (lane F), Zn2+ is probably required for dephosphorylation. K+, then, probably binds to the dephosphorylated form and stimulates the ATPase/autophosphorylation. So, if Zn2+ is added to the phosphorylated pump, Zn2+ will stimulate dephosphorylation, trigger a conformational change, and be injected into the vesicle. K+ will stimulate the kinase activity of the pump, but because there is no ATP to be hydrolyzed in the interior of the vesicle, no phosphorylation and hence no movement of K+ will occur.

Which of the following is required for the secretion of neurotransmitters in response to an action potential? (a) neurotransmitter receptors (b) Na+-K+ pumps (c) voltage-gated K+ channels (d) voltage-gated Ca2+ channels

d). Voltage-gated Ca2+ channels open in response to the depolarization caused as the action potential moves toward the nerve terminal. The influx of calcium from outside the cell causes the synaptic vesicles to fuse with the plasma membrane and release large amounts of neurotransmitter into the synaptic cleft.


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