An amphipathic molecule meaning it has a hydrophobic region and hyrdopphilic.
What's the fluid mosaic model?
The membrane is a fluid structure wirh varioys proteins embedded in or attached to a double layer of phospholipids.
Davson danielli model
Sandwhiched phoshoplipid bilayer betweenb two protein layers. WRONG
Current fluid mosaic model
Disperses the proteins and immerses them in the phospholipid bi layer, which is in a flid state.
The core of the membrane is hydrophobic. True or false
True
Most lipids and some proteins can drift laterally
True rarely across center. Flip flopping
What are integral proteins?
Proteins that penetrate the hyrdophobic core of the lipud bilayer.
Peripheral proteins
Not embedded in the lipid bilayer at all they are appendages loosely bound to the surface of the membrane
Cell-cell recognition
Cells ability to distinguish one type of neifhboring cell from another, is crucial to the functioning of an organism
Hyrdophilic substances avoid contact with the Lipid bilayer
By passing through transport proteins.
Diffusion
The tendency for
Molecules of any substance to spread out into available space
Function of membrane proteins.
Transport, enzymatic activity, signal transduction, inter cellular joining, cell-cell recognition, and attachment to the cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix.
Membrane carbs are important for cell cell recognition.
Short chains of sugars are linked to proteins and lipids on the exterior side of the plasma membrane, where they can interact with the surface molecules of other cells.
Passive transport is
Diffusion across a membrane.
Cell survival depends on balancing water uptake and loss.
isotonic/hypertonic/hypotonic
Facilitated diffusion.
A transport protein speeds the movement of water or a solute across membrane down its concentration gradient.
Active transport
The pumping of of solutes against their gradients. Specific membrane proteins use energy,usually in the form of ATP, to do this work.
Exocytosis and endocytosis used to _____
Transport large molecules. in exocytosis- transport vesicles migrate to the plasma membrane, fuse with it, and release its contents. Endocytosis-large molecules enter cells. Phagocytosis, pinocytosis, receptor- mediated endocytosis
Cell division functions in reproduction, growth, and repair.
unicellular organisms reproduce by cell division. Multicellular organisms depend on it for development from a fertilized egg, growth, and repair.
Chromosomes
- Usually in the form of chromatin
- Contains genetic information
- Composed of DNA- Thicken for cellular division
-Set number per species (i.e. 23 pairs for human)
Nucleolus
- Spherical shape
- Visible when cell is not dividing
- Contains RNA for protein manufacture
Centrioles
- Paired cylindrical organelles near nucleus
- Composed of nine tubes, each with three tubules
- Involved in cellular division
- Lie at right angles to each other
Chloroplasts
- A plastid usually found in plant cells
- Contain green chlorophyll where photosynthesis takes place
Cytoskeleton
- Composed of microtubules
- Supports cell and provides shape
- Aids movement of materials in and out of cells
Endoplasmic reticulum
- Tubular network fused to nuclear membrane
- Goes through cytoplasm onto cell membrane
- Stores, separates, and serves as cell's transport system- Smooth type: lacks ribosomes
- Rough type (pictured): ribosomes embedded in surface
Golgi apparatus
- Protein 'packaging plant'
- A membrane structure found near nucleus
- Composed of numerous layers forming a sac
Lysosome
- Digestive 'plant' for proteins, lipids, and carbohydrates
- Transports undigested material to cell membrane for removal
- Vary in shape depending on process being carried out
- Cell breaks down if lysosome explodes
Mitochondria
- Second largest organelle with unique genetic structure- Double-layered outer membrane with inner folds called cristae- Energy-producing chemical reactions take place on cristae- Controls level of water and other materials in cell- Recycles and decomposes proteins, fats, and carbohydrates, and forms urea
Ribosomes
- Each cell contains thousands- Miniature 'protein factories'- Composes 25% of cell's mass- Stationary type: embedded in rough endoplasmic reticulum- Mobile type: injects proteins directly into cytoplasm