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Plasma Membrane
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The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Dec 31, 2015

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Sydney Miles
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Page 1: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Plasma Membrane

Page 2: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Plasma Membrane• The plasma membrane separates the internal

and external environments of the cell

• This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model

Page 3: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Fluid Mosaic Model

Page 4: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Fluid Mosaic Model

• The lipid bilayer phosopholipid heads are polar, hydrophilic

• Their phospholipid tails are hydrophobic

Page 5: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Plasma Membrane

• Proteins in a membrane consist of peripheral & integral proteins•Peripheral proteins:

• Integral proteins:

Page 6: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Proteins

Page 7: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Plasma Membrane• Both Phosopholipids and proteins can have

attached carbohydrate chains facing the outside of the cell

• This combined with peripheral proteins means that the 2 halves of the plasma membrane lipid bilayer are asymmetrically

Page 8: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Plasma Membrane Functions• The plasma membrane function differs from

cell to cell and the type of integral proteins largely determine the specific function: • Channel Proteins:

• Carrier Proteins: involved in the passage of molecules through membrane

Page 9: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Plasma Membrane Function• Cell Recognition Proteins: glycoproteins that help the body recognize invaders (pathogens) • Receptor Proteins: have a shape that allows a specific molecule to bind to it

• Enzymatic Proteins: carry out metabolic reactions, and without it these necessary reactions would be not occur

Page 10: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Plasma Membrane Permeability

• The plasma membrane is differentially permeable, which is why substances can move across the membrane while others cannot

• Most molecules move across the membrane due to a concentration gradient that is high on one side of the cell and low on the other

Page 11: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Plasma Membrane Permeability• Larger molecules and some ions or charged

molecules can’t move freely using concentration gradients

Page 12: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Diffusion and Osmosis • Diffusion is the movement of molecules from

a higher area to lower area of concentration

• It is a physical process that occurs with any type of molecule and doesn’t require any use of energy

Page 13: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Diffusion and Osmosis

• The properties of the plasma membrane allow only a few types of molecules to enter and exit the cell this way

• Several factors influence the rate of diffusion:

Page 14: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Diffusion and Osmosis

• Osmosis is the diffusion of water across a differentially permeable membrane from an area of high concentration to low

• Osmotic Pressure is the pressure that develops in a system due to osmosis

Page 15: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Diffusion and Osmosis

• Isotonic Solution:• The solute concentration and water concentration both inside and outside the cell are equal

Page 16: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Diffusion and Osmosis• Hypotonic Solution:• Can cause the cell to burst • Hypo=less than and refers to a solution with a lower concentration of solute • If a cell is placed in a hypotonic solution , water would enter the cell

• Cytolysis is used to refer to a burst cell

Page 17: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Diffusion and Osmosis• Hypertonic solution :• Hyper=more than and refers to a solution with a higher percentage of solute • If a cell is in a hypertonic solution water leaves the cell

• Plasmolysis is the shrinking of cytoplasm in a plant cell

Page 18: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Transport By Carrier Proteins• Facilitated transport: the passage of

molecules like glucose and amino acids, across the membrane by carrier proteins

• Active transport : when molecules or ions move through the plasma membrane, when an accumulation occurs

Page 19: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Active Transport• Usually chemical energy like ATP is required

for the carrier protein to combine with the molecule being transported

• A sodium-potassium pump is the most common example of these protein pumps

Page 20: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Na-K Pump

Page 21: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.
Page 22: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Examples of Osmosis

Your fingers in water• When your fingers are submerged in water

they become water logged • the massive amount of water out side of

your skin moves in causing you skin to expand, leading to wrinkles

Page 23: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Examples of Carrier Protein Importance• Improper functioning of Carrier proteins

can result in many different types of disorders, most considered genetic• Cysteinuria: causes the Cysteine Protein Carrier to malfunction allowing a build up of cysteine in urine and causes it to solidify • Other Vitamin carriers have been linked to people who develop breast cancer

Page 24: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Importance of Pumps

• A malfunctioning Na-K pump can cause a variety of disorders• Build ups of Na or Ca ions in cells lead to Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (COLD)

Page 25: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Vesicle Formation• Exocytosis is when a vesicle fuses with the

plasma membrane as secretion occurs to the outside of the cell

Page 26: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Vesicle Formation• Endocytosis is when cells take in substances

by vesicle formation

• There are Three Types of Endocytosis

Page 27: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Vesicle Formation

• Pinocytosis occurs when vesicles form around a liquid or very small particles

• Phagocytosis is when the material taken into the cell by endocytosis is large (like food particles)

Page 28: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Vesicle Formation• Receptor Mediated Endocytosis is a form

of pinocytosis that uses receptor proteins shaped to a specific molecule

Page 29: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Vesicle Formation Disorders

• Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome•Pigment dilution, decreased visual acuity, a bleeding, and lysosomal accumulation that can lead to pulmonary fibrosis•Lysomes are made in the cell, serve their function and when are no longer needed are not destroyed, causing a build up of toxins in the cell

Page 30: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Cell Size

• Cells are small . This is an incredible advantage for multi-cellular organism

• A larger cell would require more nutrients and produce more wastes than a smaller cell

Page 32: The plasma membrane separates the internal and external environments of the cell This description is known as the fluid-mosaic model.

Cell Size• For example a cube shaped cell two units high, wide

and depth has a surface area of 24 units and volume of 8 units . A cube cell double the size, 4 units, would have a surface area of 96 units surface area and 64 units volume.

• The smaller has more surface area per unit of volume allowing for more efficient exchanges of nutrients at the cell surface

• Most actively metabolizing cells are small. A cell needs a surface area that can adequately exchange materials with its environment and surface area to volume ratios require that cell stay small