The Biology of a Cell Membrane and Cellular Transport
The Biology of a Cell Membrane and Cellular Transport
Cell Membrane
Cell Membrane Components
Protein channels
Proteins- Peripheral Proteins
Lipid- Phospholipid bilayer
Carbohydrate chains- glycoproteins and glycolipids
Cholesterol
Internal proteins
Channel
Carrier
Four Major Biomolecules
Carb
Lipid
Protein
Nucleic acid
Monomers- They are one small molecule
Polymers- They are a long chain of many molecules
Lipids
In terms of cell membranes, lipids are technically called phospholipids
The parts of a phospholipid bilayer:
The phosphate, (It is polar/hydrophilic, meaning it likes water)
The glycerol
The fatty acid chains (They are nonpolar/hydrophobic, meaning they don’t like water)
Lipids make up the majority of the cell membrane
The monomer of lipids: glycerol and 3 fatty acids
The polymer of lipids: triglyceride
They are made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen
Examples of lipids include butter, oil, wax, and steroids
Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates take up the external surface of a cells membrane
Glyco is the prefix for protein
For example glycoproteins and glycolipids
Proteins
They span the cell membrane
They help let molecules into the cell
The types of protein that help with cellular transport:
Channel protein- They form openings to let molecules pass through the cell membrane
Carrier proteins- They act as a binding site that selects the molecules that are safe to enter through the cell membrane into the cell
The types of proteins that help the cell with responses:
Receptor proteins- They act as “receptors” in the cell and trigger responses that are sent to the cell
Enzymatic proteins- They help to carry out the metabolic reactions that the receptor proteins caused
Biomolecules Chart (This is a more general chart, it isn’t specific to cell membranes)
Biomolecule name | Monomer | Polymer | Elements | Functions | Examples in real life |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Carbohydrate | Monosaccharide | Disaccharide and Polysaccharide | Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen | Help with short term energy | Pasta, Bread |
Lipids | Glycerol and 3 fatty acids | Triglyceride | Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen | Help with insulation and long term energy | Butter, oil, cholesterol |
Nucleic Acids | Nucleotide | DNA, RNA, ATP | Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Phosphorus | Help with cellular energy and heredity | Anything that is living or was once living |
Proteins | Amino acids | Polypeptide or protein | Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen | Help with the structures of a cell and the enzymes in a cell | Meats, bones |
Cellular Transport
The two types of transport:
Active transport (ATP is required)
Endocytosis (entering)
Exocytosis (exiting)
Sodium-Potassium Pump
Passive Transport (ATP is not required)
Diffusion- happens on its own, without the help of a channel or carrier protein
Facilitated diffusion- needs a channel protein to help with the diffusion (carrier proteins require energy)
Osmosis- The movement of water from high to low concentrations through the semipermeable membrane
The three types of osmotic solutions:
Hypertonic- water exists from the cell, causing the cell to shrink
Isotonic- water simultaneously enters and exits the cell, creating equilibrium within the cell
Hypotonic- water enters into the cell, causing the cell to grow
Osmosis only applies to the diffusion of water
ATP
ATP is a nucleic acid that is needed in the movement of molecules from a low to a high concentration. This is needed because molecules need to against the concentration gradient.
The Biology of a Cell Membrane and Cellular Transport
Cell Membrane
Cell Membrane Components
Protein channels
Proteins- Peripheral Proteins
Lipid- Phospholipid bilayer
Carbohydrate chains- glycoproteins and glycolipids
Cholesterol
Internal proteins
Channel
Carrier
Four Major Biomolecules
Carb
Lipid
Protein
Nucleic acid
Monomers- They are one small molecule
Polymers- They are a long chain of many molecules
Lipids
In terms of cell membranes, lipids are technically called phospholipids
The parts of a phospholipid bilayer:
The phosphate, (It is polar/hydrophilic, meaning it likes water)
The glycerol
The fatty acid chains (They are nonpolar/hydrophobic, meaning they don’t like water)
Lipids make up the majority of the cell membrane
The monomer of lipids: glycerol and 3 fatty acids
The polymer of lipids: triglyceride
They are made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen
Examples of lipids include butter, oil, wax, and steroids
Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates take up the external surface of a cells membrane
Glyco is the prefix for protein
For example glycoproteins and glycolipids
Proteins
They span the cell membrane
They help let molecules into the cell
The types of protein that help with cellular transport:
Channel protein- They form openings to let molecules pass through the cell membrane
Carrier proteins- They act as a binding site that selects the molecules that are safe to enter through the cell membrane into the cell
The types of proteins that help the cell with responses:
Receptor proteins- They act as “receptors” in the cell and trigger responses that are sent to the cell
Enzymatic proteins- They help to carry out the metabolic reactions that the receptor proteins caused
Biomolecules Chart (This is a more general chart, it isn’t specific to cell membranes)
Biomolecule name | Monomer | Polymer | Elements | Functions | Examples in real life |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Carbohydrate | Monosaccharide | Disaccharide and Polysaccharide | Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen | Help with short term energy | Pasta, Bread |
Lipids | Glycerol and 3 fatty acids | Triglyceride | Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen | Help with insulation and long term energy | Butter, oil, cholesterol |
Nucleic Acids | Nucleotide | DNA, RNA, ATP | Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Phosphorus | Help with cellular energy and heredity | Anything that is living or was once living |
Proteins | Amino acids | Polypeptide or protein | Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen | Help with the structures of a cell and the enzymes in a cell | Meats, bones |
Cellular Transport
The two types of transport:
Active transport (ATP is required)
Endocytosis (entering)
Exocytosis (exiting)
Sodium-Potassium Pump
Passive Transport (ATP is not required)
Diffusion- happens on its own, without the help of a channel or carrier protein
Facilitated diffusion- needs a channel protein to help with the diffusion (carrier proteins require energy)
Osmosis- The movement of water from high to low concentrations through the semipermeable membrane
The three types of osmotic solutions:
Hypertonic- water exists from the cell, causing the cell to shrink
Isotonic- water simultaneously enters and exits the cell, creating equilibrium within the cell
Hypotonic- water enters into the cell, causing the cell to grow
Osmosis only applies to the diffusion of water
ATP
ATP is a nucleic acid that is needed in the movement of molecules from a low to a high concentration. This is needed because molecules need to against the concentration gradient.