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Biological membranes and transport
Introduction
• Membranes define the external boundary of cells and
regulate the molecular traffic across that boundary.
• It separates and protect the cell from the external
environment.
• Plasma membrane also provide a connecting system
between the cell and its environment.
• Membranes are tough but flexible, self sealing, and
selectively permeable to polar solutes.
• Their flexibility permits the shape changes that
accompany cell growth and movements.
Composition of membranes
• The membranes are composed of lipids, protein and
carbohydrates.
• The actual composition differ from tissue to tissue.
Among the lipids, amphipathic lipids (containing
hydrophobic and hydrophilic groups) namely
phospholipids, glycolipids and cholesterol are found
in animal membranes.
• Many animal cell membranes have thick coating of
complex polysaccharides referred to as glycocalyx.
Structure of membranes
• Fluid mosaic model proposed by Singer and Nicolson
is a more recent and acceptable model for membrane
structure.
• The biological membrane usually have a thickness of
5 – 8 nm.
• A membrane is essentially composed of a lipid
bilayer.
• The hydrophobic (nonpolar) region of the lipids face
each other at core of the bilayer while the hydrophilic
(polar) region face outward.
More than lipids…
• In 1972, S.J. Singer & G. Nicolson proposed that
membrane proteins are inserted into the phospholipids
bilayer.
It’s like a fluid
It’s like a mosaic
It’s the fluid mosaic
model
Phospholipids
• Fatty acid tails – hydrophobic
• Phosphate group head – hydrophilic
• Arranged as a bilayer
Membrane proteins
• Membrane proteins are the nanomachines that enable
membranes to send and receive messages and to
transport molecules into and out of cells and
compartments.
• Without membrane proteins the phospholipid
membrane would present an impenetrable barrier and
cells would be unable to communicate with their
neighbors, transport nutrients into the cell or waste
products out of it, or respond to external stimuli.
Cont…
• Both unicellular and multicellular organisms need
membrane proteins in order to live. The membrane
proteins that are present in a particular membrane
determine the substances to which it will be
permeable and what signal molecules it can
recognize.
Types of membrane proteins
Based on their structure, there are main three types
membrane proteins.
1. Integral membrane protein t that is
permanently anchored or part of membrane.
2. Peripheral membrane protein that is
temporarily attached to lipid bilayer or integral
proteins.
Cont….
3. Lipid anchored proteins
These are proteins located on the surface of the cell
membrane that are covalently attached
to lipids embedded within the cell membrane.
These proteins insert and assume a place in the bilayer
structure of the membrane alongside the similar fatty
acid tails.
Functions of biological membrane
• Biological membranes carry out functions that are
indispensable for life.
• provide a barrier against the extracellular
environment
• Give shape to the cell, creating a matrix for insertion
of proteins
• storing and transmitting energy
• receiving and amplifying signals
Transport
Across
biological
membrane
Transport across cell membrane
• Biological membrane regulates the movement into
and out of the cell. The cell membrane is selectively
permeable. It lets some substances pass through
rapidly, and some substances pass through more
slowly, but prevents other substances passing through
it at all.
• Lipid soluble substances, water & urea can easily
pass through the lipid bilayer of the cell membrane
• The lipid bilayer of the cell membrane is
impermeable to lipid insoluble substances such as
ions & charged or polar molecules like glucose.
These substances pass through specialized protein
channels, carrier proteins & active pump mechanism.
Large macromolecules are transported through
vesicles.
Types of transport
• Passive transport
Diffusion – simple, facilitated
Osmosis
• Active transport
Primary – Secondary
• Vesicular transport
Endocytosis – Exocytosis – Transcytosis
No energy needed
• Passive transport
Energy needed
• Active transport
Passive transport
Diffusion
Simple diffusion
• It is the movement of
ions or molecules from
a region of their high
concentration to a
region of their low
concentration, without
the expenditure of
energy
Facilitated diffusion
• Facilitated diffusion is
the movement of
specific molecules (or
ions) across the plasma
membrane, assisted by a
carrier protein.
• No energy required
• Diffusion occurs down a concentration gradient.
• Facilitated diffusion is of two types
1. Channel mediated
2. Carrier mediated
• In channel mediated facilitated
diffusion, ions or small molecules move through a water
filled channel. It functions much like a bridge over a
river that must rise and lower in order to allow boats to
pass. It is of two types
 Leak channel always open
 Gated channel require a stimulus (binding
of an ion) to open.
Difference
in type of
protein
used
• Carrier mediated facilitated diffusion is the
movement of small polar molecules across the
membranes by a carrier protein that changes its shape
to pass through. Such as glucose molecules.
