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Cell Membranes and Transport Mechanisms

Introduction to Cell Membranes#

Cell membranes are selectively permeable barriers that surround cells and organelles. They control what enters and exits, maintaining cellular homeostasis and enabling communication with the environment.

Membrane Structure - The Fluid Mosaic Model#

The fluid mosaic model (Singer and Nicolson, 1972) describes membrane structure:

╔═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╗
║ Phospholipid bilayer with embedded proteins ║
║ ────────┳────────────┳────────────┳──────────────────── ║
║ ╱ ╲ ╱ ╲ ╱ ╲ ╱ ╲ ╱ ╲ ╱ ╲ ╱ ╲ ║
║ ◉ ◉ ◉ ◉ ◉ ◉ ◉ ◉ ◉ ◉ ◉ ◉ ◉ ◉ ◉ ║
║ ╲ ╱ ╲ ╱ ╲ ╱ ╲ ╱ ╲ ╱ ╲ ╱ ╲ ╱ ║
║ ────────╳────────────╳────────────╳──────────────────── ║
║ ↕ ↕ ↕ ║
║ Cholesterol Integral Peripheral ║
║ proteins proteins ║
╚═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╝

Key Components#

1. Phospholipids#

The main structural component, arranged in a bilayer:

  • Hydrophilic (water-loving) head: Phosphate group + glycerol
  • Hydrophobic (water-fearing) tails: Two fatty acid chains
Hydrophilic head (attracted to water)
┌───┐
│ P │
└─┬─┘
┌─────────┴─────────┐
│ Hydrophilic │
│ region │
├─────────┬─────────┤
│ │ │
Fatty Fatty Fatty Fatty
acid acid acid acid
tail tail tail tail
(hydrophobic)

This arrangement means:

  • Hydrophilic heads face outward (towards aqueous environment)
  • Hydrophobic tails face inward (away from water)
  • Creates a stable barrier in aqueous environments

2. Proteins#

Integral proteins (embedded):

  • Channel proteins - Form pores for specific molecules
  • Carrier proteins - Change shape to transport substances
  • Glycoproteins - Protein + carbohydrate (cell recognition)

Peripheral proteins (surface):

  • Attached to membrane surface (often to integral proteins)
  • Involved in signalling and structural support

3. Cholesterol#

  • Fits between phospholipid tails
  • Regulates membrane fluidity:
    • At low temperatures: Prevents packing, maintains fluidity
    • At high temperatures: Restricts movement, provides stability

4. Glycolipids#

  • Lipid + carbohydrate chain
  • Found on outer surface only
  • Important for cell recognition and immunity

Why “Fluid Mosaic”?#

  • Fluid: Phospholipids and proteins can move laterally (like a liquid)
  • Mosaic: Many different components scattered throughout
TIP

This flexibility allows membranes to change shape, fuse, and repair themselves - essential for processes like phagocytosis and cell division!

Methods of Transport Across Membranes#

Passive Transport (No Energy Required)#

Simple Diffusion#

Movement of molecules down a concentration gradient (high → low concentration).

Characteristics:

  • No energy required (ATP)
  • Small, non-polar molecules only
  • Examples: Oxygen, carbon dioxide, glycerol
High concentration ───→ Low concentration
[●●●●] [●]
║ ╲
╲ Diffusion
╲ ╲
▼ ▼
[●●●] [●●●]

Fick’s Law of Diffusion:

Rate ∝ (Surface area × Concentration gradient) ÷ Thickness of membrane

Factors affecting diffusion rate:

  • Surface area - Larger area = faster diffusion
  • Concentration gradient - Steeper gradient = faster diffusion
  • Thickness - Thinner membrane = faster diffusion
  • Temperature - Higher temp = faster particle movement

Facilitated Diffusion#

For molecules that cannot pass through the phospholipid bilayer:

Channel proteins:

  • Form water-filled pores
  • Specific to certain ions or molecules
  • Gated (open/close in response to signals)
  • Examples: Ion channels in neurons

Carrier proteins:

  • Bind to specific molecule
  • Change shape to transport across
  • Example: Glucose transport in red blood cells
Channel protein: Carrier protein:
┌────────┐ ┌────────┐
│ ││││ │ │ ⊕ │ → ┌────────┐
└────────┘ └────────┘ │ ⊕ │
Pore └────────┘
NOTE

Facilitated diffusion is still passive - no energy required, moves down concentration gradient!

Osmosis#

Special case of diffusion - water moves from high water potential to low water potential across a partially permeable membrane.

Water potential (Ψ) = Pure water at standard conditions = 0

Adding solutes decreases water potential (makes it more negative):

Solution type Ψ value Water movement
Pure water 0 -
Dilute solution -500 → More concentrated
Concentrated -2000 ← From less concentrated

Key terms:

TermDefinitionDiagram
IsotonicSame concentration inside/outside↔ No net movement
HypotonicLower concentration outside→ Water enters cell
HypertonicHigher concentration outside← Water leaves cell

Effects on cells:

  • Animal cells in hypotonic: Burst (lysis)
  • Animal cells in hypertonic: Shrink (crenation)
  • Plant cells in hypotonic: Turgid (rigid, supports plant)
  • Plant cells in hypertonic: Plasmolysed (membrane pulls away from wall)
IMPORTANT

Water potential = Pressure potential (Ψp) + Solute potential (Ψs). Pressure is positive in turgid cells, solute potential is always negative!

