Bio211 lecture 9 (membrane structure)(1)

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Inner organization of the cell Structure Barriers Maintenance of the inner structure of the cel Function Transport Signal transmission Unity of structure and function Membrane structure Membrane transport Cell compartmentalization and protein sorting Vesicle transport Signal transmission

Transcript of Bio211 lecture 9 (membrane structure)(1)

Page 1: Bio211 lecture 9 (membrane structure)(1)

Inner organization of the cellStructure

BarriersMaintenance of the inner structure of the cell

FunctionTransportSignal transmission

Unity of structure and functionMembrane structureMembrane transportCell compartmentalization and protein sortingVesicle transportSignal transmission

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Structur & organization of the main components of biological membranes

Lipid bilayerMembrane proteins

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Membrane lipids are amphipatic and form bilayers in watery milieu

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Lipid bilayer behaves like a two dimensional liquid

2mm/s

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Fluidity depends on the composition of the lipid bilayer

Fatty acidssaturatedunsaturated

Lipid compositionCholesterol Different phospholipidsGlycolipids

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CholesterolA B

Stabilizes lipid bilayerPrevents transport of small water soluble moleculesSeparates CH-chains to prevent cristallisation

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Phospholipids are two-dimensional solvents for membrane proteins

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Lipid bilayer is assymetrical

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Lipid bilayers are not permeable for solvents and ions

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Membrane proteins have different functions

Structure of membrane proteinsAssociation with lipid-bilayer

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Membrane proteins can be linked to lipid bilayer in different ways

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Most transmembrane proteins span the lipid bilayer with an αlpha-helix

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Transmembrane proteins can water-filled transmembrane channels

Hydrophilic side chains are directed towards the inner core of the pore which is formed by hydrphobic single chains

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Maximisation of hydrogen bond formation through „beta-Barrel“

Example: Porines

16 beta-sheets form a transmembrane water-filled channel

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Plasma membrane proteinsA B

GlycocalixProtectionSurface recognitionCell-Cell contacts

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Cell-cell adhesion in blood

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Membran proteins can be solved and purified with detergents

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The plasma membrane is enforced by a cytoskeleton

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Membrane proteins diffuse within the membrane

Fluorescence recoveryafter light bleaching

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Cells can limit protein and lipid movement to certain membrane domains

Example: Epithelial cells