Lab 1: Simple Molecular Movement
Simple - not using a protein, molecule can pass between phospholipids or through another medium such as air or water
Cell mediated - using a protein to cross the cell membrane
Passive - driven by concentration gradient, no energy input by cell required for movement, gradient not required
Brownian motion - random movement of particles in liquid or gas, no change in concentration over time
Simple diffusion - movement of molecules from area of high concentration to area of low concentration leading to change in concentration over time
Concentration gradient - difference in concentration between two areas
molarity (M or mM) - concentration of solute in solution, moles/L or millimoles/L
Temperature - average kinetic energy of the sample
Molecular size (dalton, amu) - size of the molecule
Membrane permeability
Thickness
Resistance
Surface area
Electrochemical gradient - gradient consisting of both charge and concentration
Eq potential - charge gradient equal and opposite to concentration gradient in force
Osmosis - net movement of water across a semi-permeable membrane
Osmolarity (OsM, mOsM) - concentration of active particles in solution in osmoles or millisosmoles
Size and type of particle do not matter as long as it is water soluble
(molarity)(number of particles from each molecule) = osmolarity
Osmotic gradient - difference in osmolarity across a semipermeable membrane
Osmotic pressure - pressure generated when water pushes toward the side with higher osmolarity in a system with a fixed volume (or the pressure required to prevent osmosis)
Tonicity - describes the effect of a solution on the volume or tension of a cell
Isotonic - no net osmosis, no effect on cell volume or tension
Hypertonic - net osmosis out of cell, decreases cell volume and tension → crenation of cell
Hypotonic - net osmosis into cell, increases cell volume and tension → swell and lyse of cell
Transport proteins (transporters, channels, ATP powered pumps)
Subtypes
Uniporter - moves one type of molecule
Cotransporter - moves more than one type of molecule
Symporter - same direction
Antiporter - oppsite directions to each other
Unidirectional - only operates in one direction
Bidirectional - operates in either direction depending on conditons
Conformational change - change in the 3D shape of a protein
Specificity - specific based on size, shape, charge of substrate
Competition - molecules seem to compete for space, but one with greater concentration gradient will be transported at greater rate
Saturation - substrate concentration at which all binding sites are constantly occupied
Vmax/Tmax - highest rate of transport possible without adding more proteins, at or above saturation concentration
Facilitated diffusion - passive movement of molecules across a cell membrane from high concentration to low concentration via a transmembrane protein, leading to a change in concentration over time
Binding of a substrate causes conformational change
Primary active transport - movement of molecules across a cell membrane via a transmembrane protein using ATP as the energy source
Substrates must still bind, but do not drive conformational change
Phosphorylation/dephosphorylation causes conformational changes
ATP → ADP + Pi
Example: Na+/K+ pump - pumps 3 Na+ out, 2 K+ in, breaks down 1 ATP
Secondary active transport - movement of one molecule from low concentration to high concentration coupled with the movement of another molecule from high concentration to low concentration using the concentration gradient of the second molecule as the energy source
Example: Ca2+/Na+ antiporter - allows 1 Na+ in, pumps 1 Ca2+ out
Simple - not using a protein, molecule can pass between phospholipids or through another medium such as air or water
Cell mediated - using a protein to cross the cell membrane
Passive - driven by concentration gradient, no energy input by cell required for movement, gradient not required
Brownian motion - random movement of particles in liquid or gas, no change in concentration over time
Simple diffusion - movement of molecules from area of high concentration to area of low concentration leading to change in concentration over time
Concentration gradient - difference in concentration between two areas
molarity (M or mM) - concentration of solute in solution, moles/L or millimoles/L
Temperature - average kinetic energy of the sample
Molecular size (dalton, amu) - size of the molecule
Membrane permeability
Thickness
Resistance
Surface area
Electrochemical gradient - gradient consisting of both charge and concentration
Eq potential - charge gradient equal and opposite to concentration gradient in force
Osmosis - net movement of water across a semi-permeable membrane
Osmolarity (OsM, mOsM) - concentration of active particles in solution in osmoles or millisosmoles
Size and type of particle do not matter as long as it is water soluble
(molarity)(number of particles from each molecule) = osmolarity
Osmotic gradient - difference in osmolarity across a semipermeable membrane
Osmotic pressure - pressure generated when water pushes toward the side with higher osmolarity in a system with a fixed volume (or the pressure required to prevent osmosis)
Tonicity - describes the effect of a solution on the volume or tension of a cell
Isotonic - no net osmosis, no effect on cell volume or tension
Hypertonic - net osmosis out of cell, decreases cell volume and tension → crenation of cell
Hypotonic - net osmosis into cell, increases cell volume and tension → swell and lyse of cell
Transport proteins (transporters, channels, ATP powered pumps)
Subtypes
Uniporter - moves one type of molecule
Cotransporter - moves more than one type of molecule
Symporter - same direction
Antiporter - oppsite directions to each other
Unidirectional - only operates in one direction
Bidirectional - operates in either direction depending on conditons
Conformational change - change in the 3D shape of a protein
Specificity - specific based on size, shape, charge of substrate
Competition - molecules seem to compete for space, but one with greater concentration gradient will be transported at greater rate
Saturation - substrate concentration at which all binding sites are constantly occupied
Vmax/Tmax - highest rate of transport possible without adding more proteins, at or above saturation concentration
Facilitated diffusion - passive movement of molecules across a cell membrane from high concentration to low concentration via a transmembrane protein, leading to a change in concentration over time
Binding of a substrate causes conformational change
Primary active transport - movement of molecules across a cell membrane via a transmembrane protein using ATP as the energy source
Substrates must still bind, but do not drive conformational change
Phosphorylation/dephosphorylation causes conformational changes
ATP → ADP + Pi
Example: Na+/K+ pump - pumps 3 Na+ out, 2 K+ in, breaks down 1 ATP
Secondary active transport - movement of one molecule from low concentration to high concentration coupled with the movement of another molecule from high concentration to low concentration using the concentration gradient of the second molecule as the energy source
Example: Ca2+/Na+ antiporter - allows 1 Na+ in, pumps 1 Ca2+ out