Active Transport (Requires Energy)#

Movement against concentration gradient (low → high) using ATP.

Primary Active Transport#

Direct use of ATP to pump substances across membrane.

Sodium-Potassium Pump (crucial for nerve impulses):

1. 3 Na⁺ bind inside 2. K⁺ bind outside
╱ ╱
│ ┌─────┐ │ ┌─────┐
│ │ Na⁺ │ │ │ K⁺ │
└───┤ + │ ATP → ADP + Pi └───┤ + │
└─────┘ ────────→ └─────┘
╲ ╲ ╲ ╲
╲ ╲ 2. Pump changes shape, ╲ ╲ 4. Pump changes
╲ ╲ releases Na⁺ outside ╲ ╲ shape, releases K⁺
╲ ╲ ╲ ╲inside
╲ ▼ ╲ ▼
  • Pumps 3 Na⁺ out for every 2 K⁺ in
  • Maintains electrochemical gradient
  • Uses ~1/3 of body’s ATP at rest!

Secondary Active Transport#

Uses energy from electrochemical gradient created by primary active transport.

Cotransport:

  • Symport: Both substances move same direction
  • Antiport: Substances move opposite directions

Example: Glucose absorption in small intestine:

  • Na⁺ gradient (created by Na⁺/K⁺ pump) drives glucose uptake
  • Na⁺ moves down gradient, glucose moves against gradient

Bulk Transport#

Exocytosis#

  • Secretion of substances from cell
  • Vesicle fuses with plasma membrane
  • Contents released outside
  • Examples: Neurotransmitters, hormones, enzymes
Inside cell Outside
┌─────┐ Fusion ●●●●
│ ●●● │ ─────────────→ ●●●●
│ ●●● │ ●●●●
└─────┘
Vesicle

Endocytosis#

  • Uptake of substances into cell
  • Membrane engulfs material, forming vesicle

Types:

TypeDescriptionExample
Phagocytosis”Cell eating” - large solid particlesWhite blood cells engulfing bacteria
Pinocytosis”Cell drinking” - liquids and dissolved substancesNutrient uptake in intestine
Receptor-mediatedSpecific binding triggers uptakeCholesterol uptake (LDL)

Practical Investigations#

Surface Area to Volume Ratio#

As cells grow larger:

  • Volume increases faster than surface area
  • SA ratio decreases
  • Diffusion becomes insufficient for cell needs
Cube side SA (6a²) V (a³) SA:V
1 mm 6 mm² 1 mm³ 6:1
2 mm 24 mm² 8 mm³ 3:1
10 mm 600 mm² 1000 mm³ 0.6:1

This explains:

  • Why cells are small
  • Why large cells have adaptations (flattened shape, folds, microvilli)
  • Why multicellular organisms need transport systems

Investigating Osmosis (Required Practical)#

Using potato cylinders in different sucrose concentrations:

Sucrose conc.Initial massFinal mass% Change
0.0 M (water)2.5 g2.8 g+12%
0.2 M2.5 g2.6 g+4%
0.4 M2.5 g2.5 g0%
0.6 M2.5 g2.3 g-8%
0.8 M2.5 g2.1 g-16%

Plotting % change vs concentration gives:

  • X-intercept = isotonic concentration (≈0.4 M above)
  • Shows water potential of potato cells
TIP

Use this method to determine water potential of any plant tissue!

Key Exam Points#

IMPORTANT

Frequently tested topics:

  • Explaining membrane structure using fluid mosaic model
  • Comparing diffusion, osmosis, and active transport
  • Interpreting SA ratio calculations
  • Explaining results of osmosis practical
  • Describing how sodium-potassium pump maintains gradients

Practice Questions#

  1. Explain how cholesterol affects membrane fluidity at different temperatures.
Answer

At low temperatures, phospholipids have less kinetic energy and pack closely together. Cholesterol prevents this packing, maintaining membrane fluidity by creating space between phospholipids. At high temperatures, phospholipids have more kinetic energy and move more. Cholesterol restricts this movement, preventing excessive fluidity and maintaining membrane stability.

  1. Describe how the sodium-potassium pump contributes to the resting potential in a neuron.
Answer

The pump moves 3 Na⁺ out for every 2 K⁺ in using ATP. This creates:

  1. A concentration gradient (more Na⁺ outside, more K⁺ inside)
  2. An electrochemical gradient (inside more negative due to net -1 charge) This resting potential (approx -70mV) is essential for nerve impulse transmission.

Summary#

  • Cell membranes are selectively permeable barriers with fluid mosaic structure
  • Phospholipids form bilayer with hydrophilic heads out, hydrophobic tails in
  • Proteins provide channels, carriers, receptors, and enzymes
  • Passive transport: Diffusion, osmosis, facilitated diffusion (no ATP)
  • Active transport: Pumping against gradients using ATP
  • Bulk transport: Endocytosis and exocytosis for large volumes
  • SA ratio limits cell size and explains cellular adaptations

Understanding membrane transport is fundamental to understanding how cells maintain homeostasis, communicate, and carry out specialised functions!


Related: Protein Structure and Enzyme Function - How membrane proteins are synthesised and folded

Cell Membranes and Transport Mechanisms
https://shannonrufus.com/posts/cell-membranes-and-transport/
Author
Shannon Rufus
Published at
2024-10-20
License
CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

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