Osmosis
.
• Osmosis is the movement of water molecules
(solvent) through a selectively permeable membrane/
semi permeable membrane like the cell membrane.
• Water diffuses across a membrane from an area of
high concentration to an area of low concentration.
• Semi-permeable membrane is permeable to water, but
not to the solute i.e., sugar
Active transport
• Molecules move against the concentration gradient
(low to high)
• Energy must be provided
• Exhibit saturation kinetics
Active transport is divided into
two types according to the source of the energy used to
cause the transport:
1. Primary active transport
2. Secondary active transport.
Primary active transport
• It is also called direct active transport, directly uses
chemical energy such as ATP to transport solutes
across a membrane against their concentration
gradient.
• An example of primary active transport is sodium-
potassium pump which moves sodium ions to the
outside of the cell and potassium ions to the inside of
the cell.
Secondary active transport
• Secondary active transport is the transport of two
different molecules across a transport membrane
using energy in other forms than ATP.
• Two types of molecules are transported at once.
• Concentration gradient of driving ion provides the
energy for the transport of driven ion/molecule
against the concentration gradient.
• Moving down its electrochemical gradient is referred
to as the driving ion because it is movement of
this ion that drives the uphill movement of other ion.
• Symport and antiport are two types of trans
membrane proteins
• Symport moves molecules in same direction
• Antiport` moves molecules in different
direction.
• Glucose sodium pump co transporter is an example.
Vesicular transport
Transport of larger substances such as proteins,
carbohydrates by membranous sac/vesicles
Endocytosis
Cell intakes contents from outside of cell. Plasma
membrane traps the substance by folding inward. The
lipid bilayer then fuses to form a vesicle tthat engulfs
the substance.
Types
1. receptor mediated endocytosis
2. phagocytosis (solids)
3. pinocytosis (liquids)
• Phagocytosis target large structure as bacteria and
food particles as white blood cells engulf bacteria
through phagocytosis.
• Pinocytosis is non specific as amino acids, fatty acids
etc
• Receptor mediated endocytosis is specific for
substances recognized by a cell surface receptor.
Exocytosis
• Exocytosis is the process by which a large amount of
molecules are released; thus it is a form of bulk
transport. In exocytosis, membrane-bound secretory
vesicles are carried to the cell membrane, and their
contents (i.e., water-soluble molecules) are secreted
into the extracellular environment.
Biological membranes and transport
Biological membranes and transport

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Biological membranes and transport

  • 2.
  • 3. Introduction • Membranes define the external boundary of cells and regulate the molecular traffic across that boundary. • It separates and protect the cell from the external environment. • Plasma membrane also provide a connecting system between the cell and its environment. • Membranes are tough but flexible, self sealing, and selectively permeable to polar solutes. • Their flexibility permits the shape changes that accompany cell growth and movements.
  • 4. Composition of membranes • The membranes are composed of lipids, protein and carbohydrates. • The actual composition differ from tissue to tissue. Among the lipids, amphipathic lipids (containing hydrophobic and hydrophilic groups) namely phospholipids, glycolipids and cholesterol are found in animal membranes. • Many animal cell membranes have thick coating of complex polysaccharides referred to as glycocalyx.
  • 5.
  • 6. Structure of membranes • Fluid mosaic model proposed by Singer and Nicolson is a more recent and acceptable model for membrane structure. • The biological membrane usually have a thickness of 5 – 8 nm. • A membrane is essentially composed of a lipid bilayer. • The hydrophobic (nonpolar) region of the lipids face each other at core of the bilayer while the hydrophilic (polar) region face outward.
  • 7. More than lipids… • In 1972, S.J. Singer & G. Nicolson proposed that membrane proteins are inserted into the phospholipids bilayer. It’s like a fluid It’s like a mosaic It’s the fluid mosaic model
  • 9. • Fatty acid tails – hydrophobic • Phosphate group head – hydrophilic • Arranged as a bilayer
  • 10. Membrane proteins • Membrane proteins are the nanomachines that enable membranes to send and receive messages and to transport molecules into and out of cells and compartments. • Without membrane proteins the phospholipid membrane would present an impenetrable barrier and cells would be unable to communicate with their neighbors, transport nutrients into the cell or waste products out of it, or respond to external stimuli.
  • 11. Cont… • Both unicellular and multicellular organisms need membrane proteins in order to live. The membrane proteins that are present in a particular membrane determine the substances to which it will be permeable and what signal molecules it can recognize.
  • 12. Types of membrane proteins Based on their structure, there are main three types membrane proteins. 1. Integral membrane protein t that is permanently anchored or part of membrane. 2. Peripheral membrane protein that is temporarily attached to lipid bilayer or integral proteins.
