lec 1

Cards (34)

  • What defines the cellular structure of cells?
    • Cells are compartmentalised
    • Compartments are surrounded by biological membranes
  • Which lipids are included in diverse lipid structures?
    Fatty acids, phospholipids, mono-, di-, & triglycerides, waxes, sterols, fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K)
  • What are the general properties of lipids?
    • Generally insoluble in water (hydrophobic)
    • Most contain C, H, O (phospholipids also contain P, N)
    • Building blocks of biological membranes
  • What is the general structure of a fatty acid?
    CH3CH_3(CH2_2)_nCOOH,</latex> where nn = 14-18 (ie 16-20 C in total)
  • What are the hydrophobic and hydrophilic properties of fatty acids?
    Hydrophobic: hydrocarbon chains
    Hydrophilic: polar carboxyl group
  • What is an amphipathic molecule?
    A molecule with both hydrophobic and hydrophilic properties
  • How are fatty acids primarily found in organisms?
    • Phospholipids (membranes)
    • Triglycerides (body fat)
    • Cholesterol esters (storage/transport)
  • What types of fatty acids are commonly found?
    Saturated and unsaturated fatty acids
  • What are the types of lipids found in biological membranes?
    • Glycolipids
    • Cholesterol
    • Phospholipids
  • What hydrophobic, amphipathic, and hydrophilic properties characterize phospholipids?
    Hydrophobic: non-polar tails
    Amphipathic: both hydrophobic and hydrophilic regions
    Hydrophilic: polar heads
  • What structural backbone is commonly found in glycolipids?
    Sphingosine
  • What properties does cholesterol possess in membranes?
    Hydrophobic, amphipathic, and hydrophilic
  • How do hydrophobic molecules interact with water?
    • Do not interact with water
    • Cluster together to exclude water
    • Form micelles
  • Why do hydrophobic molecules readily form micelles in water?
    The polar heads interact with water while the hydrophobic tails cluster inward, excluding water.
  • How do amphipathic phospholipids self-assemble in aqueous solutions?
    • Form lipid bilayers
    • Bilayers are ~4 nm thick
    • Hydrophobic core
    • Hydrophilic surface
  • What are liposomes?
    • Phospholipid bilayers that form spherical vesicles
    • Separate compartments
    • Mimic cell membranes of biological cells
  • What determines the permeability of a lipid bilayer?
    • Semi-permeable
    • Hydrophobic and small uncharged polar molecules can diffuse
    • Large polar and charged molecules cannot diffuse
  • How is the permeability of lipid bilayers measured?
    By the membrane permeability coefficient
  • Is membrane permeability an all-or-nothing property?
    No, it's a graded property where substances considered impermeable can still cross with low probability.
  • Besides lipids, what other component constitutes biological membranes?
    Proteins, up to 75% of membrane composition.
  • What functions do membrane proteins carry out?
    Many important functions including structural support and transport.
  • How can membrane proteins be classified according to their topology?
    • Integral membrane proteins (1-4)
    • Lipid-anchored membrane proteins (5-6)
    • Peripheral membrane proteins (7-8)
  • What are glycoproteins and glycolipids?
    • Glycoproteins: proteins with attached carbohydrates
    • Glycolipids: lipids with attached carbohydrates
  • Who proposed the fluid mosaic model of membrane structure and when?
    Singer & Nicholson in 1972.
  • Describe the fluid mosaic model.
    The model describes membranes as a fluid mixture of lipids and proteins, where proteins move freely in a phospholipid sea, with some proteins anchored by cytoskeletal proteins.
  • What are lateral diffusion and flip-flop in membrane lipids?
    • Lateral diffusion: movement of lipids in the plane of the membrane
    • Flip-flop: movement of lipids from one leaflet to the other (very rare)
  • Has flip-flop of protein molecules been observed?
    No, it has never been observed.
  • How does FRAP provide evidence for the fluid mosaic model?
    • Label membrane components with fluorescent molecules
    • Bleach fluorescence in a small area
    • Observe recovery of fluorescence
    • Recovery indicates mobility of labelled molecules
  • What are the diffusion coefficients for phospholipids, rhodopsin, and fibronectin?
    • Phospholipids: ~1 μm2s1\mu m^2 s^{-1}
    • Rhodopsin: 0.4 μm2s1\mu m^2 s^{-1}
    • Fibronectin: 10410^{-4} μm2s1\mu m^2 s^{-1}
  • What was the result of the cell fusion experiment to support the fluid mosaic model?
    • Mouse and human cells labelled with coloured antibodies against cell surface proteins
    • Cells fused to create heterokaryon
    • No initial mixing of proteins
    • Proteins mixed after several hours
  • How does temperature affect membrane fluidity?
    At higher temperatures, membrane lipids are in a disordered state, leading to higher fluidity; at lower temperatures, lipids become ordered, resulting in lower fluidity.
  • How do fatty acid chain length and saturation affect membrane fluidity?
    • Long fatty acid chains: stronger interactions, lower fluidity
    • Double bonds in unsaturated chains: prevent close packing, higher fluidity
  • How does cholesterol influence membrane fluidity at high and low temperatures?
    At high temperatures, cholesterol stabilizes the membrane, reducing fluidity; at low temperatures, it prevents lipids from clustering, increasing fluidity.
  • What are the key properties of biological membranes?
    • Composed of amphipathic lipids and proteins
    • Approximately 2 molecules thick
    • Held together by non-covalent interactions
    • Fluid structures where components diffuse readily