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  • 14. Cont…. 3. Lipid anchored proteins These are proteins located on the surface of the cell membrane that are covalently attached to lipids embedded within the cell membrane. These proteins insert and assume a place in the bilayer structure of the membrane alongside the similar fatty acid tails.
  • 15. Functions of biological membrane • Biological membranes carry out functions that are indispensable for life. • provide a barrier against the extracellular environment • Give shape to the cell, creating a matrix for insertion of proteins • storing and transmitting energy • receiving and amplifying signals
  • 17. Transport across cell membrane • Biological membrane regulates the movement into and out of the cell. The cell membrane is selectively permeable. It lets some substances pass through rapidly, and some substances pass through more slowly, but prevents other substances passing through it at all. • Lipid soluble substances, water & urea can easily pass through the lipid bilayer of the cell membrane
  • 18. • The lipid bilayer of the cell membrane is impermeable to lipid insoluble substances such as ions & charged or polar molecules like glucose. These substances pass through specialized protein channels, carrier proteins & active pump mechanism. Large macromolecules are transported through vesicles.
  • 19. Types of transport • Passive transport Diffusion – simple, facilitated Osmosis • Active transport Primary – Secondary • Vesicular transport Endocytosis – Exocytosis – Transcytosis
  • 20. No energy needed • Passive transport Energy needed • Active transport
  • 22. Diffusion Simple diffusion • It is the movement of ions or molecules from a region of their high concentration to a region of their low concentration, without the expenditure of energy Facilitated diffusion • Facilitated diffusion is the movement of specific molecules (or ions) across the plasma membrane, assisted by a carrier protein. • No energy required
  • 23. • Diffusion occurs down a concentration gradient. • Facilitated diffusion is of two types 1. Channel mediated 2. Carrier mediated • In channel mediated facilitated diffusion, ions or small molecules move through a water filled channel. It functions much like a bridge over a river that must rise and lower in order to allow boats to pass. It is of two types  Leak channel always open  Gated channel require a stimulus (binding of an ion) to open. Difference in type of protein used
  • 24. • Carrier mediated facilitated diffusion is the movement of small polar molecules across the membranes by a carrier protein that changes its shape to pass through. Such as glucose molecules.
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  • 26. Osmosis . • Osmosis is the movement of water molecules (solvent) through a selectively permeable membrane/ semi permeable membrane like the cell membrane. • Water diffuses across a membrane from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration. • Semi-permeable membrane is permeable to water, but not to the solute i.e., sugar
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  • 28. Active transport • Molecules move against the concentration gradient (low to high) • Energy must be provided • Exhibit saturation kinetics Active transport is divided into two types according to the source of the energy used to cause the transport: 1. Primary active transport 2. Secondary active transport.
  • 29. Primary active transport • It is also called direct active transport, directly uses chemical energy such as ATP to transport solutes across a membrane against their concentration gradient. • An example of primary active transport is sodium- potassium pump which moves sodium ions to the outside of the cell and potassium ions to the inside of the cell.
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  • 31. Secondary active transport • Secondary active transport is the transport of two different molecules across a transport membrane using energy in other forms than ATP. • Two types of molecules are transported at once. • Concentration gradient of driving ion provides the energy for the transport of driven ion/molecule against the concentration gradient. • Moving down its electrochemical gradient is referred to as the driving ion because it is movement of this ion that drives the uphill movement of other ion.
  • 32. • Symport and antiport are two types of trans membrane proteins • Symport moves molecules in same direction • Antiport` moves molecules in different direction. • Glucose sodium pump co transporter is an example.
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  • 34. Vesicular transport Transport of larger substances such as proteins, carbohydrates by membranous sac/vesicles Endocytosis Cell intakes contents from outside of cell. Plasma membrane traps the substance by folding inward. The lipid bilayer then fuses to form a vesicle tthat engulfs the substance. Types 1. receptor mediated endocytosis 2. phagocytosis (solids) 3. pinocytosis (liquids)
  • 35. • Phagocytosis target large structure as bacteria and food particles as white blood cells engulf bacteria through phagocytosis. • Pinocytosis is non specific as amino acids, fatty acids etc • Receptor mediated endocytosis is specific for substances recognized by a cell surface receptor.
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  • 37. Exocytosis • Exocytosis is the process by which a large amount of molecules are released; thus it is a form of bulk transport. In exocytosis, membrane-bound secretory vesicles are carried to the cell membrane, and their contents (i.e., water-soluble molecules) are secreted into the extracellular environment.